Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
You are about to listen to the Doctor Dahlia Show,
sassy stimulating medical talk radio. Any medical advice doctor Dhalia
Wax gives on her show should not be substituted for
an actual visit to your medical provider. And now here's
doctor Dahlia.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
All right, we are back on the Doctadelia should thank
you all for giving me.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
One eight seven seven Doctor Dollie one eight seven seven
Doc d A l I.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
So one of my listeners the family all got together.
She has young kids, but her sister has older kids,
and she witnessed the fight with the older kids and
older sister where are the kids told her that they
hate her? And here's our listener with younger kids, wants
(01:06):
to prevent her kids from hating her. And I get
asked a lot. You know, how do you have such
a good relationship with your boys who are in their twenties.
How do you salvage relationships with older children that you
might have lost? Uh, you know, you know, lost closeness
with and it's it's tricky because you really want to
(01:30):
start early. You know, the better the childhood you know
these kids have and relationship with you as a child,
the better your relationship is going to be.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
For some of us, we might be too late because
it's there.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
And I have given you all pointers and I will
I'll review those on what to do if your child
hates you because of what happened during childhood. But obviously
one of the best times to address the situation is
to prevent them from hating you to begin with. And
so while they love you and they think you're a god,
you know, and and they they you know, are with
(02:04):
baited breath on every word and piece of advice. You know,
tune in and and you know, while you have had
you uh, you know, with great power comes great responsibility.
And I have seen parents abuse their children because they
have such a captive audience. And when that happens, then
(02:27):
unfortunately you turn into you know, somebody like me, where
I you know, as a duty, I've been there for
my parents, but you know, and I love them, but
I tried to stay away from them as much as
possible because they would hurt me. And so, uh, you know,
(02:47):
these are these are things. So the the first piece
of advice is don't hurt your kid. Now, I understand punishing.
There's different forms of punishment, you know, I try to
you know, spake, it didn't work. And so for me
it was easy because I came up with ways to
discipline them that didn't involve smacking or hitting, and so
(03:09):
they felt less physically hurt. Although boy were they mad
when I took away their video games or I took
away their cell phone or you know, took the keys
away from their car.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
That hurt. But at least I didn't physically hurt them.
So the one is no belts.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
Now, you know, if you were a belter and that
did happen to them as kids, because kids don't forget
about that. They do not forget about the beatings that
they They will always have that memory. Well, try and
have an honest conversation with them about it and tell
them you're sorry, tell them you regret it, tell them
(03:49):
you know, back in the olden days, this is how
parents disciplined. We didn't know better, and so if I
could have done it differently, I would have ever you know,
struck you, I would have you know, And and I
know it's going to be hard for me to make
this up, but I want to at least start with
(04:11):
that sort of a conversation. If you hurt your kids
when they were younger now like trying to blackmail them
or or do things to them. And I don't want
to go into the details of what you know, my
family tried to when I was younger, you know, just
to kind of get me to do what they wanted
me to do. But but if you did, you know,
do that own up to it and say, I am
(04:32):
going to continually spend the rest of my days trying
to make that up to you own up to what
you did, say it was wrong, and say you want
to be a better person.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
And that's always the first part of healing.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
If you are a young parent and you're looking at
your young kids going wow, you know they they love me.
How do I keep this? How do I use logic?
And and I I mean maybe have a paper trail? Okay, yeah,
I mean my kids will remember remember you yelled at
me for this, and you yelled at me for this,
(05:08):
and and then I'm like, well, this is why I
don't want to hear it.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
I don't want to hear you were wrong.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
You were you know, and you know it's okay to
have disagreements, but but also make sure you have the
right facts and say this is what I was concerned about.
So I told you the first time I ever spanked
my kid was we were at the park my older
son and uh my younger son was a baby and
it was just me. So I was, you know, dealing
with a stroller, and my son meets this girl that
(05:34):
we've never seen at the park before say why don't
you come and let's go get some ice cream, and
so my son goes, Mommy, I want to go get
ice cream, and I go where there's an ice cream truck.
