Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Arry Show is.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
On the air.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
You love is the greatest thing in the world. But
that's not what he said.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
He distinctively said to blave, and as we all know,
to blave means to bluff.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
So you're probably playing cards and he cheated. Liar liar. January.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
We just basically follow the money, you know, we look
at the presence executive orders and we else just follow
the money. So we started looking closely at USCID because
they were completely violating the presence executive orders to suspend
uh foreign foreign aid, you know's what's called foreign aid,
but in our view is a lot of corruption.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
We post the.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Receipts, so it's like this, this action has been taken.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
This actions taken.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
So when we get criticism, we say, like of what
which line do you disagree with? Like which cut, which
cost saving do you disagree with?
Speaker 1 (01:12):
And people usually can't think of.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
Any There are people who are charged with trying to
find savings. So yes, it's an attack on government, but
it's also an attack on this government. What I mean
by that is it's an attack on this government that
needs to be headed by a black man. It's an
attack on this government that almost elected a black woman
through the highest office in the land. It's an attack
(01:36):
on a government that has been more welcoming and more
supportive of people who have come to this country and
sold for a better life.
Speaker 5 (01:42):
September one, nineteen thirty nine, eighty six years ago, two
days ago, was the anniversary of the day that the
German panzers rolled into Poland. It's one of the images
of World War Two watching documentaries that has most embedded
(02:06):
itself and I can't get it out of my mind.
Those panthers are coming rolling in. Many would argue the
best tanks on the planet at that moment. Now there
would be quite an advancement in World War two technology
over the next few years. But as those tanks rolled in,
(02:29):
the proud Polish ran out to meet them, many of
them infantry units on foot, and then they brought in
the big dogs, the cavalry astride. They're beautiful horses, and
they're beautiful bespoke suits with that great cap with a
(02:54):
great hat on the top of the point. I forget
what you call it. Oh, it's glorious, it's regal. And
they were mowed down by the tanks and I think
to myself, they went to their deaths proud, noble, willing
to sacrifice. What a tragic, tragic moment, and that not
(03:17):
the Czech Republic that there will be peace. Mistake was
allowing Hitler into the Sudan Land or into the Czech
into Czechoslovakia. But Poland was the last straw. So the
Germans and the Russians decided to carve up Poland. That's
(03:41):
going to be there. They're packed setting off World War two.
The Polish are a proud people. Yesterday I read to
you the change in the percentage of the population in
every European country, and the lowest change in population was
in Poland, where it went from three percent to four
and a half percent. I'm not sure they're not going
(04:03):
to kick out the marginal difference Poland is for the Polish.
If you come to the country, you're going to follow
the rules. You're not going to live on welfare, You're
not going to rape the girls, you're not going to
stab the shopkeepers, you're not going to terrorize the residents.
We could learn from that in this country. England may
(04:25):
be too far gone. President Trump met with the leader
of Poland today. He clearly likes the guy. He has
referred to that in the past. I don't know if
he had a chance to rib the guy about the
Polish millionaire who was at the tennis tournament this last
week and stole the ball cap from the kid and
then said, well, first come, first served.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Somebody really needs to kick that.
Speaker 5 (04:46):
Guy in the wavos. But be that as it may,
Poland is a very very important ally at this moment
with what's going on amidst Russia and Ukraine and China
and North Korea. And for everyone saying, oh, look at
(05:10):
this Putin and She they're over there, and this is
a slight on Trump.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
No, Biden drove Putin into the arms of She.
Speaker 5 (05:21):
Biden created the Russian Chinese axis. We've made the mistake
of going to war with Putin through Ukraine, and it
has cost us dearly and it has made the world
less safe, and that that is an absolute fact. It's
(05:44):
a terrible, terrible thing that has occurred. And I think,
just as the Epstein secrets need to be revealed, I
think every detail of American involvement in Ukraine must be
he disclosed and revealed and punished. And I don't just
mean the over a million dollars that Hunter Biden was
(06:08):
paid to smoke crack on the board of Barisma. You
hadn't forgotten that, had you. I don't mean the involvement
of Hillary Clinton allegedly to assist her in election fraud
in twenty sixteen, that is being reported. I don't mean
(06:29):
the numerous trips that Lindsey Grahamnesty. Is amazing how bipartisan
they are on Ukraine. They are so concerned about Ukraine
if they were half as concerned about the United States.
