Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Six one seven two six six, sixty eight sixty eight
is the number. I just want to state on to me. Now,
this is anecdotal. This is purely subjective. I'm not claiming
that I have some kind of insider knowledge or I'm
using scientific data for this. I can just speak for myself.
(00:22):
Growing up in the nineteen seventies, in the nineteen eighties, yeah,
you know, I you know, look, I ran into a
lot of people. I went to a very big school.
I went to a very big university. I got around. Yeah,
there was the occasional person here or there that was autistic,
or you'd see some parents, you know, parents with an
autistic child. But it was very rare, very rare. I
(00:46):
don't want to say unheard of, because you saw some,
but it was very rare. I'm telling you just through
my own eyes. In the last twenty years, a lot
more autism, a lot more autism. I'm noticing it. I'm
seeing it, parents with autistic children, people who are autistic.
(01:08):
I know teachers, I've spoken to them at schools and
they say, the last twenty twenty five years, the number
of autistic children we have to deal with. Their words,
not mine, have quote unquote skyrocketed. So something is happening.
This is not made up. This is not a conspiracy,
This is not fiction. There is a surge, a crisis,
(01:32):
whatever you want to call it. But rates autism rates
are going have gone much, much, much higher in the
last twenty to thirty years. And the question is why,
like something is causing this. Why six one seven two
six six sixty eight sixty eight is the number? Okay,
(01:56):
very quickly, Uh, this is a very good text that
I got six three. You can text the cooner man
seven zero four seven zero seven zero four seven zero
from six to oh three and again, just an absolutely
dynamite point. We watched the press conference with President Trump
(02:18):
and RFK Junior because we had a newsfeed that carried
the entire thing. But are you aware, Jeff, that Fox
News started to carry the press conference, but a little
while into it they cut away and went to something else. Now,
why do you suppose they cut their coverage short, Jeff?
(02:42):
Could it have anything to do with the fact that
Big Pharma is one of their main advertisers. Sometimes money
talks and sometimes money silences bingo bingo, And to be fair,
it's not just fack. MSNBC, CNN the nightly news. It
(03:05):
doesn't matter big Pharma. They make billions of dollars off
of big pharma advertising and newspapers as well. Just look
at the ads and newspapers. Half the ads are big Pharma. Okay.
This is from Tristan on Messenger and he's making a
(03:29):
very interesting point. Jeff, I've been following the research into
the link between increased rates of autism and children and
Thailand all being given to expectant mothers and young children
prior to the early nineteen eighties, and that is very true. Aspirin.
That's right. Aspirin was the preferred over the counter medicine
(03:53):
taken by both pregnant women and young children. Yet around
the early nineteen eighties, links between aspirin usage and Ray's
syndrome were being widely studied, and so pediatricians began recommending
that aspirin be substituted with tylanol, and thailand all purchases skyrocketed. Ironically,
(04:20):
this occurred around the same time as the infamous tailand
All murders, which I remember as well as a young
kid or I guess young teen. And then Tristan followed
up by saying, Jeff, the data that's been compiled about
the link between Thailand all use among pregnant women and
(04:41):
autism shows a definite spike in the rates of autism
among children birth from women who took Tayland all. You
know what they say, where there's smoke, there's fire. Now
it doesn't mean if you take Tayland all you're trying
going to have, you know, be autistic. You know, it
(05:03):
doesn't mean you're a bad mother or a negligent mother.
But they're noticing something is going on here. And you know,
if you don't need it, as Trump said, if you don't,
if you don't need to take it, what's the damage.
How does it hurt you not to take it, you know,
unless you really need to take it. And your doctor says, look,
(05:25):
I gotta take it. But unless it's that, why take it?
What does it hurt not to take it? And again,
it's just a recommendation. You want to take it, take it.
It's a free country. Greg in Boston, thanks for holding Greg,
and welcome.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
I was I've been listening. I've been listening to you
for a long time. One of your earlier callers mentioned
Brittany and Cooksy. I was laughing because I remember when
you used to sit in for Savage and I agree
with them. USA, such a strong voice, and I hope
you never change. It's been. I've been with you for
a long time.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
And yeah, I mean it's in Sally, but it's it's
it's funny. It's anything that Trump said. Trump could get out,
you know, go outside and say the sky's blue, and
then they would pick a rainy day and say, no,
it's not. It's great. He's a liar, he's a this,
he's a that. And in my in my own personal life,
I do everything in moderation. Okay. So, so I got
(06:29):
a headache, you know, I can't take it. I'll take
a tile and all you know, I go. I'm fifty eight,
you know. I go to the doctors and they ask you,
what do you want? What medications you take? And I'm
like nothing. I take some vitamins.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
And Greg, I'm sorry, can you please hang on? I'm
up against a heartbreak, but I want to come right
back to you. Okay, let's go right back to Greg
in Boston. Greg, you were saying you're fifty eight or
fifty nine years old, you only take vitamins. Yeah, when
you have a really bad headache. Of course you'll take
a tile and all when you go see your doctor.
