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June 3, 2023 49 mins
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, friends, welcome to the Patriot Barbie Podcast. I am
doing a powerhouse woman today. This woman has been fighting
the good fight for you, for your kids, for your family,
for your freedoms, for your medical freedom for years. We're
gonna hear the whole story what she's doing now, how

(00:21):
she is still fighting for you. If you haven't heard
of Jody O'Malley, prepare yourself for an epic, epic adventure today. Jody.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Welcome, Hey, welcome, Lindsay, thank you because you're such a
strong boss, babe.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
I'm so proud of you.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Thank you. I feel the same about you. So I'm
very excited that we finally get a chance to talk.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
Yeah, we've have we ever met, We've met in person,
just like briefly, right or no, I don't.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Think so what? Yeah, I feel like I know you,
you know what, because we see each other on social media.
I love to tell you I have developed some very
like my best friends from life from social media over
the past three years.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
You really find your people, man, when you speak out,
you find out who's going to turn their back on you,
and who's on your.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Team so oh yeah, and who just keeps looking you know,
because you know the usually lose followers. They kind of
follow you more intently, but they just don't comment.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
That's right. Someone someone influential, I don't remember who it
was said not all followers or fans or something like that,
and I was like, ooh, a good point. People might
follow you, but they're just they're watching for when they
want to poke at you and and slander you and
piss you off.

Speaker 2 (01:35):
Yeah, yeah, all right, we'll talk a little bit about
that part about the stalking when we get to the later.

Speaker 1 (01:42):
Jessy Jesy, All right, So I guess take us back
to twenty twenty. Oh, guys, remember March twenty third, all
of America got locked down because we were all gonna
die of COVID. So where we were staying home, staying safe,

(02:03):
praying for a vaccine, for a for the for a
for a virus that was killing people on the streets
that nobody ever saw, Right, were you home? Ye know, yes,
fear fear. Where were you during all this?

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Well, it's funny, we were. I was talking with Senator
shamp she's our senator, love her, Yes, talking with her
the other day, and she's like, you know, they're saying, oh,
the Morgues at the hospital are full, and she's like,
do people know that even large hospitals only have like
place for three.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
No, wonder they're full. There was a car accident, a
four person car accident.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
That's exactly right, Lindsay, that's exactly right. So yeah, so
you mean take you back to March twenty twenty where
the propaganda started.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Yes, that's right about there. We're using a lot of
trigger words. By the way, I'm totally getting banned. We've
said COVID, vaccine and propaganda.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Oh, we're this is okay, so let's be.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
Oh, it's fine, I'm already banned. It's fine, I've already
got strikes. I'm like, dude, that would be called a sellout.
If I'm like, don't say certain things because we don't
want to get deplatformed. It would be like not asking
you not to speak the truth.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
Well, we can speak the truth, you know, I can
play their game. I mean, how else are we going
to get people from? You know, the mainstream social media
is that everybody you know is familiar with, like the
Instagram and the TikTok. I mean, you know, I'm always
constantly living on the edge with Instagram and Facebook. You know,

(03:35):
so we just have to be a little bit more clever.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
So let me be clever. Shouldn't be a problem for us.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
Yeah, I can play the game. Okay, So March twenty twenty, Well,
let me take you back a little bit before that,
so and I'll briefly tell you because it's in the book,
and you know my book actually, uh, which is really
cool because they asked me do you journal? And I
said no, I don't journal, and then I realized I did.

(04:04):
I journaled Facebook. I was hosting all the time about this.
So the book is kind of guided by that story.
But I was in Seattle in February and got really sick,
and really really sick, the sickest I've ever gotten in
my life, like shortness of breath, sick, thinking that I'm
going to go to the hospital. But you know, it's

(04:26):
a flu and whatever. I handled it and you know,
took my medications and stuff that I wanted, and I
got over it. I find out in March that there's
this virus going around, and so then I found out
that Seattle was the hub at that time, and I thought, well,

(04:47):
maybe I got it. Yeah, well if I did, Yeah,
it was really crappy. But you know, I got over it,
you know, And so anyway, I just started noticing the
twenty four to seven propaganda death ticker, you know, telling
my son, even my ten year old Benjamin or eleven,
he was a ten or eleven he was at the time.
You know, I had just taken him and go see

(05:09):
Jojo Rabbit the year before. Have you ever seen that movie?

Speaker 1 (05:13):
No, I don't even know what that is.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
Oh my.

