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March 18, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Verie Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
What happened? Something must have happened.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
It's not you, it's me.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
You're giving me the it's not you, it's me routine
I invented. It's not you, it's me. Nobody tells me
it's them, not me. If it's anybody, it's me.

Speaker 5 (00:30):
George, it's you.

Speaker 4 (00:31):
You're a damn right, it's meg.

Speaker 6 (00:39):
Let's start with a new polling that shows the Democratic
Party has preached an all time low in popularity. The
latest NBC News national poll finds that a majority of
registered voters fifty five percent have a negative view of
the party, while it's twenty seven percent. Just over a
quarter of registered voters have a positive view of the party.

(01:17):
That's the party's lowest rating in NBC News polling dating
back to nineteen ninety. Meanwhile, though a k New CNNSSRS
poll finds the Democratic Party's favorability rating at just twenty
nine percent, a record low going back to nineteen ninety two,

(01:37):
and a drop of twenty points since January of twenty
twenty one. What's more, just sixty three percent of Democrats
and Democratic leaning independents have a favorable view of their
own party, down nine points from January and eighteen points
from the start of the Biden administration.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
You know good, You know good, baby, you know good.

Speaker 7 (02:30):
Democrats are in disarray. It's really really bad. And I
only hope that it gets worse. I really do because
watching them snipe at each other, a circular firing squad,

(02:50):
it is.

Speaker 5 (02:52):
It is glorious.

Speaker 7 (02:55):
You know, when the crazies in their party, the far left,
turn their artillery from US American people to the leaders
of their party and start insulting them, it is beautiful.

(03:15):
They recognize they've got a problem. They also recognize that
the petulant little children of ilhan Omar aoc Ayana, Presley
Jasmine Crockett, who's a new member of the squad here,
that these people love the attention they're getting, and by
throwing bombs in there on Schumer and Pelosi and all that,

(03:38):
they're making the news. And that's their business to be
in the news. So the Democrats are in real trouble.
They are in real trouble. And now it's like they're
coming together in a confessional Democrats anonymous to try to
figure out what they can do to solve their problem.

Speaker 8 (03:56):
Okay, folks, let's gather around here to democrats anonymous, the
safe space where you could admit that you're losing elections,
embarrassing yourselves, and worst of all, filming tiktoks about it Democrats?

Speaker 5 (04:10):
Okay, who would like to go first? Him?

Speaker 3 (04:13):
Mike?

Speaker 9 (04:15):
I used to think defunding the police and shouting slogans
at brunch was a winning strategy. Now I realized voters
have jobs and mortgages, and well, maybe, just maybe they
don't want to be lectured by a guy in a
Chego our T shirt.

Speaker 5 (04:30):
Yeah yeah, okay, yeah, whoa whoa, Mike, you saw like
a Republican? You take an independent?

Speaker 9 (04:38):
No, no, no, I just think maybe if we didn't
let our interns run our pr strategy, here's the look
at our successes.

Speaker 10 (04:46):
Hi, my name's Stacy and I identify as a cat.

Speaker 5 (04:49):
And I am perfect.

Speaker 11 (04:51):
I've got a question, what if we like focus on
jobs and lowering grocery products? And that's today's lesson and
Democrats and not you either keep dancing or you get
the move or die.

Speaker 7 (05:07):
So here is Alexandria Cassio Cortes on CNN with Jake
Tapper talking about the unthinkable, dislodging the leader of the
Democrat Party.

Speaker 5 (05:19):
What do you think of the job that Chuck Schammer's doing?

Speaker 12 (05:20):
Would you ever challenge him?

Speaker 1 (05:21):
Do you think?

Speaker 13 (05:22):
I think that what we need right now is a
United Senate Democratic caucus that can stand up for this
country and not vote for cloture and not vote for
this bill. And I think that the strength that we
have is in this moment reconciliation. And all of these
Republicans do not need Democratic votes for that, they need
it for this. And so the strength of our leadership

(05:43):
in this moment is going to demonstrate the strength of
our caucus. And I cannot urge enough how bad of
an idea it is to empower and enable Donald Trump
and Elon Muskin this moment.