I didn't hear the do do do do do? I
didn't hear any of the that means.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
I'm like, where is it? And there's a white van.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
On the opposite side of the park and I'm like, oh,
hell no, no, the answer is no, So then my
baby needs to be changed. I start changing the baby
the other one. I look up and my son is
halfway across the park. It's like a football field, going
all the way down to that van with this girl.
He didn't listen to me. So I told my friend
(06:13):
about this, and she said, he's not scared of you.
I mean he needs to know that if you say no,
it's no.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
I go.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
But I don't want to beat him like, but she goes,
you're gonna have to do something more than a time out,
because that was some serious stuff. So I took him
home and I spent him and he laughed, you know,
because it didn't hurt.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
I tried to find a spoon whatever.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
But you know, I explained to him later, I go,
there could have been bad guys, bad girls in that van.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
This little girl.
Speaker 2 (06:41):
Was trying to get you, was trying to kidnap you.
And I used it as a learning point. As a
teaching point, kids could be taught.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
And I know a lot of pairs.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
You know, the teenage years are gonna be rough, but
make sure however you do treat them, you use logic.
Speaker 4 (06:59):
Now.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
They may not like logic, they may not be listening,
but they are going to be adults one day. God
willing that you keep them safe because your job is
also to keep them safe and you don't want them
dead or you know, getting exposed to fentanyl or getting
abducted or trafficked. So you do have to do tough love.
But then explain what that tough love was now and say, look,
(07:20):
if the choice was you, you know, dying or being
abducted now or hating me.
Speaker 3 (07:28):
I'd rather you be alive now.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
And and so talk to your kids about your decisions.
Teach them and many of them will listen, especially once
they mature. One eight seven seven, Doctor Dolly.
Speaker 5 (08:00):
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Speaker 3 (09:00):
Hey guys, it's doctor Dahlia.
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Speaker 3 (10:20):
All right, we are back on the Doctor Dahlia Show. Thank
you all for tuning in.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
One eight seven seven Doctor Dolly one eight seven seven
d O C. D Ali. Big thanks to Talk Media
Network for making the show happen. Big thanks to Daniel,
our producer, and big thanks to.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
You all for tuning in. We really do appreciate it.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Don't forget to follow us on Twitter or exit Doctor Dahlia, Facebook,
The Doctor Dahlia Show, and on YouTube quick and subscribe.
So I think we are going into day fourteen of
this shutdown as of today, and the Senate, now that
we have completed Columbus Day weekend, the Senate returned to
(10:57):
work today. They are going to vote again. All Republicans
are voting to open up the you know, the the
government and pass the clean CR. The House is not
set to come back this week. The Senate or the
Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson is there and he's
you know, active and he's but the House did their part.
(11:20):
They passed the CR goes to the Senate. This hold
up is all in the Senate.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
And so.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
You know the uh by the way, we're being told
that in terms of the main Senate seat, Senator Susan Collins,
who is a registered Republican but seems to you know,
caucus a lot with the Democrats and her seat is
now in jeopardy as main Governor Janet Mills has announced
(11:52):
she is going to be running for the Democratic nomination
for the Senate Interstate And so you know, Senator Susan
Collin does sometimes vote with the Republicans as well, but
that could definitely alter the numbers and the thin margin
that Republicans already have with the Senate. So, being that
(12:15):
we're going into day fourteen, I'm not expecting there to
be any movement. And it's unfortunate because our federal workers
are not getting paid. You know, the I R S
isn't working on our refunds. We some of us still
need the I RS especially for our refunds. National parks
(12:36):
aren't open, and you know, I mean we're paying taxes.
I don't think our taxes stopped. I mean, if there's
going to be a shutdown and the government is technically
not working, then do we get our tax dollars back? Also,
do senators and House members still get their money?