Speaker 1 (05:16):
Rabbit.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
Yeah, so it's not really a kid's movie per se.
It's a story of a ten year old boy. Yeah,
Benjamin's ten, so ten year old boy that lived in
Nazi Germany and Hitler was his imaginary best friend.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
Oh no, girl, Oh this sounds real juicy.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
Yeah, so it's like since here, you know, satire, it's comedy,
it's drama, it's all of it. But even my ten
year old said, Mom, this seems like propaganda, and I
was like, yes, because this is what we were seeing, right,
twenty four seven death old ticker. Somehow overnight the AJHS

(06:00):
told the hospital systems, you are going to stop treating
people the way you normally did, and you were going
to use this protocol and so everything that we knew
as a healthcare provider went out the window from masks
to wearing the gowns. Like you know, if if any
infectious disease team saw us walking in the hallway with

(06:25):
their gowns, are coming out of an isolation room and
taking off our gowns or touching our masks, we would
have gotten right now yep, totally.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
So you know, this is a This is like a
new overnight protocol.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
Overnight so weird, like yeah, yeah, and so and here
you're going to wear these masks. And so for me,
initially I was like, okay, well we never did it
for flu. So how big is a flu virus? All
point two? Well, how big is a corona point one? Okay,

(07:04):
well how big is a TB? Because our gold standard
in the hospital, you know, the most infectious aerosolized disease
that we have in the hospital floating around is TV.
So when you have a TV patient tuberculosis, you had
to put them in a negative pressure room so it
didn't go circulating through the vents, and you had to

(07:25):
wear an THEN ninety five. So I look at the
box of the N ninety five and it says zero
point three microns is a TV, And so I was like,
so TB is, you know, triple the size of a
corona virus and we use N ninety five. It's like,

(07:46):
there's nothing that we have that's gonna work except to popper.
You know.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
And by the way, as a as a non nurse
person onlooking, I recall all the medical profession at this
time saying we don't know much. We don't know much.
They thought it was airborne, they thought it was surface born.
Like they didn't know anything. So it's really funny that
they so quickly implemented new policies and procedures for you

(08:13):
guys based on all these facts that they're then telling
the public they don't have.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Well, let me just take you how a critical thinker
should do the things. You know, A master's prepared critical
care nurse is what I am.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
You know.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
It's like I needn't get there by not critically thinking.

Speaker 1 (08:31):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
And so when that was the you know, when I
told my colleagues like, hey, guys, coronavirus is point one
and uh, tuburculus is point three. This isn't gonna work.
Oh Jody, oh Jody, it's novel. We're doing the best
we can. Just put on the darn mask, and I'm like, no, no,

(08:55):
I'm not. I'm not playing this dog and pony show
because i know it doesn't work. And so lindsay, without
like going into the whole detail, it was one thing
after another. It was shutting down, you know, our non
essential surgeries, which is everything that's not going to imminently
kill you like a heart attack of stroke, So everything

(09:15):
just shuts down. You know, hospitals make money off of surgeries, right.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
So yeah, so that is kind of interesting.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
Yeah, right, So where were they getting their money from
the They were getting it from us, the taxpayer, right,
because we're the ones who have to pay that trillion
dollars back.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
Yeah, And all of the new policies and procedures that
you guys were being forced into required more ppe. Is
that the word that like everyone used, ppe? Ppe? Ppe. Yeah,
So that hundreds of millions of dollars I'm sure is
going out the door for all that crap which you
just said doesn't work.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Oh you mean the stuff that I would get shipments
from at our federal facility from China that has like
Chinese writing on it. My gosh, that's what the PPE
that we were using at Phoenix, India Medical center.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
I should have brought a whistle to the to this podcast.
I need to get better about props. Props are awesome.
She's blowing the whistle.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
You know. But at the end of the day, we
knew what it affected, right, and with any disease, we
know like, does it affect your heart, does it affect
your you know, your nerves, Does it affect your brain?
Or does it affect your lungs? Oh, shortness of breath?
That's yeah, so it affects your lungs. So if it
does that, what's the route of entry?

Speaker 1 (10:43):
Don't ask don't don't don't ask me real questions because
I don't know the answers. I'm like, I'm here for you.
Don't even ask me simple questions like what's two plus two?

Speaker 2 (10:51):
I'm like, this is your interview, So it's your nose
in your mouth, right. Essentially, they were getting us to
buy toile of paper, you know, they were getting people
to wash their their vegetables and their fruit. We knew
that it was We knew that it was respiratory route.
That's why they said to put the mask on. That

(11:13):
didn't work, but you know, so it was just the
fair constant fear fear fear. You know, I also worked
prior to this in detox and recovery, and I would see,
you know, all of the people that you know, my
previous patients that I follow on Facebook, like they were struggling,
you know. I also, you know, was dancing at the time,

(11:35):
and then the dance community was stripper hip hop. Oh.

