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September 7, 2025 133 mins
Y’all are doing something called GAS STATION HEROINE to escape and to feel “good”? GAS STATION HEROINE 🤧 WTF is wrong with y’all…this is why God doesn’t like y’all and no one is going to heaven during the rapture 😂 Gas station heroine indeed…y’all need Jesus 😈

Everything has an origin…even your nightmares

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https://www.deusdaewalker.com 😈🎶😂

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I'm not saying that these niggas ain't shit. I'm just
saying if I heard in the news in other news
shoot out and could be a store over cupcake, I
immediately would assume Baltimore nigga. Likely why, I don't know.

(00:21):
It sounds stupid because any rational person will say there's
no need to discharge a firearm over a cupcake. That
is actual madness. But Baltimore niggas that is own brand.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Lose your life over a product that literally costs less
than probably if it's a Baltimore motherfucking cupcake, seventy five cents.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
So let's discharge ammunition that we know costs more than
that the gun, the charge will cost more than So again,
seventy five risk death over a cupcake. That is absolutely
I would believe niggas in Baltimore would do. These are

(01:10):
things that would not surprise me when it comes to
nigga jury. Baltimore is the epicenter. Again, New York, would
you discharge firearms over a dumb bitch? Absolutely? Would you
discharge it over a canole? Likely not charge too high

(01:35):
a lot going on? Again, New York niggas is dumb,
But would they discharge a firearm or for Duncan donut.
Probably not Baltimore niggas. Absolutely no question why because it's
the dumbest reason possible, no other reason, risking prison over

(01:59):
seventy five. It on chat, the man was on fil Man.
It was a light skinned nigga. All of this makes
sense again, I'm going to roll it back. They had
the man on film.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
Where twenty five people had to be rushed to the hospital.
You know, this is where one month ago.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Copyright first, I said, bitch, how.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
Grown black adults in the entertainment district vandomizing ice cream shops?

Speaker 1 (02:35):
And no, look at me. This is the this is
the fourth wall break ship. I'm complaining about the podcast
all All being on the podcast dallis real shit, no
dead ass. I'm talking to Spotify for the last two hours.
I'm like, where's my fucking podcast because that's where I'm noticing,
like my little ship going down, up and down or
whatever like that. And I went through all the distribution channels.

(02:57):
So I'm through the main one, which through the speaker ship,
so that's up there. I'm through the Apple shit, so
that's up there, and I'm looking at all the other
ones and I'm like, okay, why am I not on
Spotify the motherfucker I actually paid for in real life.
I said, bitch, where the fuck is my podcast? They're like,
it should be up there because the RSS feed. I said, bitch,

(03:19):
it is. Here's the RSS feed. They're like, oh, it's
taking down doe the copyright infringement. I said, how was
it copyright infringement? It said, it has music on there?
I said, it's mine. You have if your pay proof.
I said, bitch, it's on my computer and my website
and I own the master. What do you mean do
I have proof? They're like, oh, what do you mean?

Speaker 4 (03:40):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (03:41):
What the fuck is the other thing?

Speaker 5 (03:44):
No?

Speaker 1 (03:44):
See, this is why I'm saying, like everybody's fucking retarded.
This is not a point that they said, do I
own my shit that I uploaded my self? The layers
are stupid in this entire situation is crazy. So again
the question is do you own the music in which
you said you own.

Speaker 6 (04:06):
What?

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Okay, so you copyright wrote struck music that is not
on your platform because my stuff has been taken down.
So I'm like, by me, They're like, so we copyright
struck it? Okay? Is music I own? You got proof.
You mean besides the copyright and the website that it

(04:31):
is on and the fact I recorded it myself and
the master files I have on the phone. I'm like
what They're like, Oh, what do you mean? Oh again,
this is Spotify. They deal with record labels. What do
you mean if an artist is uploading something via podcast

(04:54):
you said, oh to him having the mas again, the
inception and the like, you have to dispute it. Dispute
what the copyright infringement? You struck it? Yes, because we
didn't know you owned the material. How my name is

(05:17):
on it? Oh what do you mean? Oh? I mean,
this is like you'll have a better explanation, So I said.
For the letter in which I said, I'm debuting like
I'm disputing the front of the copyright strike there since
I own the copyright. Here's the website. It's an insane

(05:42):
census who say it's like, I'm disputing the copyright strike
because I own the copyright legally. The fact that we're
in this part of the world where I'm just saying,
you understand that I actually have the paperwork, which you
people don't believe in papers. Unfortunately, the Copyright Office and

(06:06):
the fucking DC does believe in it. So because of that,
the shit is filed there, meaning I beat you, period,
because ninety nine percent of stuff on Spotify, I promise
you I can bet money on it. It's not filed
with the copyright Office. I can bet money. I'm not

(06:27):
even joking, especially like probably independent artists more so no,
no niggas.

Speaker 7 (06:35):
No, but.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
If they were the fuck and like especially like punk
Asian artists, absolutely they absolutely have the shit. If they're
like if their songwriters not like they're actually like made
the ship from the from the bottoms of the top
and they're actual more conversation. Oh, they've absolutely got that shit.
Becau's not expensive. It's sixty five bucks. That's the problem.

(06:58):
These things aren't expensive. Niggas is just stupid, Like how
the hell you got all your music on YouTube and
none of the copy written. You can button lit and
say this is the bunder work as Rogan is named
the same, and you upload the copy thing to the
copyright office. That is what you call proof, and you

(07:24):
always win. But motherfuckers is stupid. So what I have
to say is say is saying this UF, you can't
copyright strike me because I own the copyright.