It's almost as if they're getting kickbacks. I don't trust
Zelenski as far as I can throw the little fella,
and I might be able to throw the little fellow
(06:50):
because he's a little weasel.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
He's untrustworthy. And you don't have to like Putin.
Speaker 5 (06:58):
But do you ever notice, whether it's Archer, Carlson or
anyone else, who ever criticizes our involvement in Ukraine, the
extent of our involvement, the method of our involvement, If
you dare question it, as Americans should do, it's a
civilian government, by a representative government, representative of the people
(07:20):
who elect them. Then you're called a stooge for Putin
that should raise the biggest question.
Speaker 6 (07:29):
Where I can't believe he just said that happens that
Michael Berry show.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Well, the more that comes to light, the worse it looks.
Speaker 5 (07:40):
So there's a fellow by the name of doctor Dimitri
Dosclachas and this guy was I guess head of the
CDC at some point under.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Under Biden.
Speaker 5 (07:59):
And is a complete and utter freak show. Which fine,
if you want to be a tattoo artist and act
like this, fine, if you want to be a skateboard
shop owner, bike shop, fine, you know what, the more
of the merrier.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
It takes everything to make the world go run.
Speaker 5 (08:20):
But this guy, this guy was issuing decrees as to
what should be done with children. And this guy, okay,
well let me not all right, let me rewind twenty
twenty three. We've got monkey Pocks on the rise. And
(08:44):
so here's a guy who would would have the National
Guard hold you down and stick needles in you if
they could to put the COVID shot into you, which
would kill you. This is me six twenty one or
the mom him in twenty twenty three on MSNBC. But
when it came to dangerous behavior that causes oh I
(09:07):
don't know ade and at that point, monkey pox which
was spreading fast. So they're talking about these sex festivals
around the world that rich gay gas go on, and
it's basically just one big rump. And here's what he says.
(09:27):
He doesn't want to judge gay people because he is.
Speaker 7 (09:31):
I work in HIV normally, and I'll tell you that,
you know, I always say that I've never made an
HIV diagnosis in someone that hasn't somehow related to stigma.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
I think empox is the same.
Speaker 7 (09:41):
So really, uh, stigma tends to be a barrier to testing,
a barrier to vaccination, and so you know, really addressing
stigma intentionally and making sure that we get the word
out in a way that supports people's joy as opposed
to you know, calling them risky. So I think, you know,
one of the things to think about is that, you know,
one person's idea of risk is another person's idea of
(10:03):
a great festival.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
Or Friday night for that matter.
Speaker 7 (10:05):
So we have to sort of embrace that with joy
and make sure that folks know how to keep themselves safe.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
All right.
Speaker 5 (10:11):
So here is doctor Dasala Duska Lacas, who poses in
Speedo's he's hulked up round steroids.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
But he's hulked up. He's got tattoos all over.
Speaker 5 (10:24):
There's pictures of him in all sorts of sato masochistic gear.
All of this is spreads for magazines like this is progress.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
I guess.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
So here he is on ABC this week and he's
very upset over RFK changing the hepatitis B vaccine recommendation
for newborns. We should not be injecting needles into newborns
for a hepatitis B. But he does not look out
(10:56):
for the child. He looks out for big pharma, and
they need a subscription in every single human being. The
more needles ache and jab, the more money they can make.
This is not medical direction here, this is absolute sellout
the big pharma.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
Listen to this.
Speaker 7 (11:12):
I mean, from my vantage point as a doctor who's
taken the hippocratic oath, I only see harm coming. I
may be wrong, but based on what I'm seeing, based
on what I've heard with the new members of the
Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices or ACIP, they're really moving
in an ideologic direction where they want to see the
undoing of vaccination. They do want to see the undoing
(11:33):
of mRNA vaccination. They have a very specific target on COVID,
but I do fear that they have other things that
they are going to be working on. Hepatitis B vaccine
is on the agenda for the meeting in September. I
predict that what they're going to do is try to
change the birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine so that
kids don't get it.
Speaker 1 (11:52):
When they're born. So if you have a.
Speaker 7 (11:54):
Mother who is well connected to care, you know, are
hepatitis B status, that may not matter very much. But
if you have a mother who's not gone to prenatal
care who comes into deliver, we have one bite at
that apple. So that child gets that important hepatitis B vaccine.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
But he's not the only one.