Speaker 1 (11:42):
I love that you didn't flinch When I asked if
you were a stripper like bartender, there was a zero.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Yeah, no, so yeah. I mean, you know, we did
all these things that just did not make any sense.
And I was very vocal about it from the beginning.
And then they asked me if I wanted to be
hospital supervisor, and I was like, sure, never done it before.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Why would they ask you to be a hospital supervisor
if you were the one like calling out the crap? Well,
I think they were trying to promote you to shut
you up.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
No, they they needed me, They needed my skill set.
And because remember we also let everybody take two weeks
off that's tested positive.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Yeah, and were a bunch of other people not coming
into work because they were so scared.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
No, no, they would just come in. And you know,
Sandy tested positive.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
I thought I could be here, I'm already sick. Hilarious.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
And then there was also that whole the whole contact
close contact right sixe apart? Yeah, okay, so contact tracing.
So yeah, like for example, my supervisor like one day,
she's like, hey, you are a close contact your patient
that you you know, brought to the fourth floor. They

(13:12):
wound up testing positive. So can you go to AC
health and get tested? And I was like no, why
would I? And she's like, well, because you were a
close contact. And I was like, well, then that's if
you believe in a symptomatic transmission. I was like, I
don't believe in it. I've seen the research. Do you
want me to show you the research? And and she's like, well, listen,

(13:35):
like you know, can you just go down and do it?

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Just please tell me you think play. I don't want to.
I don't want to argue truth with you. I just
want you to do it. Leave me alone.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
Well, but you also have to remember, so I was
flow pool, so I worked I cu er and hospital supervisor.
So hospital supervisors like admin right administration, So I got
I saw what AHHS was telling the hospital administrators to
do and then to pass along to the doctors and
the nurses, so I knew what policy was. And so

(14:08):
she's like, well, do you not want to know if
you're positive or not? And I said how do you
know that, I'm I don't know already. And then she goes,
well do you and I was like maybe, and she's like, dot,
you just go take the test. I said, no, I'm
not taking it. I said, I'm not taking it to
an emergency youth test. I've seen way too many false

(14:30):
positives come from it. I know that if I go,
let me ask you a question. If I'm positive, do
I still have to come to work. And she's like no,
we'll discuss it. And I go right, based on my symptoms, right,
and she goes yes, And I said, okay, so I
feel fine, yeah right now, I'm not going to be

(14:53):
another number. I'm not going to drive these numbers up,
you know.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Tell me about the tell me about the fault positives. Okay.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
Well, so the the PCR test, you know, was never
intended to be diagnostic. We we never test people and
say you know, you could possibly you know, it's like
going to you know, even say you're HIV screenings. Most
of the time, like if you feel fine, you know

(15:22):
you are You're fine, right, and so like for even HIV,
there's symptoms that happen, there's like flu like symptoms. There's
all these things that happen. We don't just go around
telling people just go take a test. Yeah even if
you know, I mean maybe if you you know, are
a high risk individual, but if you're not, we don't.
We don't recommend them. So why are they recommending this

(15:45):
for for this right?

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (15:48):
And so and then I looked at like what the
cycle threshold should be? So I just did research research, Yeah,
and in my lab riatory diagnostic people, they couldn't tell
me how many cycle thresholds that we were running at
until I found one person that said that the test
ran for fifty two minutes. And from everything that I

(16:11):
had read, max this should have been twenty seven minutes.
So we So the PCR is essentially they take a
fragment of something and then they magnify it. It's like
this polymerase chain reaction is what it stands with. But
essentially it's a magnification process. So they're like magnifying it,

(16:33):
magnifying and magnifying it, waiting to see if they see
a fragment of what they're looking for. So if you
continue to magnify for fifty two freaking minutes.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
Eventually, eventually you gotta find something.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Yeah, that's how I understand it. And so that's why
I you know, say, and then the numbers, you know.
So then we also have people that, like I said,
are asymptomatic. They're coming into the hospital with a gall bladder. Right.
I had one lady pregnant, she needed a gall bladder out.
She got her gallbladder out, but before she gets admitted,

(17:08):
before anybody got admitted into the hospital, we had to
test them. So we knew what room to put them in.
So we had a bunch of people that weren't even symptomatic,
literally on the floor with all the sick people.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
Oh my gosh, it's so stupid. It's stupid. It's and
they're and they're and they're in pain. Right, I mean,
this girl's probably in pain. She needs her gallbladder. Move. No, No,
even though there looks to be absolutely nothing wrong with you,
you sit there in pain while we run this test.