Speaker 8 (07:36):
Like it's just like it don't sound less.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
Insane, but no, it is insane. It isn't insane thing
to say that the defense of a copyright strike is
I own the copyright because I beat your copyrights guy,
because you don't even know what the fucking copyright is.
You're just saying shit because they're trying to say again,

(08:00):
there was like a piece of a Marilynd Mansie song,
like I'm talking like the tail end of like the
static and the copyright struck.

Speaker 7 (08:06):
My shit.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
I'm like, okay, y'all being stupid now, and at the
approval point, I just want to do something else because
technically I am allowed to stream audio books and everything
like that. If it is transformative, me changing the soundscape
and speeding it up is literally a transformative work. Literally,

(08:27):
So for them to even try to say, like you
don't have no because AI paid for me that legally
I own it, it would be the same as me reading it.
And as long as I am giving credit, which I
am and doing more than ninety nine percent of everybody
on Spotify period, I'm saying, this is the YouTube you
could go to, this is the lenk you could go to,

(08:47):
this is this walk shameless and promoting my shit. So
for you to try to copyright the music is unhinged.

Speaker 9 (08:55):
Yeah, I was expecting it to be the audio money
when you starting to say.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
Music, No, it's the music. I was able to dig
stream all the Maryland Master shit, the entire thing, because
again it's the transformative work I am giving credit and
it's all this the ed agatt is brought promotions, so
it's a thing. I am so confused. That's why I'm like,

(09:23):
what's I felt? What's up? Listen? That's why I have
to make sure that this stuff is actually working. Because
once I heard this megachurch shit in this morning, I
was extremely pissed the funk off. I'm like, no, not,
these niggas can make a church into a tax ride
off because these niggas can pray in it, because the
house of God, I said, hell yourself, no, the play

(09:44):
sorry plut triffa jet shit, not just the private jet, No,
the jack, the audi, the cyber truck. Because as long
as you pray and testify the minister and in it,
it is a tax free accent.

Speaker 8 (10:00):
Here's a privilege. Oh I want one of them concept chats.

Speaker 10 (10:02):
Do you remember when they used to like drop a
concept car like every couple of months and they just
have it up on the website.

Speaker 8 (10:08):
They have one that had a glass roof.

Speaker 10 (10:11):
Yo, the way that I wanted this car, the Urdu exists.

Speaker 8 (10:14):
It doesn't matter the way I wanted this car. Can
we make this happen? Call Jesus, No.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
I'm telling you at this point, at this point, I'm
that serious. I'm going to religious route. I'm a changed intity.
I'm starting listen. If the Hell's Angels Is, the Church
is recognized religion, I believe me the Hell's Angels Is.

Speaker 8 (10:42):
Please stop talking to me, you teach me something. You
pissed me the funk off every single time. I don't
need this ship in my life.

Speaker 11 (10:50):
Like, what the actual fuck do you mean? How is
this a thing?

Speaker 1 (10:54):
Because it's a religion.

Speaker 12 (10:57):
I can worship you because you can't, because you can
because you've been living, because you've been living in this
world not paying attention to the SAX code.

Speaker 1 (11:08):
So you literally could have started and you started listen.
As long as you fall under this fourteen tenets of
the Salvation Army, then you technically can create a religion
as long as you have a creed, as long as
you have like a governing body. As long as you
worshiping something, then technically, as long as you fall within

(11:30):
that construct, you absolutely can't create a religion. And every
religion nowadays falls within that construct. Why do you think
why they barely Meza became what was gone? Yeah, no,
it became a preacher the Church of Satan just because
he could, And a lot of things become taxics and

(11:52):
status because if you worship us under against the whole
separate of church's state. So that is why a plane
is a tax right off, because you aren't able to
minace the people and bring them to the Lord.

Speaker 11 (12:14):
I want some private.

Speaker 10 (12:18):
I'm a big real niggas shown that private jet though,
because once you run out of gas, I'm giving it back.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
Like, no, the gas is also tax free because no,
you don't understand kidd is Copeland is in big like
he has oil underneath his comp underneath the land that
he owns because he owns like fifty one million eggres. Yeah,
he own a fifty one million eggres and oils there.

(12:43):
So the oil is also considered a holy asset.

Speaker 5 (12:51):
Yes, yes, yes.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Stop, that's why he's stop.

Speaker 8 (12:57):
I'm done. I have checked that we are not doing
this anymore.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
It's a runway in his backyard.

Speaker 10 (13:02):
Between Holy Oil in Texas and Holy Oil on Amazon.

Speaker 8 (13:07):
I'm not fucking with y'all no more. Stop talking.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
Here's a runway in his backyards. The runway it's four
just because he feels this message need to be delivered
four times each tax He.

Speaker 8 (13:20):
Wait, didn't you say something about scattering to the winds.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
To the for the four winds. Listen, you gotta hit
the north, the southeast, and the west because God made Listen,
God made four directions. Therefore, God that needs me to
have four different jets to go in each direction, fueled
up by God's oil. This is because again, this is

(13:46):
allowed by the irs, who is out here bothering motherfuckers
who owed him like five grand and throwing him in jail.
Ain't that a bitch? Yeah, we got preachers literally saying
all these donations that we're using towards the people, in
which they give ten percent of the ten percent and

(14:08):
keep ninety. I said, that is some insane math. They're like, yes,
we are making sure people sow ten percent of their
net gross income, and they check it, check it. They
say that everybody in the church got to go to
a financial environ make sure they is actually given a
ten percent liszten. These real mega church breezes a third

(14:32):
would just scam. They said, you niggas is really give
a ten percent. We don't believe you'd get fuck ten
dollars ten percent of all any and we're gonna take
ten percent of that ten percent that you're giving and
give it to the poor. Now, one would think that
they would take the whole ten percent of this, give
it taking and give them to the poor. Says that's

(14:54):
allegedly what the Bible said, which it doesn't. But they're like,
you know, there are operating costs on taking this ten percent,
So we're gonna take ninety up percent of disks and
put it in our pockets. If Jesus name.