Speaker 12 (05:53):
It is dangerous and it is reckless.

Speaker 7 (05:57):
Dangerous and reckless were the copy points they gave her
to go out and say. Here is Jasmine Crockett, I'm
ashamed to say is from Texas and she's on with
Jake Tapper, and Tapper seems to be picking at this
scab over Democrat infighting and encouraging more of it.

Speaker 5 (06:16):
Why because of what's happening right now.

Speaker 7 (06:20):
You've got a lot of primary content creators who are
inciting Democrat on democrat insult because that's how they get
us to replay their stuff. Otherwise their stuff doesn't get replayed.

Speaker 14 (06:37):
I'llpic of discussion among Democrats. Last week, you were one
of those who participated in a Choose your Fighter video.
It got some criticism online, including Democratic Senator John Fetterman
called it bizarre and reportedly mocked it in the Senate
hall way. I will say that you're punching look better

(06:58):
than some of your colleagues.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
He's been.

Speaker 14 (07:00):
Fetterman has been criticizing your party for undignified antics and
a sad cavalcade of self pH owns during the President's
addressed to Congress. What's your response to Senator Fetterman, He's.

Speaker 12 (07:12):
Not the one to talk about anything.

Speaker 15 (07:14):
I mean, this is a guy that doesn't seemingly.

Speaker 12 (07:16):
Want to own a suit, own a suit.

Speaker 15 (07:18):
I'm not really sure, but I don't show up in
hoodies when I'm going on the floor.

Speaker 12 (07:22):
And so the idea that you would.

Speaker 15 (07:24):
Say that we could not have a moment in which
an influencer asked us to do this. Now, I'll be
perfectly honest with you and tell you that when she
asked me to jump, I said, did.

Speaker 12 (07:34):
You ask my older colleagues to do this?

Speaker 15 (07:36):
Because I feel like you're picking on me because you
think that my knees.

Speaker 12 (07:39):
Are a little younger.

Speaker 15 (07:40):
And I did not know who all was in this
particular trend whatsoever. And I think that it is important
that people see that we're real people, and even if
that means that there's a moment to laugh, that's okay,
especially since it seems like we're doing more crying than anything.
But just know that we were not on the house

(08:00):
jumping around at all, whereas Senator Fetterman is consistently walking
around the Senate chamber, and he is walking around in
such a way that they literally had to change the
rules in the Senate so that he could walk around
that way. So I just don't think that he's necessarily
the one to actually have an opinion about this.

Speaker 16 (08:21):
I'm not sure what your question was with the Michael Berry.

Speaker 5 (08:25):
I lost the plot somewhere you did.

Speaker 7 (08:29):
We're talking about how unpopular the Democrats are right now,
and how there are some Democrats like James Carbole and others.
We're trying to right the ship. The problem is they've
got too many kooks, they've let into positions of if
not leadership, They've let them have the microphone too long.

(08:53):
And this should be continued because it's a failing strategy.
This is how you end up with Shila Jackson Lee
always hogging the mic until she died a Maxine Waters.
These types of individuals. Well, here's Manu Raju on CNN

(09:14):
talking about how bad the Democrats are these days.

Speaker 5 (09:19):
So bad.

Speaker 7 (09:20):
It's the lowest ever recorded in CNN's polling, which is
more than thirty years.