Speaker 2 (17:42):
Well, well absolutely so, I mean they would get the
you know, got the gallbladder out, but once she you know, left,
that f surgery. She got admitted onto the floor with
the COVID patients as a surgical patient.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
That is so ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
There's a lot, I mean there's a lot that but.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
There's everything that we the people knew was happening. And
we're waiting for somebody, anybody at all, to speak up
and say this is happening. And I'm proof. I'm boots
on the ground, I'm in the war room and this
is so so tell us about coming out and exposing

(18:22):
all this.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
Yeah, so you know, I, like I said, I I
had been talking to my colleagues. But you know, it
just depends on where people work, what unit they work on. Right,
You're gonna have the ICU nurses that are gonna be
saying like this is horrible. Right, Well, you're an ic
you nurse, you you deal with horrible.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
Everything you see is horrible, So everything you see is horrible, right,
So your gauge is a little off.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
That's right. And then you also have like the er
nurses where a lot of us are like we see
people come in and we see them leave. And then
we were telling people for the first time ever, Okay,
you are sick. You're noticeably sick, but we can't admit
you because your oxygen is still normal. So just go home,
do nothing, take tail and all if you need to,

(19:12):
which is horrible by the way, you know, do that
and then go home and try to stay away from
your family if you can, and come back if you
have problems breathing. And it's like, wow, this just didn't
make sense. And I saw people trying to help. I
saw doctors there trying to you know, prescribe, and you know,

(19:36):
then you know, the hammer just came down on them.
So essentially, Lindsay, I mean, you know, in June of
twenty twenty, I actually had enough like educating the public
and really just ask God, like I'm getting off of Facebook.
I'm getting off of all of this because I got
attacked more in March to June of twenty twenty. Then

(19:58):
I have this entire two times to I've blown the whistle.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
Why is that you think more people waking up?

Speaker 2 (20:06):
No, because I think people recognize the truth. Like I
showed them. I didn't. I wasn't telling them anymore, right,
I wasn't given them. I was like, all right, all right,
I've done all this. I've tried to, I've tried to educate,
So let me just show you. And that's that's, you know,
what was laid on my heart to do. And and

(20:28):
then I realized also, it's like when people suffer from
propaganda messaging, they lose the ability to critically think right
and so they're detached. They so you have to hit
them on an emotional level to snap them out of it. Gotcha,
that's what I think my video did. It snapped them

(20:49):
out of it? Or those people that were towing the
line for society? Should I do it as a virtue
signaling kind of thing? You know that I did my
part be I even though you know, God is telling
me not to. Some people call that instinct. I call
it you know God. You know, like, yeah, you better not.

(21:10):
You might want to think about this, you know, the
Holy Spirit. You know, everyone to call it.

Speaker 1 (21:15):
If it goes against your own sanctity of preservation, it's
probably probably something supernatural, like the Holy Spirit.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
Absolutely, just like our thoughts are supernatural, you know, they're supernatural.
And depending on what like spirit. I like to say
you're led by is what's going to come out of
your mouth. So if I'm led by the Holy Spirit,
you're gonna hear me. You know, ninety nine percent of
the time speak love and kindness and stuff in the world,

(21:46):
right may create me funny.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
Maybe am I on my period and then.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
Maybe you guys, depends if I get really triggered. Definitely,
I definitely can go a little get on them, but
I try not to. Or you can see the other
people that are spewing hate and me, you know, like
you get attacked a lot. Like when I see people
attacking you and you know, talking, I literally like see

(22:15):
demons like that are possessing them essentially and they just
don't know they don't know it, you know. But yeah,
so yeah, that's so, that's the story I decided to record.
And the one organization that I had started following a
few months prior to that, where like Ivory Hecker came out,

(22:37):
you know, CNN, April Moss came out with Fox, you know,
all of them. I was like, Okay, I need to
do something bold, and that's that's why I recorded.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
So good We're gonna so I'm gonna attach that video
into this episode too, really really, oh yeah, I gotta
send it to me though.

Speaker 2 (22:59):
Okay, you may want everythink that they might ban you,
for sure, oh.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
I might get another strike on YouTube. Actually came a
post on YouTube right now because of it.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
Yeah, you know what I do, I'll do people to
Project Veritas insiders and then you can see all the clips.
So projectveritas dot com insiders, and I encourage people to
go there and look at what has been exposed because
you see every whistleblow or video there.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
Yeah. And unless you're following that page, which a lot
of people aren't now because of James O'Keefe, you unless
you're following the Instagram and seeing little sneak peaks here
and there, you don't really know everything that's being exposed. Right,
most of the time you only see what goes viral.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
That's right. Yeah, exactly, So you said sharing it. That's
why I tell people you got to share, you know.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
Yeah? Yeah? So are you? Are you still nursing? What?
What has all that done to? Like, I'm sure sure
it's uprooted your life in so many ways? What is it?
What has it changed?