Speaker 10 (15:13):
It's just say JC at the bottom, what.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
Like, who processes this JC? Who Jesus Christ, Jesus Christ?
What is this VAK account number? In the the Caymans?
This thing is said, I'm a bi church and the Caymans,
so I got to travel there because it is a
small remote area that needs the administering of the Lord. Like, wait,
you mean all the conveniently the people that need God

(15:43):
is in the Caymans. You need deliverers in the Cayman
is huh. Attack the extradition laws ain't got shit to
do with it, nothing, huh nothing, all right. You know
what that's not about is that's sound makes about as
much sense as Oprah building schools and in Africa. We're
in Africa. Doesn't matter. Is the area in Africa that

(16:07):
she's going to build the schools ran by warlords to
do female general mutilation? Doesn't matter. We're just building schools
in Africa.

Speaker 8 (16:15):
Because it's doing a telethon.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Come on, where's it going?

Speaker 8 (16:29):
I was like, y'all need to see the pr nightmare
coming here.

Speaker 10 (16:32):
Y'all see this because I saw this from a mile away.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
To give it to who you donate? Donate to? What
all the niggas who got all this shit knocked out
in fucking Hawaii talking about could you help rebuild, rebuild
what you hid? Like again, I'm absolutely fine with all

(17:02):
of these preachers doing this because apparently people were fine
with it. Do I think that this is morally incorrect? Absolutely?
Do I think this is abhorrent? Absolutely? Is a completely
gives everything biblically?

Speaker 13 (17:21):
Yes?

Speaker 14 (17:23):
Is it heresy?

Speaker 1 (17:25):
Absolutely? But if heresy is looked at as morally correct,
then go forth and be a heretic. Now, if you're
offended about being called a heretic.

Speaker 10 (17:43):
Whoever told me in my group to watch that fucking
movie with that sad ass shit.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
It was just sorry, you're a character.

Speaker 8 (17:51):
Do you remember when we watched it?

Speaker 1 (17:53):
Because they told me, well, that's that's like a Hollywood
being of all that shit. Because I thought it was
gonna be deeper than it was, because it started out
going deep and then devolved into stupid, white bitch stupid shit.

Speaker 10 (18:07):
And they were talking, they were talking this ship up, like, oh.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
My gosh, I've come to realize the majority of people
have horrible film recommendations because they're stupid. So it's not
I'm pretentious. It's just that the intellect of the average
consumer has devolved because there's just stupid. It is absolutely music.

(18:35):
Because my pretentiousness has nothing to do with their bad taste.

Speaker 14 (18:41):
It's true.

Speaker 5 (18:44):
Absolutely, it's true.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
It doesn't he said, my pretend. If I am pretentious,
that is completely irrelevant to someone having a horrible taste.
For example, me saying that bitches do not know how
to dress the twenty twenty five is not me being pretentious.
That is them not knowing that colors are a thing
or makes sense, or coordination is a thing. That is

(19:10):
just from an artistic perspective. If you look a certain
way and you wear bright colors, probably.

Speaker 10 (19:15):
Shouldn't the house this morning a bitch like poor poor
houses down.

Speaker 8 (19:20):
She had lime green hair. I can't make this up.
I wish I was lying it was lime green.

Speaker 10 (19:28):
And then it's like a bad weave because it's like
sticking out straight. It looked like somebody like she stuck
her finger in the socket, like it's just the static
and it's just like sticking like outside of her.

Speaker 11 (19:37):
It was horrible.

Speaker 8 (19:38):
It was horrible like.

Speaker 11 (19:42):
It was that.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
So in Baltimore got anything lime green on?

Speaker 14 (19:47):
It's incorrect.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
Because I already know how their face looks. So lime
green on a Baltimore bitch is incorrect because of the
drawing attention. If it is on top of their head,
that is absolutely incorrect. And actually assault somebody criminal.

Speaker 10 (20:10):
Now, I think I was already out of Baltimore yet,
because I was on I think I was on ninety
five by then.

Speaker 8 (20:16):
But this bitch just decided that she wanted the spot
I was in and just was I was like that
was like.

Speaker 10 (20:22):
You like, okay, turning on your signal does not give
you a right to move into said spot, like even
this person next to me, cause I got this word
like sis the edge of not going into the lane,
but like way close to the other one and we're
both looking at this shit.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
The problem is insanity is a thing.

Speaker 10 (20:45):
So to delete me because it would have been spot on,
like almost because she's literally it's not like you don't
see me, yo.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah, it is very it's very problematic. I would have
given a lot of holes, allow them to struggle.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
She was absolutely, oh well listen, I'm listens.

Speaker 10 (21:11):
This big and she had the long gas bridge, but
it was it was just like like six of the break.

Speaker 1 (21:16):
And I was like, if we're if we're going to,
if we're going to, if we are going to allow
holes to have right, I feel that there should be
a little bit more structure. Back in the good old days,

(21:38):
holes was holes, and society was allowed to put holes
in their place. As I mean, listen, holes having an
opinion on things is new. I'm saying, like being taken seriously,
like if you were a hole, you're not allowed to

(22:01):
have a perspective on society.

Speaker 10 (22:02):
Well, welcome to the two decent whichever two bitches that
you will actually acknowledge as halfway intelligent because we've been
listening to bitch made as niggas make opinions about shit widely,
loudly and people paying attention for a long time.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
First of all, long time. First of all, I don't
know why y'all are listening to ugly niggas. That is
a you problem, not a mean problem. You you are.

Speaker 10 (22:39):
How many times do I say, Oh, this nigga talking
like he don't get none.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
Because people encourage me ugliness. You are listening to ugly
people and expect positive results? Do you not these people
wake up and know what they look like? You are saying.
These ugly niggas are saying words, and people are listening,

(23:06):
and you think I should do what with this information?