Speaker 17 (09:30):
A brand new exclusive CNN poll that paints a brutal
reality for Democrats as they struggle to mount a unified
opposition to President Trump. American's favorable views of the Democratic
Party brand are at a record low, just twenty nine percent.
That's compared to thirty six percent for Republicans. It is
the lowest ever recorded for Democrats in CNN polling going

(09:53):
back more than thirty years, as you can see the
party's numbers dropping a staggering twenty points in just four years.
The cnnsrsr's poll also found fifty seven percent of Democrats
and Democratic leaning voters are more interested in seeing their
party leaders stop the GOP agenda compared to forty two
percent who are more interested in cutting bipartisan deals. It

(10:15):
is a big shift from where the party stood at
the start of Trump's first term in twenty seventeen. Now,
this survey was taken before this week's tumultuous battle over
funding the government, which resulted in one of the ugliest
intra party democratic disputes in years, and that many in
the party lobbing furious attacks a Senate Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer,
who ultimately reversed course and let the GOP bill funding

(10:38):
the government become law in order.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
To avert a shutdown.

Speaker 17 (10:42):
Now a bitter round of finger pointing is taking shape
after Democrats failed to get a single concession from the
GOP despite having their first piece of leverage to fight
back against Trump. Now, the big question where does a
party in deepening turmoil and in open warfare go from here?

Speaker 5 (10:59):
That is CNN, Now we go.

Speaker 7 (11:04):
CNN is trying to moderate back to being a less
lefty cheerleading group because it killed their ratings. But here
is the entity that is the avowed leftist cheerleader, and
that's MSNBC. So we've got drunk sexual harasser Chris Matthews

(11:24):
talking to Mourning Joe's mistress, Mika Brazenski, And you got
to realize Chris Matthews was chief of staff to Tip O'Neil.

Speaker 5 (11:33):
He is an old fashion.

Speaker 7 (11:36):
Democrat, a favor trading, corrupt Democrat. Mika Brazenski's father's a
big new Brazenski was the follow up to Henry Kissinger.
He was the Carter Administration's Henry Kissinger.

Speaker 5 (11:52):
He is a blue was a blue.

Speaker 7 (11:54):
Blood Democrat intellectual on foreign policy. Now his ideas were
all bunk, but he was blue blood.

Speaker 5 (12:04):
And I'm sure he had.

Speaker 7 (12:05):
Something to do with getting his daughter on to become
a Morning Joe's mistress. So you're talking about two stallwart Democrats,
not good people, but within the Democrat Party, these people
are stalwarts, and they're talking about how bad the Democrats are.

Speaker 6 (12:22):
Let's start with the new polling that shows the Democratic
Party has reached an all time low in popularity. The
latest NBC News national poll finds that a majority of
registered voters fifty five percent have a negative view of
the party, while twenty seven percent just over a quarter
of registered voters have a positive view of the party.

(12:43):
That's the party's lowest rating in NBC News polling dating
back to nineteen ninety Meanwhile, though he knew, CNNSSRS poll
finds the Democratic Party's favorability rating at just twenty nine percent,
a record law going back to nineteen ninety two, and
a drop of twenty points since January of.

Speaker 12 (13:06):
Twenty twenty one.

Speaker 6 (13:07):
What's more, just sixty three percent of Democrats and Democratic
leaning independents have a favorable view of their own party,
down nine points from January and eighteen points from the
start of the Biden administration. The Republican Party's favorability ratings
stands at thirty six percent. Okay, I want to break

(13:29):
this all down. There's some numbers also on Trump's first
What are we in seven weeks now?

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Who's counting?

Speaker 12 (13:36):
It's moving quickly.

Speaker 6 (13:38):
But Chris Matthews, what do you make of these numbers
for the Democrats?

Speaker 18 (13:41):
Well, you could have seen them the night did Trump
address the Congress. When you watch the Democratic Party, they
seemed like they weren't there. They were sort of vacant.
They weren't saying anything with their manner. They never questioned
the facts. They let the president life.

Speaker 5 (14:01):
He's always slurring. I guess because he's always drunk.