Speaker 2 (24:05):
Well? I've gained about fifty pounds since March. So if
there's anybody out there that wants to, like, put me
up for a couple months in like fat camp and
see keep me on the schedule.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
No no, no, not feed you, no feeding put it.
Just give her water. I think you look great. I
would never have even known that.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
Oh yeah, girl, like it literally, I mean my life
completely changed. I was a free spirit. Like well, I
mean I still am, but you know, I traveled all
the time. I loved nursing. I absolutely loved it. I
picked my own schedule, you know. I can tell them like, hey,
I want to work these eight days in a row
and take two weeks off without getting you know, using

(24:51):
PTO Like it was amazing. But after the video came out,
I had to go in front of the Arizona State
Board of Nursing and undergo they ordered me. Well, I
had to do a whole investigation for like six months
and then they ordered me to undergo an ethics evaluation
and I did and I was cleared of all wrongdoing.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Yeah good girl.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
So so that was pretty big. And then, like I said,
you know, I after meeting people, you know how you
you are who you are, and you're you and I
are talking because we are that we're just this is
what we who we are, and this is just how
you know me. Now, you know, I look at it
like people need people saw that, well let me, let

(25:40):
me go back. I just kept hearing like your hero,
your your brave, your your courage, Oh my gosh. And
so then I realized, like, oh my gosh, we don't
have a pandemic of like COVID. We have a pandemic
of cowards.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
Yes, yes, because if you know, just to literally what
three percent of us stood up and said no out loud,
we would have we would have changed the trajectory of this.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
And so then I wrote my book for some time,
flying around, you know, doing speaking engagements. Not a whole
lot on my dad, not a whole lot, which is
very odd. You know, you hear these big ticket, big
name freedom things that you see all the time. You

(26:38):
never see any nurses on there, right, and so it's
very odd to me why we didn't have any of
the nurse whistleblowers, like you know, we outnumbered doctors tend
to want in the hospital. If you're really wanting to
change the culture in the hospital, you got to get
your nurses to do it, because we can refuse orders,

(27:00):
right and as long as it's like a safety thing,
like you know, we we could have educated, we could
have done that. And so I did I'm more busier
now than I was when I blew the whistle. Yeah,
and I think that's just because it's God's plan. I mean,
I look at it that way. You know, I never

(27:20):
went out and saw all of this I offered, but
I didn't seek it. What I realized, Lindsay, is that
I am probably fifty to fifty introvert extrovert and where Yeah,
whereas in twenty twenty I would have been like, oh,
I'm probably eighty percent extrovert.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Here's here's an interesting thing that just occurred to me.
Because you and I are somewhat in the same boat.
We both in the middle of this. Somehow got clarity,
probably the Holy Spirit right into like I don't know why,
but this just isn't sitting well. And I I'm no
different than anyone else politically or socially, but I'm not

(28:03):
okay with this. And person B is so what makes
us so different? Right? And the minute you take that
that clarity and you put it out there in the world,
correct me if I'm wrong, because this is how I felt.
I felt like when I opened against the mandates. It's
not that big a deal. It's my right to literally

(28:23):
work and that's what I believe. People will be supportive
because I have three children, I have a home, I
have six businesses. It's going to be very obvious to
them that this is two weeks to flatten. The curve
is now six. So we were lied to and they
would sympathize with the state of my life that I'm

(28:44):
in going bankrupt if we stay closed. So I didn't
speak I spoke up thinking I would get support. Did
you also think when I speak up, people will be
grateful that I'm exposing this and that I'm opening their eyes.
But what really happened, which is why we would never
try to do this, which is what the left claims
for fame or clicks or follows is or because we're grifters,

(29:09):
is so much hate came that was completely unexpected. And
you're like, oh, trust me, if I knew you were
gonna hate me this much for telling the truth, I
wouldn't be quiet. I wouldn't sit down and go back.
But it's like I might have thought a lot harder
about doing it.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, And you know, for me it was
the opposite. I was like, I'm going to get a
whole bunch of hate because I'm a nurse, and I'm
going against mainstream you know, the mainstream media right when
everybody knows, even my own colleagues, you know, weren't stepping
up and saying anything. So I actually expected a.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
Lot interesting Okay.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
I had to deal with a lot of lawsuit bs
and all of that and investigations, and you know, my
whole schedule was changed. I had no schedule anymore, you know,
and when and here's another thing. When somebody has an
addiction and you take away their routine and their livelihood
and you you know, essentially give them, like they say,

(30:12):
idle time is the devil's playground. Most of them are
going to go back to their addiction. And that's how
that happened to me. I lost fifty pounds before I
turned forty, and now here I am forty six years old,
and I'm starting, you know it, you know, slowly crept on.
You know, all of the like going you know and
flying here, and your schedule changing and eating on the

(30:35):
road and doing those things like you know, it just
crept up. But you know, probably last year and a half,
it's like I've noticed a significant difference. After my book
came out, I was like, all right now, Jody, you
need to focus on yourself.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Yeah, so the book what what is what is the
purpose of the book to really get all of the
details out there and is there the facts and the
studies and like okay, good and.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
Well no, it tells me. Yeah, so it tells a story.
It's most people say they read it in like one sitting,
maybe two. It's one hundred and fifty pages. It takes
you through my post and then the story unfolds. So
the short answer is it's my journey as a critical

(31:24):
care nurse in a federal hospital through COVID and how
my faith got me through it all.