Speaker 15 (23:13):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (23:16):
Bomb? God has done that by making them ugly. You
all are allowing these voices to spread and actually get
into your consciousness knowing how they look. What the fuck? Somebody?
The second, again, the same way ugly holes run the world,

(23:39):
ugly niggas also do too, because they lie as much
as ugly holes do, because they have to lie to themselves.

Speaker 8 (23:52):
Shoot out means that there was more than one.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Oh yeah, because this is stupid.

Speaker 3 (24:00):
In Baltimore's infrastructure was falling apart, like the video from
June about the conditions of the brand new in the
Harbor high Rise where the ceiling was literally crumbling.

Speaker 16 (24:10):
And this Baltimore infrastructure thing isn't anything new.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
I literally mentioned this in my first published book in
twenty twenty one.

Speaker 16 (24:18):
Now Wes Martin Brandon Scott is neglecting.

Speaker 17 (24:21):
That city and the people in it, and now they're
trying to stop Trump coming in and trying to make
the city say.

Speaker 8 (24:33):
He kept getting and it probably said something some alpha
man and.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
Then he kept wait it was talking. Wait, I thought
you said, Brandon Scott said, Alpha messing. Who what this lidge.

Speaker 10 (24:50):
Just making point about these ugly niggas out here, these
bitch manigas with an opinion.

Speaker 8 (24:54):
I'm bras are gonna get Jack.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
I'm not worried about Kevin Samuels right now. I don't care. No,
it's not a nigga. I'm saying he look like he
looked like he's like that demographic. I'm saying, Yeah, that's
what I'm saying. I'm like one of them up of
the old niggas that used to work in stables and
now work in management. I mean you typically are obviously

(25:18):
most of you. It just do. But it's fine because
that's called upward mobility. I'm again not against yes, most
when again, when I'm talking about whole ship I need,
I'm saying the holes need to work on their upward
mobility and not remaining in that raggedy asshole's status. If
you have lime green hair, you were determined to be

(25:41):
a raggedly hole.

Speaker 10 (25:43):
Nintendo nin the sixty four, the one where you play
Atari where you could like you know, you put the
cartridge in and then like you said it down and yes,
like yeah yo, yeah yo.

Speaker 8 (26:02):
The way that I was in there playing Mario, it
was much better.

Speaker 11 (26:07):
Than the what.

Speaker 8 (26:10):
That's besides the point, right, it.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Was niggas is old and retro.

Speaker 10 (26:19):
Yes, and there was a city player and there were
all of these oh oh my god, you would have hated.

Speaker 8 (26:23):
Him in the first thirty seconds.

Speaker 10 (26:25):
Okay, So he was a retired army for something, and
like the books on his bookshelf were like behind what's
going on in the Middle East and why and why?

Speaker 1 (26:44):
I don't have problems. I don't have problem. I don't
have problems with old conspiracy niggas. That's not my problem
again because again I'm I'm a foul Listen. I'm a
former military person that generally did not like to talk
about the military because I told the truth about the military.
People who feel some type of way. I eat military people.

(27:05):
I'm not talking about like military people who got out
they'd actually agree. I'm talking about military people who are
so fucking indoctrimentd that they're still in there right now
that if you say anything besides the fact that oh,
this is the world's greatest X Y and Z. The moment, sure, I.

Speaker 10 (27:23):
Was like, you are the most basically, you are the
most indoctrinated out nigga I've ever met.

Speaker 8 (27:29):
R I was like, why is this actually a thing?

Speaker 1 (27:33):
It's not a thing. There's a nigga who's in the
now and probably getting paid, which is fine. Again, but
as one who is actively combating this, the veterans of airs,
I eat the stupidest organization never created by man. I
can only say nothing but yes, the military trained me

(27:55):
to become the cold bloody killer I am. That teach
me to be invisible, and they made me unkillable. And
because of that, they've taught me all the necessary skills
to survive. And what are they going to do now, Nothing,
because they can't find me. And if they do find me,
they're gonna be disappeared, because that's the whole purpose of
them actually creating me to disappear, people who try to

(28:17):
find me to disappear. So because of this, and they
create people like me, Ma, No, they create people who
try to do what I do. But because they have
like morals, ethic, clity, kids and stupid shit like that,
they unfortunately have that little they have the little thing
in their head like oh I should go into the light.
I'm like, ah, now I'm stand in the dark. Why

(28:40):
because again you gonna hate this one. The point the
point is, oh, well she probably never called you, right
of course?

Speaker 18 (28:47):
Not.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
Well, if she did, well, she did, I may not
have picked the phone, but I don't think so, because
that's what Nigga be leaving messages.

Speaker 8 (28:53):
Yeah, because that's not the one who I just set
it up. That's the other one.

Speaker 1 (28:56):
I just gave the information to it. I was like, yeah,
see what happens. Yeah, but no, because there are certain
people that take all the training that the military gives you,
and they just let a fucking atrophy. And there's some
of us who just take all of it and compartmentalize
it and utilize it just in everyday life. And then
next thing you know, you are just literally you just

(29:18):
are what are you? It all depends on the situation.
What do you know? It all depends on the situation.
And once you become that, you are not necessarily a
cognit machine. You are a ghosts in that fucking machine.
So once it create that, I don't know what the
fuck to tell you. That's what they trained, that's what
they created. So when that goes for some reason, it

(29:40):
starts feeling uncomfortable because people just doing stupid shit that
is making him personally uncomfortable, ay eviolating their own rules.
Why would you not expect to ghost to you know,
do some ghostly haunting shit, terrified petrified reveal shit. Why
would you not expect this? And then how are you
gonna where the responsors goes? We're gonna call ghostbusters. No,

(30:04):
this is what you can better call exorcist because if not,
the ghosts and machine just go to possess it and
tear it to the ground. Why are you like this,
Because first of all, all these motherfuckers is fat and
they need to exercise. So the closest thing to exercising
is getting an exorcism, because maybe that'll nea to get
rid of that spirit of fat, fucking greeden slot and
whatever like that, they could actually like get the fucking

(30:26):
brain in order and you know, actually figure things out.
A Listen, all I'm saying is most of these motherfuckers
outside of the military is out of regulation, especially the
sheriff who was fucking with me when I got the
falseol fiction.