Speaker 3 (12:54):
You know how come they get paid? Well, they're essential.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
Well, you know, if they're not passing you know, the
cr then they yeah, I mean that's that's how you
get people to vote and come to the table. You know,
if they're still getting paid for doing this stall routine,
then there's no rush. And I don't think the Democrats
are in any rush because they got this No King's rally. So,
(13:19):
as many of you heard the No King's protests, actually
it's now called Still No Kings.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
So despite some.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
Very lukewarm praise from the left for what Trump did
in terms of the ceasefire and peace and getting the
hostages back from Hamas and his other work to end
multiple wars, the after the left gave some you know,
oh yeah, we commend the president.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
Let's move on.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
They are working for a big, big, multi million attendance rally,
these Still No Kings. There are apparently thousands of locations
across the United States. This is going to be taking
place on Saturday. They are going to protest the quote
(14:11):
unquote autocratic regime of President Donald Trump. His government shutdown,
his quote demolition of Medicare, Medicaid and other public programs
in service for quote tax cuts for billionaires. This is
being reported by the American Prospect. The protest under the
(14:31):
brand No Kings have the potential to be the largest
ever in the United States. So they're blaming him for
the government shutdown, which to me is odd when all
the Republicans are voting to reopen it as the Democrats
voting against it. But in that verbiage that already tells
you what they're doing.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
They want to wait for no kings.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
They I don't think they have any any plans to
get the job done, get the government re own opened,
because they need that government shut down as talking points
during their their you know speech, and you know, people
are saying, well, I don't understand why don't the Republicans negotiate. Well,
(15:14):
what are they negotiating for. Well, it's the Obamacare tax
subsidies and the lack of funding. And well, we've said
from the beginning, Obamacare sucks. Obamacare was a stupid bill.
It was very poorly written, It was poorly designed. It
ruined many of our healthcare It you lost your doctor,
(15:35):
It ruined my practice because insurance companies said, sorry, patient
has a ten thousand dollars deductable, we're not paying you.
Go bill the patient. And we were in the midst
of a horrible recession. For years, people with job loss
they couldn't pay their thirty five dollars or fifty dollars
or one hundred and fifty dollars bill, So we closed.
I went to teach, So my patients don't have their
(15:59):
doctor anymore. Wish I could, but paying for staff that's expensive,
and in retrospect, I'm kind of glad I didn't have
my office because trying, most doctors could not get staff
to come in and help because of the fear of COVID,
not to mention the lack of ppe and personal protective equipment,
(16:20):
and so it was actually a blessing in disguise. You
know that I closed my practice and I went on
to teach. But the you know, between Obamacare and COVID,
the average person, they don't even know the name of
their doctor. They see whoever can randomly see. It's it's
it's not an ideal situation, but that's one of the
(16:43):
negotiating points that Democrats are saying. We need to fund
more Obamacare subsidies, and some of those will include illegal immigrants. Now,
as a physician, I want to give medical help to
whoever needs it, but I also understand that if we
are having trouble funding Medicare and Medicaid for our citizens,
(17:08):
for our homeless, for our vets for our then we
need we need to figure out where the money is
being spent and how to make sure that those people
who deserve it get it have access. So I believe
there are twenty five hundred events planned across every state
(17:29):
Europe and Canada according to No Kings organizers. You know,
unlike the George Floyd riots, they had more time to
plan this out. And there is a huge I guess
group behind this. And then you also wonder about the
(17:50):
funding Soros and all that. And they even have Bozeman, Montana,
uh included. It's going to be in Atlanta, Bosson, Kansas City,
New Orleans, San Francisco, Chicago, d C, I'm sure Las
Vegas and so a concern I have with something like
this is one is I think they're not going to
be addressing the shutdown until after the No Kings protests
(18:13):
because they really want that as a talking point. And
you see the government shut down this because of Trump.
If they could say we have the longest shutdown in
history under the Trump presidency, they could use that when
they campaign. The problem is is they're causing I mean,
American people have to be kind of smart about that,
and I think the average American knows this isn't the Republicans.
Speaker 3 (18:34):
The Republicans are all voting to reopen.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
But yeah, the other thing is is what law enforcement
resources are going to be sadly.
Speaker 3 (18:47):
Stripped and diluted and triage for this.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
I would like to think that all twenty five hundred
locations are going to be without incident, but unfortunately we
didn't see that with other riots. And so a concern
I have is Saturday going to be an absolute mess
and with people reading, you know, oh wow, now there's
(19:21):
gonna be twenty five hundred, this is gonna be a
big deal. It's gonna be they might use that day
to cause mayhem or to rob or pillage or plunder.