(07:02):
You don't like to take medications. You're trying not to
take medications. You believe in moderation and all things, which
I agree with as well. Please pick up where you left.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
Off, Greg no Jeffers, as I was saying, it is everything.
It's like the ancient you were talking about, the ancient
Greece philosophers, the Stoics. It's everything in moderation. When I
go to the doctors, they ask if I'm any medications,
and I'm like no. They give you a double take.
We're an over medicated country. I mean probably the world
(07:34):
at large. Everything is a quick fix. Now, I went
to school at a time. Like I said, I'm a
little bit older than you. You know, had I gone
to school, you know today they diagnosed me with ad
D because I was a day dreamer in class, and
I don't know, and most of my friends were daydreamers.
But you get older, you mature, you get ability to concentrate,
(07:56):
and everything is not a quick fix. It's not a pill.
You know, I'm not some puritan. I like to have
a nice teak dinner. You know, watch the mac, Capitol grill, whatever.
But I picked my spots, you know, I picked my spots.
I eat pretty clean during the week. Weekends, I you know,
I'll indulge a little bit, and I think, if you
(08:17):
know again, and I'm not being preachy, you know, do
what you want. But if you live that way, you're
gonna have a higher quality of life. And it's the
answer is not a pill. You know, the answer is
not always a pill. And one of the other things
I just wanted to bring up, Jeff, you were talking
about when I originally called was just this. You're talking
(08:39):
about Jimmy Kimball and you know, the the victory al
somebody called any guy, where's a Trump hat? You know,
you gotta look look over your your shoulder, you know it.
It really starts at it, you know, at education in
the classroom, and you get all these moonbats, all these
woke people, and you get these kids for twelve years
(09:00):
is in grade school when their mind's appliable, and they're
just pumping this stuff. America is bad. You know, there's nothing.
When I went to school, it was patriotic. They talked
about all the great the greatest country in the world.
And if we want to If we want to change
things in the country, in large part, it really starts
with kids. Get on you know, get in school boards,
(09:22):
get in school committees. If you have kids in you know,
young kids, you got a dog in the fight. You know,
it's extra work, everybody's busy, but it's really worth it.
And that's how we're going to change because young people
come out of you know, grade school hating this country,
and then you know the cherry on top is they
go to college or university and they're socialists.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
You know.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
I was very fortunate my daughter went to a regional
school that just you know, reading, writing, arithmetic, and she
got a terrific education. And you know, she is not
she's not infected with this wokeness and I count my
blessings every single day for it. She went to a
I went to Salve Regina, you know, Jesuit school, and
(10:10):
she's got calmon sense. And if we want to change
the attitudes of this country, it really it really starts there,
and it's it's worked, but it's worth it, especially if
you get young kids. I'm very fortunate my daughter went
to school where she did, and then they're continuing at
a university level. But If we want to make some changes,
(10:33):
people need to have a love of country. It's the
greatest country in the world and it still is.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
You know, you're on fire. Seriously, you're a brother from
another mother. I couldn't agree with you more, not one
hundred one thousand percent. And I've been saying this for years.
The real change is only going to happen when we
take back to schools. And I love homeschooling. If you
(10:58):
want to do homeschooling, great. I love chartered schools, I
love private schools, religious schools, but the public school system
we have to take it back. And that's where the
indoctrination is really hard. That's where they hit you hard
and heavy. I mean, that's where they really start brainwashing
your children. And that's why run for school board, watch
(11:20):
over your child's education, monitor it, because you're right. They
get them when they're young, and then they finish them
off in college or university usually, and then they come
out literally flaming Communists or flaming Marxists. They become like
AOC or Elano mar and then if you're lucky, you
get them back in their forties and fifties. If you're lucky,
(11:43):
you know, for most people, because a life will teach
them what a lie they've been taught that, they've been
taught a pack of lies. But it takes a long time,
and the damage is immense. They ruin these kids's lives.
They come out bitter, anger, very miserable. They hate their
own country. They don't take advantage of all the opportunities
(12:06):
this country has to offer. But you know, it's even
more sinister than that, Greg, And let me just end
it by saying this, Look, I hear it from from
my fifteen year old son and my thirteen year old daughter.
Kids that you know, never even thought of themselves being
gay are now being told they're gay, or they're bisexual,
or they're transsexual, or they're transgender, or they're pan sexual
(12:30):
I'm not kidding, or they're furries or whatever. So you know,
like a girl that would just be considered a tomboy
when you and I were growing up, or a guy
that was maybe just a little more on the artistic
creative side and would have you know, a few but
we consider quote unquote, you know, feminine traits or whatever.