Speaker 14 (30:44):
Okay, I'm gonna.

Speaker 8 (30:45):
Show you something stupid. I don't think I've showed you before.

Speaker 10 (30:51):
It's one of my favorite It's one of my favorite
I gi redels.

Speaker 11 (30:57):
Ever, this looks a little possessed.

Speaker 8 (31:06):
Oh actually again, I'm still mad at this niggas.

Speaker 10 (31:11):
I was cursing him all this morning when I was
driving around in circles because all the major streets were
blocked off, and somebody we were at a light and
somebody were like, you know where they motioned until you,
just trying to get you to roll the window down,
and so I rolled the window down.

Speaker 8 (31:28):
And dude was like, do you know how to get
out of here. And I was like, nah, we all
trying to figure the shit out. He was like, I've
been driving a service for thirty minutes.

Speaker 19 (31:36):
I was like, I'm sorry, I got.

Speaker 14 (31:37):
Don't tell you I got.

Speaker 19 (31:39):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 8 (31:40):
He was exasperated. He pulled over and put a uh,
put his.

Speaker 1 (31:44):
Hands into I mean, that was the top quality government
officials that all y'all got, and all y'all got to do.

Speaker 10 (31:52):
I know, it's no, it's totally my an our fault,
all the ones who were on the road this morning,
because it happens every year.

Speaker 8 (32:00):
They send out notices well in advance every year.

Speaker 10 (32:03):
They posted everywhere, It's on social media, it's in the paper,
and I just forget every fucking year.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
What in the pamphlet are you talking about?

Speaker 10 (32:13):
So they closed down all of downtown for this cycling event.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
Who's cycling?

Speaker 11 (32:20):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (32:21):
Some people are cycling, but they.

Speaker 1 (32:23):
The people of Baltimore riding bikes.

Speaker 8 (32:26):
Okay, I'm gonna show you after a mile.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
I got this shit.

Speaker 11 (32:29):
Oh for real?

Speaker 1 (32:31):
You know.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
Last week Fox forty five Baltimore did a report on
the insane amount of crime that took place in Baltimore
in the seventeen days that the National Guard has been
in DC, and I had to look at it twice
because I could not believe those numbers.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
Together, we have broken the back of violent crime. And
the last time the homicide rate was this slow in
Baltimore City, I was not born yet.

Speaker 20 (32:57):
But in the seventeen days since the National Guard it
has been on the ground in Washington, Baltimore has seen
more than twenty five hundred crimes, twice as many as DC.
There have been six homicides, nine rapes, four hundred and
twenty six assaults, two hundred and seventy one aggravated assaults,
two hundred and fifty two auto thefts, one hundred and
fifty five burglaries, and four hundred and thirty nine acts

(33:18):
of vandalism.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Listen, I feel that nine rates is fine after all
of that, I feel that I believe that niggers in
Baltimore are trying to do better than have to break down.
I feel that this is a win because rapes could

(33:41):
be higher. But wow, niggas said, you know what, we
gonna stop touching and taking to Porca and focus more
on acts of four hundred and thirty nine of them
in seventeen days. Now I'm trying to figure out. All right,

(34:03):
so I'm about to do my time magic shit. So
if I'm going to break the space time continuum, so
we're gonna say five niggas in Baltimore can't read hypothetically.
Acts of vandalism require these niggas to actually pay things
that may have words or pictures in, meaning that they

(34:23):
have to think and be creative. So if five niggas
in Baltimore who were being creative in seventeen days, how
long is it taking? Be Like, I'm just trying to
figure out the logistics of the situation on what damage
is being caused, what graffiti is being written? Is this

(34:48):
a plot? Was niggas planning this? Is this sporadic? Is
Brandon Scott just saying anything? But only nine times? Was
the pussy day?

Speaker 11 (35:06):
Though?

Speaker 20 (35:07):
That's a win, all of it in the past seventeen days.
In fact, Baltimore's seven hundred and ninety acts of violent
crime in that time period is nine times greater than
the amount of violent crime committed in Washington.

Speaker 16 (35:20):
And then that's that's not that bad.

Speaker 1 (35:22):
I mean, seven hundred and ninety sounds like a lot
of violent crime in seventeen days, but according to Brandon Scott,
we're at an all time low. We're actually on the decline.
It sounded like it sounded like crime was increasing, almost spiked,

(35:48):
but that's actually not true. No, that's not true. It
sounds like it's spiked, but Brandon Scott said, that is
a figment of your imagination. Seventeen days, crime did not increase.
There actually was not seven hundred and ninety violent crimes
that took place. This is actually Nazi propaganda. That's actually

(36:11):
what the man said.

Speaker 16 (36:12):
But the same report that called out Wes Moore for.

Speaker 7 (36:16):
His neglect, he's got a national platform right now and
he's wasting it on just hot air.

Speaker 5 (36:22):
On talk radio.

Speaker 20 (36:23):
Callers were aiming their outrage at the governor.

Speaker 21 (36:26):
Sure, you are the governor of Maryland.

Speaker 22 (36:30):
Everything that you said wild.

Speaker 20 (36:33):
Campaigning means nothing because you have done nothing to improve
the wonderful state of Maryland.