Speaker 3 (19:30):
That's why a lot of these these these happened.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
A lot of these people say why, Like I remember
with the Rodney King riots, you saw people running around
with TV sets. You'll breaking into stores of getting TV sets,
And you're thinking to yourself, if there's cops near these rallies,
why would they do that? Well, because they have an opportunity.
Somebody breaks in, they all jump in. They think they're
never gonna get caught, especially now that people are wearing
(19:54):
COVID masks, and then they the police are understaffed. Are
they going to stop everything to save a TV or
are they going to work to protect individuals that could
get caught in mayhemond fights and brawls or stabbings or shootings.
So lock your doors, make sure you have security up
(20:15):
and going on, because I just don't know what you'd
be able to do, and I would, you know, I
have conversations with law enforcement and go.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
Look what what would make your life easier.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
We know that you're gonna be pretty, You're gonna be
stretched thin the next few days, uh and for the weekend.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
What can we do to help and secure that?
Speaker 2 (20:37):
You know, we don't need to call you and I'm
sure let's say please stay away right right?
Speaker 3 (20:43):
The large crowds not gonna help.
Speaker 2 (20:46):
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All right, we're back on the Doctor Dalisha.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Thank you all for tuning in one eight seven seven
Doctor Dali one eight seven seven d Oc d Ali
Grammy winning Soul music icon Di Angelo has died at
the age of fifty one. His hits including Brown Sugar
untitled how Does It Feel? Apparently he died from pacritta cancer.
(22:39):
He is survived by his two sons and daughter. As
the mother of his first son, R and B. Star
Angie Stone had died in a car accident in March
earlier this year, and so a representative had told Daily
Mail that Michael DiAngelo archer had passed away on October fourteen,
(23:00):
the New York City only at the age of only
fifty one years old, working with Snoop Dogg and many
other award winning.
Speaker 3 (23:08):
Artists.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
And we're getting you know information now. We'll keep you posted,
but very very sad loss. D'Angelo dead at fifty one.
You're gonna see also a headline saying some medications that
you're taking, if you stop them, you're going to be
at higher risk of cancer. Now when you see that headline,
(23:32):
you're gonna be like, whoa, whoa, whoa what.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
So while I was reading Daily.
Speaker 2 (23:39):
Mail on what happened to D'Angelo, I looked a little
bit more into what they're talking about.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
So there was a study by Estonian.
Speaker 2 (23:48):
Researchers where they looked at beta blockers that we used
for high blood pressure heart conditions of ten A beta lol,
and they said that these medications were linked to changes
in your gut microbiome, your bacteria. And they also saw
that with anti anxiety medications like benzodiazepines like xanax and valium.
(24:12):
Sometimes other antidepressants or proton pumpe hippers for acid reflux
could do that as well.
Speaker 3 (24:20):
And so what they're saying.
Speaker 2 (24:22):
Is indirectly if these medications or stopping these medications cause
changes in your gut microbiome. Because your gut microbiome, which
is a diverse population of bacteria that help fight disease
and absorb nutrients and regulate immune and metabolic systems and
communicate with the brain, if they get affected, that could
(24:44):
then later that could especially if they lack of diversity,
that could lead to a weaker gut barrier, chronic inflammation,
a compromised immune system, and Daily Mail uses the term dysbiosis.
It's a state of chronic inflammation and weakened immune defense
that is a recognized breeding ground for cancer development, specifically
(25:08):
cholorectal cancer. They say dysbiosis creates a gut environment dominated
by cancer promoting bacteria, which can trigger tumor growth by
stimulating blood vessel formulation, uncontrolled cell division, and the evasion
of cell death.
Speaker 3 (25:23):
So where did they come up with this? So the
Estonian study.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
Genetically analyzed fool samples from twenty five hundred adults. They
revisited three hundred and twenty eight of them four years
later with new samples.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
And check their prescription records, and.
Speaker 2 (25:40):
Then they pinpointed the effects of common drugs like acid
reflux pills, antidepressants, and antixiety medications. Ninety percent of one
hundred and eighty six medications tested disrupted the gut microbiole
and for many, including antibiotics, antidepressants, approach on pump inhibitors,
the effects persisted for over three years after the last dose. Now, antibiotics,
(26:04):
as we know, can wipe out your gut microbiome. The
study found the effects like a zephrmyacin and penicillin remained
detectable over three years. Not the antibiotic, but the effects
of the drugs on your gut microbiome. And they say
the reduction and bacterial diversity of the antibotics in never
fully recovered, suggesting that the damage could.