Speaker 5 (12:12):
Here's a former Obama CDC director on ABC this week
named Richard Besser, and you can't believe they would say
things like this.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
You can't believe it, but they do.
Speaker 5 (12:26):
He is lamenting the fact that RFK Junior is giving
parents the right to determine what medical treatments their children receive.
Speaker 8 (12:38):
Listen to this, because of what you're seeing at the CDC,
who should people take advice from now?
Speaker 9 (12:45):
The CDC still well for personal health information, I think
you need to talk to your doctor, your nurse, your pharmacist.
I worry though about the nation as a whole. I
served as the acting director of the cd SEE at
the start of the Obama administration, and the reason I
was given that job was that I had run emergency
(13:05):
preparedness at the agency for four years. They wanted to
make sure someone was in that seat in the event
there was a public health emergency, and there was. There
was the H one N one swine flu pandemic. We
now have as an acting director someone with absolutely no
public health experience, and that puts us all at incredible risk.
Speaker 8 (13:24):
And doctor Meshler, I want to ask you one thing
about mandates. It's one of the things that Secretary Kennedy
said this week and touted progress that he's made. He
said he ended the mandates. Why do you think mandates
are important?
Speaker 9 (13:38):
Well, you know, when I think about mandates, I think
about children going to school. I think about young parents
who are sending their children to school and want to
know that their children are safe. And the way children
are safe from vaccine preventable diseases is by getting vaccinated themselves.
But no vaccine is one hundred percent, and so you
count on the other children in that clism being vaccinated.
(14:01):
I think with this secretary we are on a path
to it being largely parental choice, and that is going
to put at risk those people who for whom the
vaccine didn't work, and children who may have medical conditions
where they can't get vaccinated. That is a major step
backwards for public health.
Speaker 8 (14:17):
And if there quickly, if you will, if there were
another pandemic, you think there should be a mandate.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Well, it depends on the situation.
Speaker 2 (14:25):
You know.
Speaker 9 (14:25):
If it's a situation like we had with COVID early on,
where you have a new infectious agent, yeah, mandates can
save millions of lives. If it's another situation where your
own decision to vaccinate doesn't have an impact on other people,
then you want to look to give people as much
choice as they can. That's where the balance is and
will change during an event as you learn more information.
Speaker 5 (14:48):
This is a theme throughout everything with relation to white liberals.
Speaker 1 (14:55):
They are authoritarians.
Speaker 5 (14:57):
You shouldn't get to decide what needles get stuck in
your kid. You shouldn't get to decide if your kid
wants to cut off his Willie. You shouldn't get to
decide what your child will be taught at school. You
shouldn't get to decide anything for your child, because not
only does it take a village, but the village idiot
(15:23):
is a liberal authoritarian who will make decisions for you.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
Wow. Just wow, Michael Berry.
Speaker 5 (15:40):
In the system modern. So I've been going back. I've
been on a deep dive into COVID. Now lots of
reports are coming back out, and I thought I started
compiling different bits of audio and it and it evoked
(16:01):
different emotions in me hearing some of these things, and
I thought I would just share some of those lest
we forget all right, let's take a flashback to May
of twenty twenty one. COVID is in full swing. The
mayor of New York at the time, Bill Deblasio, who'd
have thought? We'd never thought it could be worse to build?
(16:22):
De Blasio calling mom, Donnie is worse, but we didn't
think it could get worse. They're trying to get people
to take something called a vaccine that's not a vaccine.
So one of the things they offer is free French
fries and a hamburger. Wait a second, you now, four
(16:45):
years later, has spike proteins that, if you've survived them,
might still kill you. And you trade it at all
for a hamburger. Even a street corner prostitute values her
life more than that.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
But we want to make sure we're giving you a
burger fry. Hey, here's this burger fries. Let us stab
you with this thing.
Speaker 5 (17:10):
Let us put something into you that you'll later find
out it's more likely to kill you than covid is.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
But we don't want to offend anyone.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
So if you don't eat burgers, we respect all ways
of life because.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
We don't want to offend the people who don't eat
the burgers fries. When you get vaccinated. I got vaccinated.
Speaker 10 (17:35):
You're saying I could get this be delicious fries. What
I mean so there's also a burger element to this.
Let me let me check with Bill neath hard. Is
it too early in the day to eat a burger?