Speaker 14 (36:42):
So to put in some y'all, it's Baltimore's time.

Speaker 20 (36:46):
Their comments come after the governor last week rejected potential
help from the National Guard and suggested crime is under control.

Speaker 16 (36:54):
The residents are complaining and they want Trump because.

Speaker 20 (36:57):
The nasty Guard isn't hear you when he come here.
You've seen the numbers go out. Aaron Slaughter is an
ex marine. Mike Anderson is an ex con. It's the same,
like one year, the same thing. It's the same thing
over and over again. Darryl Berman is a retired city
police officer and president of the Retired Police Benevolent Association.

Speaker 19 (37:15):
The average public and they can.

Speaker 5 (37:19):
If you're getting better in the labor.

Speaker 19 (37:21):
And you're willing not.

Speaker 20 (37:22):
Berman and others believe the Guard could be the city's
last great hope for an immediate turn around.

Speaker 13 (37:28):
Oh yeah, yeah, definitely stop the crime because when people
see these guys out, they go another way, you know,
they go another way.

Speaker 16 (37:34):
It's a dietaric.

Speaker 3 (37:35):
And like I said in my last video about Chicago,
the Democratic Party does not want safe cities. Safe cities
mean that the community can thrive. It doesn't have to
live in fear, it doesn't have to depend on the
Democratic Party for these social programs, you know, welfare, Section
eight and all this other stuff that they used to
get boats, right, they have to pander to liberals, pander

(37:58):
to criminals, you know, to get votes in the stain
of power, and they leave the residents the citizens to
suffer the consequences of all these violence, and they still
promise like, hey, we're gonna get rid of violence. You know,
we're gonna put money in pockets and all this stuff.

Speaker 16 (38:15):
Just vote for us.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
You know, this whole thing is just the rules they
need to keep you as poor and as fearful as
possible to maintain that dependency on them. And naturally, when
you have all these black people committing these crimes and
getting killed and getting.

Speaker 23 (38:32):
Hurt, Republicans say Democrats are responsible for the explosion and crime.

Speaker 19 (38:39):
From coast to coast.

Speaker 24 (38:40):
Crime is exploding and Democrat runs city lawlessness and blue
cities continues Portland into Seattle.

Speaker 19 (38:46):
In Chicago, there's all hells breaking loose.

Speaker 20 (38:48):
In New York, people are regularly shot, beaten, and robbed
in public.

Speaker 19 (38:52):
Every city.

Speaker 16 (38:53):
It is out of control.

Speaker 7 (38:54):
Chicago has become a sanctuary for violent, deprave criminals.

Speaker 13 (38:57):
Chaffrancesco evolved into a hellhole.

Speaker 19 (39:01):
La County.

Speaker 5 (39:01):
This is a lawless hellhole.

Speaker 19 (39:03):
Dangerous, filthy hellhole.

Speaker 14 (39:05):
I'm getting this hell whole.

Speaker 25 (39:08):
Your safety is in peril with Democrats and power now.

Speaker 23 (39:11):
Democrats say it's republican states where all the crime is
not Democratic cities.

Speaker 21 (39:17):
Republicans love to blame crime on Democrats and liberal policies.

Speaker 16 (39:21):
But here's the thing.

Speaker 13 (39:23):
Among the ten states with the highest murder rates in
twenty twenty.

Speaker 21 (39:27):
Eight, yeah, eight, you see them on the map, eight
voted for Trump.

Speaker 13 (39:32):
That's according to a new report by the Centers Group.

Speaker 5 (39:35):
Third Wight.

Speaker 24 (39:35):
I want people to be safe. That's not the Republicans argument, because,
of course, if you look at real crime statistics, which
they're not interested in examining, the states with the highest
crime levels are states run by Republicans.

Speaker 16 (39:50):
See.

Speaker 1 (39:51):
Hillary just shouldn't have said anything.

Speaker 8 (39:53):
See hey Hillary, I didn't see her over there. See
you know Hillary is still waiting man. Hillary would have
be She would have blown up the.

Speaker 1 (40:01):
World killer holocaust, would have listen, we had already been
in nuclear.

Speaker 8 (40:09):
War, interested though to see.

Speaker 1 (40:12):
The fallout, Absolutely, nuclear fallout.

Speaker 8 (40:14):
I would have been carrious. Just who she was gonna.

Speaker 14 (40:17):
Go for first.

Speaker 1 (40:18):
She would have bought Russia up and how bad.

Speaker 8 (40:20):
She wouldn't have hit Russia.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Absolutely, she is unhidden.

Speaker 14 (40:25):
All the problems she was happening in the Middle Age.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
She would have hit Russia first. Absolutely.

Speaker 19 (40:31):
I don't.

Speaker 8 (40:31):
I don't why we need to finish the screens.

Speaker 1 (40:34):
Putin Is would have said, no, this is how it
would have happened. Pultan would have been like, so, y'all Americans,
ain't shiittuse you got a woman in charge. She's gonna
be like say again boom. That is how it would
have happened. It would have been so quick and then
all of a sudden the entire world goes black.

Speaker 10 (40:58):
Why we need to finish the screenway because I disagree.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
Listen, it would have been hers president and back as
secretary of State. This entire world would have been ran
to the ground.

Speaker 8 (41:11):
We need to finish the screenway.

Speaker 1 (41:13):
Because imagine if people, secretary of steak, you would have
been vomiting. Everybody death, have dead, O disease, get right
on the ground.

Speaker 8 (41:21):
Again, this is why it needs to be written.

Speaker 1 (41:24):
And it would have been her Madam dictator, and then
would have been and it would have been decided for
out here just being like a harbinger of death every
country goes through when at least it just mysteriously people
just die. Guess I could be living up to that
meddal name Hussein.