Speaker 1 (31:28):
Oh amazing. Yeah, that's so it's probably pretty empowering, I.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
Would imagine, yes, and it has been. And so I
just need people to share because you know, it's you know,
the social media. It's like, you know, I do it
all on my own and it takes up a lot
of time. I understand that why people, you know, social
media managers and stuff make like two three grand.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
I know, I've had days where something goes viral or
something is a big deal and I'm constantly managing whatever
it is, and at the end of the day, I'm
like I can't see past like my hand. I'm going
to just a Oh that is the devil's playground. Also
social media, Yes, yeah, it's.

Speaker 2 (32:11):
Hard, it really is. And you can sit there and
it takes up hours and you're like, oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
You know, before you know it, you've scrolled all through
the day.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
Right right, yeah, and and so yeah, I mean it
just you know, it's been a process. Like life is good.
I'm doing a lot of work with legislation, working very
closely with Senator champ here in Arizona.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
Good.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
We're actually having in May which is pretty big, like
a congressional like hearing. I guess I'm so new to
politics and all of this I may even be saying it.
So I'll tell you exactly what it's called, which is
going to be exciting because it'll be on record, will

(33:00):
get you know, our expert take on it and get
on record. And it's called novel Coronavirus Southwestern Intergovernmental Committee,
And we have like Pierre Corey McCullough, Aaron Siri Kristen
and Tammy you know, our OSHA whistleblowers and Senator shamp

(33:23):
ghosts are Montenegro bigs and.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
Shop and what what will be the purpose of this committee.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
So the purpose of the committee is to talk about
have presentations in a panel discussions on the public health
protocol or the response, the hospital death protocols, the remdesevie,
the experimental drugs, like what I said taking away early treatment,

(33:54):
How did that happen? How did the coersion of experimental
injections happen? Data transparency, medical or solutions post exposure to
the spike and medical freedom, the legal process and so
also too. I started working with a thousand Widows dot

(34:17):
org and these are a group of widows that came together.
It was just a couple of them at first, and
they started noticing through talking, and that's why I encourage
people to talk to one another. They noticed that their
loved one died in similar manners. But once they gathered people,

(34:37):
they noticed that there were twenty seven commonalities. Wow. Yeah,
and that's how thousand Widows dot org was born.

Speaker 1 (34:47):
And so gosh, so these are women or women women
and men, okay, and family members you know, like sistlers
and yeah that all said not just cause you know,
we're called conspiracy theorists for saying, oh, he had a
heart attack and then he got the shot. So heart
attack is just one thing. These people noticed twenty seven

(35:08):
things that were in common between each victim.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
Yeah, so it was like essentially the handling of it. Right,
So what happened when we see Roger loved one to
the er for many people was the last time they
saw them. I mean, that goes against our bill of rights,
that goes against ethical principles we take. You know, the
government comes out says that there's this deadly virus, Jack's

(35:34):
up all the numbers, creates and promotes fear, and then
you have us that are actually working in this environment
and being like, it's not so bad here, It's not
so bad, and they're like, well, maybe it's bad over there.
Maybe I'm just waiting for it to come to our hospital.
You see what I'm saying. Yeah, people just like kind

(35:56):
of fed into it. And then once they got into
the hospital, we took away the use of steroids. In
the beginning, we were we were intubating people without you know,
proper reason to do so. We were giving them experimental drugs.
Lindsay remdesevir was experimental. It had just failed the ebola

(36:19):
trial to three percent of the people in that trial.
And then we go ahead and use it in our
hospital as the only drug for covidi was a twenty
percent bonus payout.

Speaker 1 (36:33):
Yeah, while demonizing ivermectin and all the other treatments that
the public would say, Hey, I tried this at work.
Don't don't say it, don't talk about it.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
Yep, that's right. And then the National Council of the
State Board of Nursing and all of the other medical
associations they came out and said, we are going to
take away your license if you talk about this because
they called it mis and disinformation. Again, this isn't how

(37:06):
science works. Science is about data and discourse. We have
got to be able to continually talk. And if you
can't talk, then you don't have science anymore. Right And
and so for me, you know, it's like I just
stuck on my ethical principles as a nurse. And I

(37:29):
you know, when people said, Jody, be careful of saying
that you don't want to talk about that, I would say,
let them come after me, because this is this is
the oath I took. I didn't take all to the
hospital administrator.

Speaker 1 (37:45):
I didn't take the oath to get to get paid
for every person. That's uh, that checks in the test positive.

Speaker 2 (37:52):
That's right. Yeah, and and now you see going around
how doctors have been incentivized to have you seeing that
like the Blue Cross Boushield.