Speaker 7 (14:03):
But what's interesting about this is that what you're witnessing
is for the first time in a long time, people
in media criticizing the Democrats. Now, they don't criticize them
as in, hey, guys, you're trying to chop off little
boys wieners to make them into girls. Hey guys, these

(14:25):
illegal aliens that are here, they're killing people and they're
trafficking in children and drugs that is destroying our country.
They never criticized them on policy. They criticize them on Hey,
I want you guys to win. Because remember, Trump delusion
syndrome is a very very serious condition, and a big

(14:48):
part of that condition is that at no matter the cost,
no matter what issue we have to take up, no
matter what issue we have to let go of, we
must beat Trump. We can never let him win. And
that's where the problems come in. So they're criticizing Chuck

(15:09):
Schumer for uh, they're criticizing Chuck Schumer for keeping the
filibuster from happening because the filibuster would have been embarrassing
to the Democrats. And oh, by the way, Scott Jennings
makes a great point. He says Schumer helped defeat that
racist Jim Crow filibuster, forcing Jake Tapper to have to
explain to the audience what that meant, which is glorious.

Speaker 19 (15:32):
First of all, I just want to say I'm grateful
for Chuck Schumer today. He helped defeat a racist Jim
Crow filibuster in the Senate and to stand up against
the racist Jim Crow philibus tactics was a moment of
pure courage and I just think he should be allowed
by anybody in any party for that's number one number.

Speaker 14 (15:54):
When there was a Democratic push against the filibuster, people
in the Democratic Party were saying it was a racist era,
Jim Crow era, and it was tactics.

Speaker 19 (16:05):
And not only that, but he he saved us from
the Democrats in the House, laying off every single veteran
in the federal government, Chuck Trimmer working with Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
Save this book.

Speaker 12 (16:17):
So I think he I think.

Speaker 11 (16:23):
Scott's having a lot of money.

Speaker 17 (16:25):
We're going to be changing the name of the Gulf
of Mexico.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
To the Gulf of Michael Berry, which has a beautiful way.

Speaker 7 (16:35):
Cheryl Atkinson was at CBS News in two thousand and
six when she started reporting on things that caused the
Democrats and the establishment problems. She ended up getting pushed
out at CBS News and some horrible, horrible things happened
to her. She did a story about flu deaths among

(16:56):
the elderly continuing to climb after getting the flu shot.
We're never going to stop revisiting COVID. This is why
the Jews constantly remember the Holocaust, the premise being if
you forget, it will happen again. So let's go to

(17:20):
Cheryl Atkinson's CBS News all the way back.

Speaker 5 (17:23):
To when she was at CBS.

Speaker 7 (17:24):
Now she's not, She's at Sinclair now and basically independent.
But here she was back in two thousand and six.
But think about this for a moment. I have long
argued the flu shot is ineffective at a minimum, if
not harmful. What if you're more likely to die if
you're old if you get the flu shot than if

(17:45):
you don't.

Speaker 10 (17:45):
It stands the reason that flu deaths among the elderly
should have taken a dramatic dip, making an x craft
like this. Instead, flu deaths among the elderly continue to climb.

Speaker 5 (17:55):
Whoa yesterday.

Speaker 10 (17:57):
Here's what scientists have found over twenty year. The percentage
of seniors getting flu shots increase sharply, from fifteen percent
to sixty five percent. It stands to reason that flu
deaths among the elderly should have taken a dramatic dip
making an X graph like this. Instead, flu deaths among
the elderly continued to climb.

Speaker 12 (18:16):
It was hard to believe.

Speaker 10 (18:17):
So searches at the National Institutes of Health set out
to do a study adjusting for all kinds of factors
that could be masking the true benefits of the shots.
But no matter how they crunched the numbers, they got
the same disappointing result. Flu shots have not reduced deaths
among the elderly. It's not what health officials hope to find.
NIH wouldn't let us interview the study's lead author, so

(18:37):
we went to Boston and found the only co author
not employed by NIH, doctor Tom Reikert.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
We realized that we had incendiary materials.