Speaker 8 (41:42):
Case in point that.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
You don't know what if I'm going on in Hillary
out here looking like Jesus in a case, it's.

Speaker 23 (41:52):
Just a fact which side is lying, the Republicans line
or the Democrats line.

Speaker 16 (41:56):
Let's break it down. Here's a quick message from the sponsored.

Speaker 23 (42:04):
This video, zoch Doc beople do doctor to go to
trust do doc and an insulibook appointment it reviews from
verified patient I found on zokdoc.

Speaker 17 (42:14):
President of the United States Donald Trump wants to attack
crime in big.

Speaker 16 (42:19):
Liberal cities like Chicago, New York, and washing Sydney City.

Speaker 7 (42:22):
President Trump is ramping up his rhetoric about federal intervention
in several Democrat run cities as a result of crime. Yesterday,
I'm true Social he called Chicago the murdered capital of
the world, but recently released fbidea shows the Windy City
isn't even one of the top ten major cities in
the US for a violent crime. Many of the cities

(42:42):
with the highest violent crime rates are in fact found
in red states run by Republicans.

Speaker 23 (42:48):
Now that's CBS, and they're supposed to be new true.
But if you didn't notice, they did what I called
the dishonest shift. See Trump was talking about cities and
crime in cities and noticed how they switched to two
crimes in states and they put up this list, which
is a very interesting list.

Speaker 16 (43:05):
Let's look at Memphis, Tennessee.

Speaker 23 (43:07):
In twenty twenty four, they had two thousand, five hundred
and one violet crimes reported for every one hundred thousand residents,
which is shockingly.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
Hot and niggas.

Speaker 19 (43:15):
Okay, well.

Speaker 8 (43:18):
Have you say this, yo?

Speaker 10 (44:43):
I need you to appreciate the pure mastery?

Speaker 1 (44:50):
Why why? Why? Why yo? This?

Speaker 4 (45:02):
Yo?

Speaker 3 (45:02):
What was so?

Speaker 1 (45:07):
What even is that?

Speaker 8 (45:09):
Oh?

Speaker 10 (45:10):
This creator E made this video way back like, I
don't know, year's a change a goo?

Speaker 26 (45:18):
Yo?

Speaker 8 (45:18):
When that ship.

Speaker 10 (45:19):
Dropped, it was what everybody just kept planted.

Speaker 1 (45:30):
Oh, I don't even know what the fuck is happening?
Hading on what?

Speaker 11 (45:46):
Yo?

Speaker 8 (45:48):
Hey, I don't know why.

Speaker 1 (45:52):
I don't even know what the hell I just saw.

Speaker 9 (45:56):
Holly was Ario with the same peaches because Beiji kept
going around.

Speaker 11 (46:03):
It was like Mario don't say hers and didn tell
st you know the people.

Speaker 8 (46:11):
He kept he kept walking in on the situation she was,
she was at the strip club and she was posted up.

Speaker 1 (46:16):
Without Why was she in the strip club.

Speaker 11 (46:21):
And Mario over there?

Speaker 8 (46:25):
The way she likes old.

Speaker 1 (46:27):
So the implications that Prince's pieces put his streets, Yes, okay,
live on such funny our cam.

Speaker 11 (46:37):
Okay.

Speaker 8 (46:37):
So this is the thing. Look they posted every year.
It runs on the dukes and runs on social media
every year. Baltimore, Maryland cycling classes. So they come from
where were what leg?

Speaker 11 (46:50):
Where's the worst?

Speaker 8 (46:53):
Yeah?

Speaker 27 (46:54):
Ws okay, So look Secretary of Health and Human Circle,

(47:32):
So thoughts a.

Speaker 8 (47:33):
Kid when I said Down's health closed? So this big
ass square, all of the.

Speaker 10 (47:37):
Major rooms to leave the kids of ninety five, the
kids and Greeks kids anywhere was closed and you were
literally the traffic just.

Speaker 11 (47:45):
Because of the detorts.

Speaker 8 (47:46):
It would just keep sitting.

Speaker 11 (47:47):
On the circle.

Speaker 8 (47:55):
Yes, every year, every year, every year, every year.

Speaker 28 (48:06):
Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Junior
and mister Kennedy, Mister Secretary, you may make your opening
statement at this time.

Speaker 19 (48:17):
Thank you Chairman Crapo, and thank you Ranking Member White,
and the invitation appear before the committee today. Before I
is some arise what we've accomplished this year at HHS.
I want to express my deepest condolence to the family
of the Calb County Police officer David Rose, who gave
his life to stop the gunfire attack on the CD

(48:41):
You see on August age. Officer Rose was a veteran.
He was a husband and the father of two children.
Officers Rose is widow, whom I visited, is expecting their
third child. Like Officer Rose's family, to know that he
remains in our prayers and that he will continue to

(49:02):
be in our thoughts. Let me start with a big picture.
Under President Trump's leadership, we at HHS are enacting at
once in a generation shift from a sick care system
to a true healthcare system that tackles the root causes
of chronic disease. Chronic disease has reached crisis proportions in
our country, and finally we have an administration that is

(49:25):
taking action. The MAHA Report Assessment, which the White House
released in May, was the first government analysis to the
key drivers of childhood chronic disease ultra process foods, chemical exposures,
physical inactivity, and over medicalization. This month, we will follow

(49:46):
with the MAHA Reports Strategy, the Trump administration solution for
addressing each cause. At HHS, we haven't just been writing reports.
We have been the busiest, most proactive administration in HHS history.
In just half a year, we've taken un food tized

(50:07):
avy formula contamination, the grass, blue pole, the flooride in
our drinking butter, gas station heroin, electronic cigarettes, drug tyss.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
I can with y'all.