This could be breakfast couch. Okay, I want you to
look at this and think about again. Some people love hamburger.
(17:59):
Something don't really want to respect all ways of life.
But if this is appealing to you, just think of
this when you think of vaccination, vaccinations.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
I'm getting a very good feeling.
Speaker 10 (18:16):
About vaccination rate this moment.
Speaker 5 (18:19):
This is one of the best moments I've seen on
the COVID conversation, and particularly the vaccine that's not a vaccine.
I mentioned this. This is RFK Junior when he was
talking to Bill Maher and he says, the people who
got the vaccine had a twenty three percent higher death
(18:42):
rate from all causes than people who didn't. And mar says, well,
maybe that's the disease. And he says, well, then the
vaccine didn't work.
Speaker 11 (18:54):
Did it.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
There's twenty five percent of Americans who believe that they
know somebody who was killed a COVID vaccine killed killed,
twenty five percent of Americans. Fifty two percent of Americans
believe that the vaccines are causing injuries, including death fifty oh.
(19:15):
If you look at the clinical trial studies, the actual
studies that were done that were released of the fires vaccine,
MODERNA has not released it.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
If you look at the.
Speaker 6 (19:25):
Fiser vaccine, there was there were twenty two thousand people
placeive it group, twenty two thousand people who got the
actual vaccine, and the people who got the vaccine had
a twenty three higher death rate from all causes at
the end of that study.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
If that could not be the disease itself.
Speaker 6 (19:49):
Well, because we know that if it is, then the
vaccine doesn't work.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
Well, it's early.
Speaker 5 (19:57):
Here is some advice you can actually use. First of all,
the flu shot, in my opinion, has no usefulness.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
And when you.
Speaker 5 (20:06):
Understand how the flu shot is built and when it's built,
and then it's only a one in three chance that
they get it right in the first place, and there
are downsides to it. There's a real corollary to covid here.
But here she is talking about the fact that the
flu shot is not what you should do. You should
(20:28):
do other things to make your body stronger for the
flu or covid or whatever comes your way. Now, there
are people right now, and you may be one of
them saying he's crazy. Now he doesn't want us to
get a flu shot. I'm not giving you advice. What
I want you to do is think for yourself and
review the actual data. Do you know how many people
(20:51):
get the flu who took the flu shot? Doesn't sound
to me like it has a talismanic effect, does it.
So who's pushing the flu shot just look at who's
pushing the flu shot, the same people who pushed the
COVID vaccine, which.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Wasn't you look into the flu shot.
Speaker 12 (21:11):
It does not prevent hospitalization or death right and it
actually can increase your risk in getting other respiratory trage infections.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
So I'm a big believer in earlier treatment.
Speaker 12 (21:21):
If you look at ivermectin, it actually blocks the entry
of the influenza virus into the nucleus. If you're not
comfortable with ivermectin, Zoefluza is a one day pill that
you can take if you get the flu, and then
you just got to find a doctor that will take
care of you. Even if those things don't work, there's
things that can be done to keep you from getting
(21:41):
in the hospital or dying from pneumonia as a consequence
of the flu.
Speaker 5 (21:46):
Professor Robert Clancy talking about a new Japanese study involving
twenty million people. As you know, in science, the bigger
your data set, the more likely there is integrity in
your results because outliers will become just that if I
(22:10):
flip a coin three times, it might come up heads
three times, and you might go, hey, there's hundred percent
chance you flip a coin, it's going to come up heads.
But if I flip a coin twenty million times, it's
probably going to end.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Up roughly fifty to fifty. The more times you have,
the bigger.
Speaker 5 (22:33):
The data set, the better the likelihood for integrity in
your results.
Speaker 13 (22:38):
There's been I'm not sure if you've seen. It's just
coming out of Japan. At the moment, it's only semi
in print. But in Japan they are able to take
twenty million people and work out who had the vaccine
and who didn't, and they are able to show highly
significant that all the ex stiffs were in the vaccinated group,
(23:03):
that the non vaccinated group had none. Now, all right,
that's just one study in Japan, but last thirty of
twenty minute million people, twenty two million people, it's not
last week. A very smart statistician in Australia sent me
his paper that he's just publishing, so I won't mention
(23:25):
all the details. But what he was able to show
was that about three months after every explodge of a
vaccine booster, mortality went up. And that's exactly the timing
the Japanese found. They found that the peak mortality was
(23:49):
one hundred days after the after vaccine, vaccination whatever the
vaccinate never had then the So there's this amazing consistency
now that's starting to come.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
Remembering that the Australian.