Speaker 3 (26:24):
Be permanent or be long lasting.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
So they say the drugs effects persisted over three years
were cumulative. More prescriptions led to more greater gut imbalance
when you took away antibiotics as the leading cause. Beta
blockers was one of the top disruptors now, beta blockers
are an important drug.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
If you are put on a beta.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
Blocker, it's not for poops and giggles. It's because we
need to decrease the workload on the heart.
Speaker 3 (26:58):
We need to slow down the heart rate.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
We need to prevent heart failure, heart attack, you know,
high blood pressure stroke. These beta blockers are important drugs.
I don't prescribe a lot of them because for most
of my blood pressure patients, I don't usually monitor manage
you know, uh, congestive heart failure. I leave that to
the cardiologists and you know. But for you know, blood pressure,
(27:21):
I use other medications that may not affect the heart, uh,
because sometimes it can also make you dizzy. But but
they're they're a very solid effective class of medication. And
if I'm in the er treating you for a heart attack,
we give you beta blockers. So these are not things
(27:43):
that we want you to stop using because there's an
article saying it could increase your risk of cancer. But
what this article to me does is it reminds us
that our gut microbiome is very necessary and very important,
and if you eat crap, it's going to make your
(28:06):
microbiome crap. If you eat healthy, you're going to increase
the diversity of it. Now people ask which probiotics should
I take, Well, it depends.
Speaker 3 (28:17):
I don't know all.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
The different probiotics out there and what you're truly getting,
and I get nervous when it's not supervised. So talk
to your medical provider or your GI doctor about what
they recommend. Usually, if you notice, what many medical providers
recommend is eating a balanced diet. If you eat a
(28:39):
balanced diet, you are going to get the proper bacteria
and microbiome that you need. But some people say, look,
I like my diet drinks, I like my sugar, I
like my steak, so let me just pop a pill.
(29:01):
And I don't think popping a pill is going to
colonize the gut the way it needs to be. Just
like with a lot of our vitamin supplements, you know,
people will say, well, I'm taking a whole bunch of calcium.
I'm taking a whole bunch of vitamin C that you
cannot recreate nature in a tablet. We do well with tablets,
(29:24):
like with thyroid medication and heart medication, but if you're
trying to get vitamin D, vitamin D supplementation is important
but there's nothing like how the sun does it. Just
we got to be careful of melanoma, so we use
vitamin D supplementation more. But you know what we get
in nature, we just can't bottle up. Researchers back at
(29:48):
twenty twenty four are deduced that changes in the gut
microbiome include the proliferation of bad bacteria was linked to
twenty three to forty percent of colorectal cancer cases. Now,
a question I keep getting asked is what about people
who have had appendicitis and had their appendix removed? As
you know, the appendix is not a useless organ. The
(30:10):
appendix has a purpose and it's a little squiggly tube.
Speaker 3 (30:14):
It's really cute.
Speaker 2 (30:15):
It's a little squiggly tube that houses zillions of bacteria
so that when it senses your body needs more, it squirts.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
It out and it can help colonize.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
And it's in between the small intestine and the large intestine.
I tell you God's brilliant nature is brilliant. The way
our body is engineered, whoever you want to give credit to,
absolutely brilliant. So then a question I can ask is
what if you lost your appendix? What happens well, your appendix.
I don't think we've seen studies and enough science to
(30:51):
say if you don't have your appendix, your life gets
shortened or your life changes. I mean, my father had
his appendix taken out. He ended up having a heart
attack at the It was not a good day, you know.
But he ate poorly, and he stopped going to the
gym in his late thirties and forties when he should
(31:13):
have been going to the gym, you know. And so
I think it was more lifestyle. And he loved pepsis.
He loved drinking pepsis. Then he gets diabetes, and once
you get diabetes, you know you're buying the eight ball
as it pertains to heart health. And he didn't like
going to the doctor. He finally did go, but he
didn't want to get his heart checked, and so stubbornness
I think killed him more than the appendix being removed.