(12:51):
But you know, it's just because he's more sensitive or
more artistically inclined or whatever. Oh, I'm not kidding. You
got to get a sex change operation. You got to
take puberty blockers, you got to take all these kinds
of hormones. You got to eventually mutilate your genitals. I
mean they literally they destroy these children. It's got to stop.
(13:14):
It's got to stop. Thank you so much for that call, Greg.
And now we're leading this epidemic of trans shootings or
pro trans shootings like what happened at that Charlie Kirk.
So it starts in the schools and it gets worse
from there. Mary Anne in Danvers, thanks for holding Marianne,
(13:36):
and welcome.
Speaker 3 (13:39):
Thanks for taking my call. Just a quick I don't
know if you call it a comment, but I just
came back from Iceland and I have a lot of
sinus issues. So just from you know, flying, I had headache,
sinus headache. So I went into a pharmacy. Pharmacy was
writing Rakovic, which is the capital of Iceland, very metropolitan,
(14:00):
and I went to the pharmacist and I said, you know,
I have sinus problems. I have a headache. Can you
direct me you know where I can pick something up?
And she said, of course, and she brought me down
an aisle and gave me called cool and food cooling
cooling jealousy, so basically a media cooling relief from migraine.
(14:24):
So there was four on a pack and very thin.
You break them and it's like a sheet and you
put it on your head, non medicinal. And I said, oh.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
H, mary Anne, can you please hang on? I want
you to finish this. Okay, let's go right back to
mary Anne and Danvers. So she takes a trip to Iceland.
She's in the capital Raykovic. She the poor woman's got
sinus issues her. You know, her head is probably pounding her,
her head is pounding, and you know she's got obviously
(14:59):
a sinus pain. So she goes into the pharmacy. They say, sure,
we got something for your sinus problem. But they give
her something that's non medicinal. It's like a cold sheet
that she puts over her sinuses. Marianne, please pick up
where you left off.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Okay. So later on that day I went back to
my hotel and I know they lie down on the bed,
put it on. Within twenty minutes, my sinus pain was relieved.
And so prior to that, the pharmacist told me that
this is what we would use prior to taking any
(15:40):
type of medication. And this is how basically we do
things here. We are the type of society that reverts
back to how we were treated as children, and our
parents treated us, our grandparents practice this way. They basically
(16:01):
said that they would go that way first before introducing medication.
And she went on and told me about, you know,
the cold seasons and what they did during cold seasons
for children, and yeah, and it was pretty interesting. So
it worked, it worked. And then I went back and
(16:22):
I bought I bought many packs to bring home. And
I'm actually giving a path to a friend today who
suffers from migraines.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
Yeah, good for you. Right now, Mary Anne, Look you're
you're completely right. Look here it's the opposite. And look,
I don't want to denigrate because I think there's so
much good about American healthcare and American medicine, but here
it's it's not non medicinal. First, you know, as frankly
most of Europe, not just Iceland. And then okay, if
you need medicine, you take medicine. No, here, it popped
(16:52):
the pill right away. I mean it's you know, and
it doesn't matter. Pediatrician, doctor, just right, just take a pill.
There it is, take a pill. You almost walk in,
you barely say hello, and here, take a pill. Here,
here's a prescription. Take a pill. And I was talking
about this with Sandy when we were off air. Notice
in Europe, the one thing that stands out when you
(17:15):
watch TV, not that I watch TV here or there,
but it's just noticeable they're commercials. They don't have commercials
when it comes to Big Farmer the way we have here.
Where have you noticed, Like you watch these commercials and
it's if you suffer from depression, okay, and you're already
(17:35):
taking medication for it, okay. Then they say, well you
can try even a secondary medication, like in other words,
add even more to what you're originally taking, and maybe
with the secondary medication you're gonna feel even better. And
then they say, go talk to your doctor. And it's
(17:56):
always some crazy name that nobody can pronounce. So I'm
just gonna make one up, you know, uh, you know, Nadyssia,
So take ask your doctor about Meadyssia. And I'm watching
this and I'm like, why should I go and ask
my doctor about medicia. I'm just again, I'm making up
(18:17):
the name. Media, Why shouldn't the doctor talk to me
about nadyssia. In other words, if I'm in the doctor's office,
I'm like, you know, I'm being treated for depression. You
know what you're giving me, whatever it is, it just
doesn't seem to be working one hundred percent. Well, then
let the doctor recommend something. No, in this country, they're
(18:39):
spending billions of dollars to put ideas in your head
that you need to take even more medication, and then
you should go to your doctor and advocate for him
what medication you should take. I'm talking, it's a racket.