Speaker 10 (18:46):
Doctor Reichert says they thought their study would prove vaccinations.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
It helped. We were trying to do something mainstream, that's
for sure.

Speaker 12 (18:52):
Were surprised astonishment. Did you check the data a couple
of times to make sure?

Speaker 5 (18:57):
Well, even more than that, we've looked at other countries
now that the same is true.

Speaker 10 (19:01):
That study soon to be published finds the same poor
results in Australia, France, Canada and the UK, and other
new research stokes the idea that decades of promoting flu
shots and seniors and the billion spent haven't had the
desired result. The current head of National Imanizations confirmed CDC
is now looking at new strategies, but stop short of

(19:22):
calling the present policy a failure.

Speaker 6 (19:23):
There's an active dialogue into how we can do better
to prevent influenza and its complications in the elderly.

Speaker 12 (19:29):
So what's an older person to do?

Speaker 10 (19:31):
The CDC says they should still get their flu shots,
that it could make flu less severe or prevent other
problems not reflected in.

Speaker 12 (19:37):
The total numbers.

Speaker 10 (19:38):
But watch for CDC the likely shift in the near
future war toward protecting the elderly in a roundabout way
by vaccinating more children and others around them who could
give them the flu. Sheryl Atkisson, CBS News Washington.

Speaker 7 (19:52):
There was a glitch in that audio or more. I
don't know if you heard that, but the point is
I was raised to believe in doctors. I had a
wonderful doctor. Growing up, it was Marty Rutledge, wonderful, wonderful doctor,
and he cared for my mother until she passed on

(20:15):
September nineteenth, like she was his own mother. And he's
cared for my father for as long as I've been
alive as well. Well, that's not true. I was delivered
by a doctor by the name of Raleigh Allen a
small town of Texas, in small town of Orange, Texas,
and his lead nurse was Barbara. They end up marrying

(20:35):
and they moved away and he sold his practice, as
often happened back then. That was back when doctors owned
their practice, when doctors could be doctors, and he sold
his practice to a young, up and coming doctor who
kind of you know, you would get introduced to doctor
Rutlidge because doctor.

Speaker 5 (20:52):
Allen was out or whatever.

Speaker 7 (20:53):
What they do is get you comfortable with this with
the new doctor until eventually he bought him out. Stockbrokers
in financial advisors do this. It's a transition, and that
gives the lead doctor an exit strategy, and that was
done for quite some time. Then the practice of medicine
was taken over by the financial industry, and so doctors

(21:14):
are by and large, almost exclusively just employees today, and
that affects everything. If you look at who's leading the
charge with social or economic issues in this country, that's
not a member of the media or politics. It's an
individual who owns their own business. A lot of cops, firefighters,

(21:37):
public employees. They are prohibited from their free speech rights.
They are prohibited from expressing themselves and contributing to the
public conversation by their very employer.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
That's wrong. You should still be able to have an opinion.

Speaker 7 (21:54):
But I got to tell you, I am surprised how
often I see people get upset and they see a
cop post something on social media.

Speaker 5 (22:04):
Aren't you a cop? Yeah, you should be saying things.
What kind of idiot are you?

Speaker 7 (22:10):
So you want us to have entire conversations without a
huge group of people contributing to it. Why, I mean,
you don't have a problem with elected officials stating their opinion.
If you truly believe in collaboration, if you truly believe

(22:32):
that the best result will occur when everyone contributes, why
would you want to silence certain people?

Speaker 5 (22:40):
Well, because you don't truly believe that. And this is
how we grow to understand that.

Speaker 7 (22:48):
Well, my doctors growing up were wonderful and I still
have I'm happy to say, incredible doctors who are friends
of mine and care about me and go above and
beyond to take good.

Speaker 5 (23:05):
Care of my health.