(31:33):
But if you did have your appendix removed, make sure
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All right, we are back on the Nata Ali Show.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
Thank you all for tuning N one eight seven seven
Docadelli one eight seven seven D O C D A
l I one of you had asked if I ever
worked with Alex Jones, because I used to be at
the GCA network and Alex Jones had been a part
of that.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
And you know, I only met him once.
Speaker 2 (34:43):
It was at a Talker's magazine conference years ago, and
he was not very friendly. This was before the whole
Sandy Hook. This was I think I met him in
like two thousand and nine or twenty ten.
Speaker 3 (34:53):
He was not friendly. I didn't think much about him.
I didn't like him.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
That was kind of my uh shall we say, in perception,
and you know, just didn't really give it much thought.
And then he gets himself into the news talking about
how the Sandy Hook elementary shooting that happened in twenty
(35:19):
twelve by Adam Lanza was a hoax and staged by actors.
I don't know all his conspiracy theory stuff. I don't
know what the hell he was talking about. And so
he had been I guess awarded a judgment, I don't
want to use a word award, but slapped with a
one point four billion dollar judgment against him. Now this
(35:43):
brought a lot of kind of concern and back and
forth by Okay, you know, he may be a complete
idiot and saying something to hoax and a conspiracy theory
when there's proof and people dead, a principal who threw
herself into the line.
Speaker 3 (35:59):
Of fire to save kids. You know, he may be
out of his mind.
Speaker 2 (36:03):
But if somebody is talking about a conspiracy theory, does
that warrant a one point four billion dollar judgment?
Speaker 3 (36:14):
So freedom of speech had then come back into.
Speaker 2 (36:18):
Discussion as it pertained to that, and I believe this
went I think all the way up to the Supreme Court,
and we're being told by the latest that the Supreme
Court is going to reject Alex Jones. Alex Jones's appeal
today they rejected an appeal from him. Of this is
according to USA Today, who had, I guess separately asked
(36:40):
the judges to protect his assets, including the info Warst website,
while he'st their intervention and a jury excuse me the
hiccups Back at twenty twenty two ordered Jones to pay
the massive judgment to family members of several of the
Sandy Hook victims and an FBIA after a judge found
(37:01):
that Jones defained and greatly harmed them for claiming for
years that the killings were staged. In a government plot
to seize American guns. As you remember, twenty six people,
including twenty children, were killed. Adam Lanza steals his mom's gun,
shoots her while she's in bed, and then goes to
(37:23):
kill multiple kids at Sandy Hook Elementary and then kills himself. Now,
Alex Jones, accord to USA Today, argued he should have
gotten a trial before a judge found him liable for
defamation and infliction of emotional distress. The Connecticut judge ruled
Jones was liable by default after he refused to abide
by court rulings or turnover evidence. A jury then set
(37:45):
the level of damages. Remember we opened the show talking
about how drama always follows people like Alec Baldwin, it
follows Alex Jones. So the result, according to Alex Jones'
lawyers said, is a financial death penalty by FIAT imposed
on a media defendant who's broadcast reached millions. So they
(38:06):
argue that state court should not be able to issue
administrative default judgments against members of the media.
Speaker 3 (38:12):
In addition to the.
Speaker 2 (38:12):
One point four billion dollar judgment from the CONNECTICU lawsuit,
Jones is also facing a fifty million dollar judgment from
a Texas court for its.
Speaker 3 (38:19):
Claims that the Sandy Hooks shooting was a hoax. The
award went to the parents.
Speaker 2 (38:23):
Of a six year old child killed in and obviously
that that that murderous rampage. So, you know, conspiracy theories,
this is it's you know, listen, listen Alex Jones.
Speaker 3 (38:35):
You know, I mean, he did do harm to the parents.
He did do.
Speaker 2 (38:38):
Harm, you know, you know, on on and and you know,
what was it worth that high ad judgment? I don't know.
Speaker 3 (38:45):
I mean, I'm not a legal analyst now, but there.
Speaker 2 (38:49):
Should be consequences, you know, like like you know, Christina
Amanpour saying that the hostages she said this, I believe
yesterday she said this, saying that the hostages were treated
better than gossins because Hamas needed Israeli hostages as bargaining chips. Yeah,
if they were treated better, then hel come two hundred
(39:11):
and fifty got whittled down to twenty.