Speaker 1 (38:02):
Yeah, yeah, oh yeah, not at all surprising.

Speaker 2 (38:06):
It's not. Yeah, but you know, throughout all of this,
it's like, you know, you just meet amazing people and
you know other people that are in this fight, and
you know, now we're at the point of like, okay,
well what's the solution, Like what are we going to do?
You know, we can't be talking about this over and
over again. You know, let let situations like this happen.

(38:28):
Let these committees happen, so it's public record. But you
know it's about solution now, right.

Speaker 1 (38:35):
That's yeah. That's the other question I was going to ask,
because this is going to hold is this going to
hold people accountable to what they did and then make
changes moving forward?

Speaker 2 (38:44):
Well, I'm I'm hoping to see justice. I personally don't
believe that the hospital system could be saved. Uh. You know,
they are absolutely run by billionaires and every everything we
see around here is just you know, pretty much a
hands of billionaires that are running it. Our government, the FDA, CDC,

(39:04):
hospital systems they're running it, so I want to hold
them accountable. But I also you know, I've had domestic
violence before, and this feels like it. I'm not going
to try to go back to a system that I
know I'm not compatible with.

Speaker 1 (39:22):
Right, that's abusing you and gaslighting you and making you
feel like the crazy one for speaking up. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Right. And so a lot of nurses are leaving the bedside.
I know, the National Council of the State Board of
Nursing came out and said, like, they estimate that one
hundred thousand left because of the pandemic.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (39:43):
I was like, they didn't leave because of the pandemic.
They lost lost because of your policy to the pandemic.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
Yeah, they lost because they don't trust you anymore. And
they don't trust and they don't want to live a
life of lies treating people the way that they shouldn't
be treated.

Speaker 2 (39:59):
Right, that's exactly right.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (40:01):
And so now we're there's like functional medicine training that
that you know, a friend of mine, she's a friend
of mine. Now I have the link in my bio.
But it's like functional medicine training for nurses. It's about
two thousand dollars you can open up your own practice.
You can order labs for your patients. Wow, yeah, CBC's

(40:25):
you know, like labs that are actually gonna do do something.
You can recommend supplements, you know, to them. We just
can't diagnose. I can't say to you you know, it
looks like you have diabetes. I can say, it looks
like your blood sugar is high, and this is how
you combat it. Got that kind of thing right, So

(40:46):
a lot of nurses are leaving and doing that as well.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
Yeah, and more and more people, myself included, don't trust
the medical community before even all of this blew up.
I mean, even without the whistleblowers, just the critical thinkers
are going no, no, no, no, no, this is not right.
And now it's down to the vaccines too, like getting

(41:10):
my kids vaccinated. If I can't trust you, then that
means I can't trust you with anything. It's a ripple
effect across the medical community. I'm not getting any more
flu shots, my kids aren't getting any more vaccines. If
I don't feel good, I'm going to call somebody like
you or the wellness company, Like I'm not going to
a regular doctor. Yeah, it's bought by big pharma.

Speaker 2 (41:32):
That's right, that's right, and that's where people are. Lots
of doctors are leaving too, and they're developing these private
medical associations. That's what TWC is. They're popping up all
over because people and nurses are having it, like Nurse
Freedom Network. You know, we're starting Remnant nursing and Remnant

(41:53):
Nursing is requiring every nurse to be functionally medicine trained
because we want to get out of the allopathics sick
care system and we can treat people. If you take out,
you know, the insurance portion of it, and you're not
paying for that anymore, and you're paying cash to the
person that's truly helping you, you're going to save money

(42:13):
essentially in the long run. The only thing is is
like maybe major medical if you have to, you know,
be hospitalized, right, But you know, but even then I'm like, eh, whatever,
I'll pay him ten dollars a month.

Speaker 1 (42:25):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, Yeah, I don't tell you the rest
of my life until I.

Speaker 2 (42:29):
Die, exactly. It totally is. See, that's what happened, Lindsay.
They overplayed their hand because I woke up people like
us and we're like, I don't trust you here here.

Speaker 1 (42:44):
And you know what happens when I don't trust you,
I don't give you my money, So you lose. You
lose by by losing my faith and my trust, you
cost yourself.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
Yes, that's right. And and now I pulled my kid out.
You know, it's like he doesn't He hasn't gone to
a public school since twenty twenty yep. And then I
tried another faith based school, but I figured, you know what,
since I'm home, you know, I'm gonna I'm going to
homeschool them. And so he has been with me this
last year. But yeah, like I'm done.