Speaker 7 (23:06):
And I encourage you to have as close a relationship
with your doctors as you possibly can, to have doctors
before you need them, because by the time you need them,
you're referred, you're already in a bad way. I encourage
you to read as much as possible about health and
wellness and exercise and food and diet and nutrition in pharmaceuticals,

(23:29):
because we are past the point of you just being
able to trust the science and trust the experts. We
are long past that. Coming up in the next segment,
and it's going to take the entirety of the next segment,
but it's important. It's the former medical director of the
Cleveland Clinic and he's literally crying as he apologizes to

(23:56):
his patience for administering vaccines, because the thing about it
is it's first, do no harm. You've got people who
took the COVID vaccine who had no business taking it,
They didn't need to, the likelihood of them dying was
so low because they were neither obese, nor elderly, nor compromised.

Speaker 5 (24:20):
Give me no compromise.

Speaker 7 (24:21):
Do you know many people died the flu every year,
So these people should not have taken the vaccine, but
you had a whole industry.

Speaker 5 (24:28):
Pushing them to do it.

Speaker 7 (24:30):
And this goes to my further to my theory, learn
on your own. Don't trust people with the financial incentive.

Speaker 5 (24:38):
To do something. Talk Radio, The Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 7 (24:41):
I've got to shorten this intro because I want you
to hear the entirety of this. It's the former medical
director of Cleveland Clinic offering a tearful apology to his patients,
or administering vaccines. I think a lot of doctors, if
they were honest, would come forward and say, may A Colepe, well,
my bad, I made a mistake.

Speaker 5 (25:03):
I care about you, I love you, but I made
a mistake. I admire this man for this.

Speaker 16 (25:07):
Are my big issues regarding vaccines, and these are the
things that I'd like to highlight. Number one, there is
no education in medical schools that I am aware of,
and being an educator at the Cleveland Clinic, Learner College
of Medicine and Case Western Reserve University, I am not
aware of education around vaccines, their contents, safety records, informed consent,

(25:34):
or the vaccine injury compensation program. We do not discuss
that in nineteen eighty six, Congress enacted legislation removing all
liability from pharma related to vaccine adverse events.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
What are we taught about vaccines?

Speaker 16 (25:52):
We are taught to memorize the vaccine schedule.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
We don't discuss that four billion.

Speaker 16 (26:01):
Dollars with a bee has been paid to vaccine injured
patients since nineteen ninety two. For medical professionals, we expect
fair balance, but vaccine seem to be absolved from that consideration.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
Number two.

Speaker 16 (26:22):
There appears to be a conflict of interest regarding payments
to providers for completing vaccine schedules and corrollary to that,
which would be Number three. Patients are being dismissed from
practices because of quote unquote vaccine safety concerns.

Speaker 2 (26:43):
If you bring up a.

Speaker 16 (26:44):
Question about a vaccine and you decide not to vaccinate
your child, you may be at risk of being terminated
from that practice. Absolutely deplorable and disgusting. Number four, and.

Speaker 2 (26:58):
Again to the Bailey family, I'm really sorry, but.

Speaker 16 (27:01):
Employers are forcing employees to receive the flu vaccine, or
face corrective action or job loss. The fact that your
dad was six months from retiring is.

Speaker 2 (27:16):
There's number five. There's a lack of informed consents.

Speaker 16 (27:19):
And I was one of those providers who didn't provide
safety sheets before vaccinating. I would tell the parents, these
are the vaccines today. We're going to give you three
vaccines in one leg and two in the other. And
then after vaccinating either the child or the adult patient,
here's your information sheet. And again, to be completely transparent

(27:41):
with you, I had no idea that there was even
a mention of the compensation program or a telephone number
to call. Absolutely deplorable on my part, and I apologize
to my patients. There's the lack of transparency regarding vaccine complications,

(28:04):
and worse, you're being shamed.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
As patients.

Speaker 16 (28:09):
For suggesting that you were harmed by a vaccine. If
I see a patient in the office and diagnose strep
throat and give them penicillin and either the mom or
the patient themselves calls and tells me that they developed
a rash, there is zero question. The chart now states

(28:30):
they have an allergy to penicillin and will never be
given it again.