Speaker 3 (39:14):
They were murdered, raped, you know, butchered. In fact, some
of the hostages.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
Were found shot execution style, hands bound bullets to the head,
I mean, and eventually later apologized. So there has to
be responsibility. You can't just be saying things that hurts people,
And does Christina Amanpor need a billion dollar judgment against
(39:40):
her for Yeah, I think that's excessive, but you know,
people in the media do have a responsibility. But then again,
look at how the government could subjectively change what freedom
of speech is. When COVID first happened, and I had
suggested that I it was leaked from a lab around
(40:03):
the end of summer of twenty nineteen, because I was
seeing patients in November of twenty nineteen who were negative
for flu and had a very severe respiratory infection.
Speaker 3 (40:16):
So for it to be in America, I thought, okay,
then it must have leaked.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
Once we started to understand about what happened with the
COVID nineteen and the Wuhan lab, I suggested it probably
was leaked into the summer.
Speaker 3 (40:29):
Oh, that's a conspiracy theory. That's wrong.
Speaker 2 (40:32):
Now, when I said, look a lot of the masks
you guys are wearing and reusing that are not N
ninety five respirators.
Speaker 3 (40:38):
Are probably not working, they're probably.
Speaker 2 (40:40):
Not like, Oh, no, that's a conspiracy, that's misinformation. So
everything I got accused of the same misinformation actually turned
around later and they said.
Speaker 3 (40:46):
Oh, no, no, this is what we do believe. We
believe it did come from a lab.
Speaker 2 (40:50):
We believe that you do need N ninety five respirators
and clean masks do a lot better than what you know,
the mask of Mandy did. When I said the lockdowns
were hurting kids and they would hurt kids for a
long period of time, that's a misinformation. And no, I
was right. And so when you're right about something, but
in the thick of it you're being accused of conspiracy theories,
(41:13):
you know, what protections do you have? And so this
Alex Jones case, although I think the majority of US
can agree he was wrong, it wasn't a conspiracy theory.
Speaker 3 (41:24):
People died, and the.
Speaker 2 (41:27):
You know, massive campaign to try to say it was
a hoax, you know, really hurt people who lost their children.
Speaker 3 (41:36):
And these were not actors.
Speaker 2 (41:37):
I mean, I mean this, you know, what he did
was was really wrong, and you should have some responsibility
when you are in the media.
Speaker 3 (41:45):
But you know, billion dollar judgments.
Speaker 2 (41:51):
Is that going to be the new thing when you know,
I mean, look at what happened to Trump.
Speaker 3 (41:57):
And so I don't know what the answer is.
Speaker 2 (42:00):
I mean, I it should be you know, a given
and I get you know, there are some people going,
wait a second here, now.
Speaker 3 (42:07):
Are are we being you know, is this? Are we
falling into a trap?
Speaker 2 (42:12):
And I watched some of these videos and some of these,
you know, you're like, okay, you know, that does kind
of make some sense. You know, I see, you know,
the distraction, I see the destabilization, I see the you know,
and I'm looking at some of these, you know, but
but you know, and and I I think it is
important to kind of look at the forest from the
trees at times, you know, and I understand people are
(42:32):
very very nervous about their guns being uh taken away,
and you know, people have suggested that there might be
some false flag attacks just so the guns that get
taken away. I hope that never happens. I hope, you know,
we never have a government that does that. But we've
we've had and we've seen before, you know, people you know,
do really ridiculous, obstructive, you know, dictatory things, and and
(42:58):
you know, what happened with COVID looked didn't look like America.
That looked like a much different society. When a doctor
spoke out about why isn't the CDC, she tweeted why
in Maine, why didn't the CDC look at natural immunity?
Speaker 3 (43:14):
Why aren't they talking about it?
Speaker 2 (43:16):
She got her license suspended and she was ordered into
psychiatric treatment, So we'll keep it posted. But yeah, you
know it's it's you can't be talking stupid and you
can't be bringing up conspiracy theories when when murder may
have happened. But on the other hand, you know who's
(43:37):
deciding on these judgments one eight seven seven doctor ully?
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