Speaker 13 (24:05):
Government had an inquiry into which SYS this and said
there's nothing in it.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
This old use, here's a job con use. That tone
to me, not a joe.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
That's sarcastic, contemptuous tone, that means you know everything because
you're a man, and I know nothing because I'm a woman.
Speaker 1 (24:21):
That is not a joke. That is a natural fact.
The Michael Very Show.
Speaker 5 (24:28):
Flashback October twenty nineteen, just a year before COVID's gonna hit.
I'm sorry, just sorry, a few months before COVID's gonna hit.
And and by the way, it's already it's already been
unleashed from the Wuhan lab in Wuhan. They're already working
through it, whether by by intentional or accidental. And Fauci
(24:53):
says it will take a decade to develop and properly
test an effective mRNA vaccine.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
A decade. Well, how was it that a year.
Speaker 5 (25:05):
Later they put something on the market that Pfizer and
Maderna we're getting top dollar four? How were they able
to do it that fast if it should have taken
a year.
Speaker 11 (25:18):
The critical challenge, and it relates to one of the
things that Peggy said, is that in order to make
the transition from getting out of the tried and true
egg growing, which we know gives us results that can
be beneficial, I mean, we've done well with that to
something that has to be much better. You have to
(25:39):
prove that this works, and then you've got to go
through all of the clinical trials phase ones, phase two,
phase three, and then show that this particular product is
going to be good over a period of years.
Speaker 1 (25:53):
That alone, if it works perfectly, is going to take
a decade. All right, I have to go back to
all the lies we were told.
Speaker 5 (26:02):
It's important to understand the lies we were told to
understand their ability to lie to you in the future.
Those who do not learn the lessons of history are
doomed to repeat them, said George Santana. This was posted
by May's on x It's from March of twenty twenty
one and CNN breaks the news that Pfizer is one
(26:23):
hundred percent effective in preventing infection and sickness in twelve
to fifteen year olds. We now know that is one
hundred percent a lie.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Producing breaking news.
Speaker 14 (26:35):
Drug maker Pfizer just announcing the results of its vaccine
trial for adolescence. It says its coronavirus shop was one
hundred percent effective at preventing infection and sickness among twelve
to fifteen year olds. This could be a major game
changer for reopening schools across America. So joining us now
is doctor Chris Pernell. She's a public health physician and
fellow at the American College of Preventative Medicine.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
I'm doctor Parnell.
Speaker 15 (26:58):
Great to see you.
Speaker 1 (26:59):
One hundred effective is that?
Speaker 14 (27:01):
I mean, John, I haven't heard numbers like that. Is
that unusual to find.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
That efficacy rate?
Speaker 15 (27:07):
Well, that's even higher than what we were reported when
we had ninety five percent efficacy in adults. Look, we
know these mRNA vaccines are a game changer. The technology
is different, The technology is very promising.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
I mean it's one hundred percent. I mean, I mean,
you know it does not get any better.
Speaker 5 (27:25):
Now Here is a two part set of quotes. The
first one President Biden, the President of the United States.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
You would mean you'd hope you.
Speaker 5 (27:36):
Can trust the president right telling you that the COVID
vaccine was in the fall of twenty twenty one.
Speaker 1 (27:43):
Provides a strong protection.
Speaker 13 (27:45):
I want to emphasize that the vaccines provide very strong
protection from severe almost from COVID nineteen.
Speaker 5 (27:52):
And then here is the CEO Affizer later admitting two
doses offered no protection. Oh, it spikes your proteins, it
can kill you, but it offers no protection.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
So why were they mandating it. The two dose of
the vaccine offer a very limited protection.
Speaker 13 (28:12):
Ifan me the three doses with a booster, they offer
a reasonable protection.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
Well why did they mandate it?
Speaker 5 (28:19):
Because Anthony Fauci, you know doctor Doom, the guy who
is supposed to know everything about this, said you should
do it for other people, not to be selfish for
your own health, but to protect other people.
Speaker 16 (28:33):
You should care because if you get infected and you're
not vaccinated, there is a chance, maybe a likelihood, that
you will be part of the dynamics of the continuation
of the chain of transmission. Mainly you will inadvertently or
innocently transmit it to someone else who will then transmit
(28:54):
it to someone else.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
And I don't think anyone.