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Why don't we believe parents and.

Speaker 16 (28:37):
Patience when they tell us they have had an adverse
event regarding a vaccine. It doesn't make sense to me
as a medical professional, and I apologize for the being emotional.
Number seven. Actually I don't apologize. Number seven. Why do

(29:04):
the placebos and vaccine studies contain the adjivius like mercury
and aluminum? Aren't placebos supposed to be inert? In other words,
if you're comparing let's say, the Hepatitis V vaccine against
the placebo, why does the placebo contain a metal?

Speaker 20 (29:20):
If the concern could possibly be the metal itself that's
triggering the autoimmunity that doctor lyons Weiler had so eloquently
spoke about.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
Number eight. Why has the rate of autism.

Speaker 16 (29:37):
Spectrum disorder gone from one in one thousand in nineteen
nineties I was taught to one in forty eight in
twenty seventeen. Is there a link between the toxins in
vaccines and this significant increase in the diagnosis not only
of ASD. We certainly know about us all risk of
giambreat but what about attention deficit disorder, mood disorders and

(30:02):
children and just the overall chronic disease epidemic in this country.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
I mean, we are a very.

Speaker 16 (30:08):
Sick population, and I'm not trying to be dramatic, but
we're currently spending three and a half trillion dollars on
healthcare and what honestly, folks, are we getting for that.
As a physician and all physicians, we take the Hippocratic
oath and we say no premium no chieri.

Speaker 2 (30:27):
First, do no harm, and.

Speaker 16 (30:29):
Not providing informed consent regarding a vaccine and then ultimately
discovering patients had adverse reactions to that intervention is a
direct violation of that oath. There's much work to be
done in this area as pharma is literally racing to

(30:50):
provide us with more life saving vaccines. Let me tell
your friends they are working on over one hundred and
forty vaccines at this time.

Speaker 2 (31:02):
Beware this is coming.

Speaker 16 (31:07):
Throughout two twenty seventeen, I received a tremendous outpouring of
support from literally all.

Speaker 2 (31:12):
Over the world.

Speaker 16 (31:15):
I just want to say thank you to everyone for
helping me keep my chin up during a difficult year.
My partner, doctor Jessica Hutchins, who is working with me
at Inspire Wellness, my family of course, Michelle from OAMF
and Stephanie doctor lyons Weiler have been in my corner

(31:37):
and what I now realized that this has been the
kick in the behind that I personally needed to get
out from under a multi billion dollar conglomerate in order
to really do the work that I feel needs to
be done, both in educating the public and taking care
of my patients that have any chronic disease, but in
the way that I really feel they need to be treated,

(32:00):
based on protocols and not under the thumb of a
watchful eye telling me I must do this or do
that or risk termination. Please don't feel sorry for me.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
I believe.

Speaker 16 (32:15):
The universe is calling me to do a higher purpose
and I will begin realizing that dream this coming Monday
on January fifteenth, when my new medical practice, Inspire Wellness,
opens in Beechwood, Ohio. I will continue to fight for
the rights of all patients, including the right to informed consent,
and along with that, we must push to uncover the

(32:36):
truths around vaccines, the real safety and efficacy data, not
the ones that either the government or big pharma wants
us to see. And we must begin to truly understand
the direct link if there is one that I do
believe that occurs in at risk populations for developing neurodevelopment

(33:00):
mental disorders like yanbreat that mister Vailey suffered from Autism
spectrum disorder ADHD, mood.

Speaker 2 (33:08):
Disorders as I spoke about.

Speaker 16 (33:09):
But folks, all chronic disease, This is all on the
table and we must keep our eyes and ears open
and as I learned when I first stepped into the
Wellness Institute, be open to new ways of thinking. And
that's what we all need to do in medicine moving forward.

Speaker 18 (33:29):
He was nice lot for Thank you and good night.
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