Speaker 1 (43:16):
Here are we're the little homestead women women? Now you
ruined us all? There they are, though they're pushing so
far that the pushback is going to revert us back
to yep, the way that God intended, which is parents
to have control over their household, and women to raise
and nurture their children and protect them at all costs,

(43:38):
and to be vigilant and paying attention. And that is
what we're seeing. And we didn't even do that. They
did it to us. Yeah, and the consequences are going
to be their own.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
Yeah, that's exactly right. I mean, they wanted to get
their little shot in every arm so bad that they
are losing all their other shots that they were making
bain gun.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (44:02):
Physicians included, Like I didn't know that they made money
on you know how much of their like I think
it's something like over sixty percent of their patients have
to be fully vaccinated for them to get the highest payout,
which you know, if a doctor had like two thousand patients,

(44:23):
which is nothing for them to have, uh, they would
get that would be equivalent to like one hundred and
fifty thousand dollars extra for them.

Speaker 1 (44:29):
A Yeah, gosh, that's insane.

Speaker 2 (44:32):
Sinsane.

Speaker 1 (44:33):
You tell me that that's not like believable. I mean,
of course it's believable. Doctors make money and you offer
that kind of incentive whether or not they believe that
the shot was going to be harmful, that's good money.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
Yep, that's good money.

Speaker 1 (44:49):
That's incentivizing money.

Speaker 2 (44:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
I told people on Instagram when I shared that thing,
I said, your life, because this is what it is.
You put up. Your doctor put a poison in you
body that he or she did not know the extent
of your life is valued at one hundred and twenty
five bucks because that's how much extra they got by
vaccinating you.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 1 (45:12):
That's a horrible amount on someone's life.

Speaker 2 (45:15):
It's horrible. And what about our babies? You know, Like
I started working with Children's Health Defends a couple of
weeks ago, just picking up a contract position to try
to boost their military chapters and Native American chapters. So
anybody you know that's in one of those areas that
want to get some education, you know, let me know,

(45:40):
because I'm working closely with them doing that. But they
they've had all these studies, like all of these anti
vax moms, like they knew what was up. Yep, they
did what was up before we were.

Speaker 1 (45:51):
Calling them crazy. Yeah, calling them crazy. I feel bad.

Speaker 2 (45:55):
Yeah, me too, me too. I apologize to them. I
was like, you guys are the real hero. It's like
because you you stood up and you did change legislation
and stuff. So because there's no studies on like the
cumulative dose effect, there's you know, physicians they know just
about as much as you and I when it comes

(46:16):
to vaccines. They don't really know the ingredients.

Speaker 1 (46:19):
They just get paid to put them in.

Speaker 2 (46:20):
Yes, this is our training and medical school and nursing school.
Here is the recommended schedule. This is what we vaccinate for.
They're safe and effective. Make sure everybody knows that. Yeah,
that's literally it. So we didn't hear what the ingredients
were or how it did necessarily work, you know.

Speaker 1 (46:42):
Yeah, so yeah, she's blown that whistle.

Speaker 2 (46:45):
Folks.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
All right, well tell everyone where they can find you,
support you by your book, et cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
Yes, so yes, you can find me speaking truth on
Nurses out Loud. You can just type that into any podcast.
I created a show with four other nurses so you
have a different nurse host daily. It's on the America
Aloud Talk radio app or iHeartRadio ten am and eleven

(47:14):
pm Eastern Standard Time, and then all of the shows
go to podcast Daily and any podcast app. You can
find me directly at Jody o'malleyarn dot com where I
am creating courses and confidence, courage and calling because I
feel that that's really where people need help the most,

(47:37):
so that they can find their voice and speak the truth.
We need more people doing that. And also I have
a retreat coming up in Alaska. Oh my gosh, I
cannot wait. We have one date right now, but we're
looking to maybe add some more. I haven't released that
publicly yet, but folks, you're in an air first and yeah,

(48:03):
I think that's it.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
Okay, amazing.

Speaker 2 (48:05):
I'm on social media jodiomaliara dot com or.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
And is your book on joey Omali dot com.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
Yes, thank you, I forget about your book, Rare Courage
standing for Right when You're surrounded by wrong. You can
get it on my website or you can also get
it on Amazon. Right.

Speaker 1 (48:24):
Amazing. You are a powerhouse. Thank you for sharing truth
with everyone. I'm so glad that it's at least blessed
your life. But we appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (48:31):
Yeah, thank you, Lindsey.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
All right, and we got to do it.

Speaker 2 (48:34):
Cheers Okay, Oh I got my protein chase.

Speaker 1 (48:37):
Yeah, I got my water? All right? What are we
cheering to?

Speaker 2 (48:42):
Oh? Let's cheers to the remnant rising love it? Yes?

Speaker 1 (48:55):
All right?

Speaker 2 (48:56):
Thanks truth in this world, speaking.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
Truth when surrounded by wrong. Yes, thanks for being a guest.

Speaker 2 (49:02):
Thanks Loving m
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