Speaker 16 (28:56):
Would intentionally want to be part of the transmission you
want to be a dead end to the virus.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
So when the virus gets to you, you stopping.
Speaker 16 (29:06):
You don't allow it to use you as the stepping
stone to the next person. So those are the things
that we asked people to consider, not only your own health,
but your society will responsibility.
Speaker 5 (29:18):
And then there was Deborah Burkes. She was right there
beside him. Remember President Trump would have the press conferences.
Here were the two science guys. He turned to them, go,
I got to rely on them same way you would
rely on your lawyers, or your CPA or your doctor.
These are my experts. What they say, I'm told they're
the experts. Well, they lied to him.
Speaker 17 (29:35):
We only knew if those vaccines protected against severe disease
and hospitalization. We didn't study silent infection. People were not
tested without symptoms on those trials. I don't know how
it got translated that these vaccines would protect people from infection.
It was wrong then, it is wrong now we could.
It's potential that you can make a vaccine better than
(29:58):
natural infection, but it's very hard to do.
Speaker 5 (30:00):
Here was the line from Joe Rogan I thought was
pretty good. He said, one of the things that I'm
sad about is how many people were promoters of the
vaccine and then died suddenly.
Speaker 18 (30:09):
One of the things that I I'm sad about, but
it's also kind of hilarious is how many people were
promoters of the vaccine then died suddenly. It's crazy how
many young people just died in their sleep after they
took it, and everybody's like nothing to see here.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
Set in adult death syndrome.
Speaker 18 (30:28):
Yeah, just died suddenly. You ever go to that died
suddenly Instagram page? Like, holy, there's so many and so
many people like talking about people who are you know,
anti Darwin, anti vaxers, and then you're dead. Sorry you bought,
you bought into the wrong bolt. But that's you know,
if you really want to get cruel, that's Darwinism.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Do you not know they lie by now?
Speaker 4 (30:50):
Do you not?
Speaker 1 (30:51):
Are you not aware of the opioid crisis?
Speaker 18 (30:52):
You're not aware of viox you're not aware of the
various like to twenty five percent of all FDA approved
drugs that get pulled one out of four.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
And you're like, really, you're.
Speaker 9 (31:02):
An anti vaccery, your conspiracy theorist, you fool.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Darwin's gonna do its work with.
Speaker 18 (31:08):
You, you're modifying your genes.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
You've idiot, like, what are you doing? What are you doing?
Speaker 18 (31:14):
You're just gonna trust Pfiser, Well, they do support Anderson
Cooper brought to you by Pfizer, and you're like, oh,
this must be legit.
Speaker 5 (31:22):
You know that there is at least an irony, if
not even a sense of justice to the number of
people who lectured the rest of us and then they
themselves died from it.
Speaker 1 (31:34):
I don't take joy in that.
Speaker 5 (31:37):
If you look up the term died suddenly, and how
many people died clean my brother shortly after taking the vaccine.
It's a great loss, and I don't think it was accidental.
And yes, I have a great deal of anger, but
I'm going to express that anger in the long haul,
off the short because I don't have to fight proteins,
(31:58):
so I'm going to be around a while. I hope
to be able to torment these pharmaceutical companies and Fauci
and Berks and all the people who did what they
did to this country, because that's what justice looks like
to me.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
All Right.
Speaker 5 (32:12):
I cobbled together all this audio on a similar subject,
and I've been quoting this thing for a few days,
and here it is comedian Jimmy Doore talking about the
COVID vaccine using a little humor. And I think it's
important to use humor to make your point because you
can say things you couldn't get away with if you
were screaming in horror.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
I don't have many friends after COVID. I tell you
the truth about COVID, and yeah, you want to, you
want to experience social distancing. Tell people the truth about
Tony Fauci that stay away from you. And I'm not
saying that the COVID nineteen vaccine doesn't work.
Speaker 1 (32:56):
Oh I'm saying this.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
Everybody I know who got the COVID nineteen backsvaccine then
got COVID.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Is that how vaccines work?
Speaker 3 (33:08):
Now?
Speaker 2 (33:09):
Could you imagine if we all got the polio vaccine
and in the same year we all got polio. I'd
be like, hey, ah, I don't think that polio vaccine works.
Why do you say that, jim ut polio