Speaker 2 (50:20):
Every time I turn around, they hope me just a
gas station heroic.

Speaker 11 (50:29):
Any time I turn around.

Speaker 9 (50:33):
I wait, I wonder if that's the one where they
were talking about like.

Speaker 11 (50:39):
The safety of like uh, like public restrooms, the addicts
of like sticking.

Speaker 8 (50:49):
The needle in there.

Speaker 13 (50:51):
Gain.

Speaker 8 (50:52):
I wonder if that's talk about that wasn't What were
those stations about.

Speaker 1 (50:57):
I don't worrying about gas station hero What the hell
is happening?

Speaker 13 (51:03):
What dietary supplement that people started to take and abuse?
And when they say that it has less overdose potential?

Speaker 19 (51:13):
I disagree.

Speaker 16 (51:15):
Hey, everybody, welcome back to the channel.

Speaker 13 (51:17):
This doctor B Doctor B addiction recovery and the topic
I want to briefly give you an overview on today
is gas station heroin?

Speaker 19 (51:26):
What is it? So let's get started.

Speaker 13 (51:29):
I'm going to break this down into presenting to you
what the issue that's presenting itself currently is and.

Speaker 16 (51:34):
It's all over the media.

Speaker 13 (51:35):
Then I'll get into a little bit of detail about
the background and the details of what's inside this stuff.

Speaker 19 (51:41):
And then I'll talk about.

Speaker 13 (51:43):
Some of the intoxication withdrawal symptoms and give you a
brief recap and my thoughts on it. Let's get going,
gas station heroin. This stuff's actually been around for about
twenty years plus years. It's making the news at this time,
more particularly sos in some of the states that are
more affected with the opiate academic and addiction than other states.

(52:05):
And it might be spreading, but at this time, I
know about Mississippi, I know about Kentucky. I'm not sure
if it's in Ohio as well. I know about Indiana.
It's really making its presentation and its presence well known there.
How is it doing that people are buying this stuff
over the counter at the gas station as a dietary supplement,

(52:29):
sometimes online on the web as a mood enhancer or
a cognitive enhancer, remember that whole thing, cognitive enhancement drug.

Speaker 19 (52:38):
They're buying it and they're.

Speaker 13 (52:39):
Starting to really abuse it, get addicted to it, have
serious cravings, withdrawals, intoxication, and now it's starting to be
banned in multiple states.

Speaker 19 (52:54):
We'll see how this.

Speaker 13 (52:55):
Goes and how it's going to develop, but hopefully it'll
be getting taken off the market in a lot of
these states. We do know that over the last twenty years,
so remember it's not new, there's been over two hundred
calls at least to poison control centers. Some of those
have been for severe intoxication, which seems like the hallmark

(53:17):
of it as they describe it is dethenergy and anxiety
or agitation, all people going into severe withdrawals, which present
themselves like opiate withdraws, agitation, sweating, muscle eggs, GI issues. Okay,
so that's how it's presenting. We know that there's been

(53:40):
at least four deaths. We know there's been ICU admissions. Again,
it's not that new. It's been around for about twenty years,
and it's giving people an opiate like high. Let's move
on to what's actually in gas station. HEROLD, which goes
by the name of Zaza, adds a white Tiana pegasus

(54:03):
sold as a mood enhancer, sometimes sold as a cognitive
enhancer sometimes and a dietary supplement.

Speaker 15 (54:11):
Let's move forward. What is this stuff?

Speaker 13 (54:13):
It's an atypical antidepressant approved in Europe in their eighties.
What is an atypical antidepressant? Briefly, let's go to the
history of that and get to where we are now.
In the fifties, they realized that medications, for example, some

(54:33):
tuberculosis medications, were able to treat depression, and they came
up with the monol mean theory or the catechorla mean theory,
or let's just call it a serotonin theory, which you know,
depression has something to do with lack of or some
sort of imbalance of serotonin in your brain. So it

(54:58):
moved to try to see what they can do about that.
As this kind of medication, which was initially for tuberculosis
and a couple of other ones, we're treating depression. But
there was quite a few side effects with that, and
they're like, well, we need to hone it in on serotonin.
Next we went to prozac selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, which

(55:18):
made it more available in what's called the kind of
neurosynaptic space, so it could be uptaken by the neuron
and sort of increase your serotonin transmission. As time went on,
they realized that, well, you know, this isn't hitting everybody,
and a whole bunch of nuances occurred that we really

(55:39):
realized that the story is a lot more complex than
just serotonin or even other model means. Okay, we even
have theories now about inflammation of GLEO cells and so forth,
and they started to sort of develop second generation and
even now third generation antidepressants that hit multiple other neurotransmitters

(56:04):
and receptors. That's for another place, the efficacy of that,
how that works. But in this pursuit, I'm sure, right,
this medication to neptine came about, and it's very complex.
It hits glumine receptors, it has you know, it has
something to do with NMDA, and so it's really a

(56:25):
serotonin modulating product, right, and the serotonin enhancer.

Speaker 19 (56:31):
But along this road in the.

Speaker 13 (56:32):
Last twenty years, they also realize whoa, this stuff is
hitting opiate receptors. It's hitting them MEWE receptors, which have
to have to do with addiction. It's hitting other opiate receptors.
It's really also the nucleus accumbence, which is known as
part of the reward circuity place and the big place
for dopamine and addiction.

Speaker 16 (56:53):
It's really hitting there.

Speaker 13 (56:55):
And then you know, they realize that this stuff is
really increasing dopamine levels in this central nervous system. In addition,
in Europe, although there was initially no thought that this
stuff can be abused and there could be addiction and
abuse potential, they started noting, even in psychiatric patients that

(57:15):
were inpatient, just across the board, that this stuff has
pretty significant abuse and misuse liability, in particular, in particular
for those that have a substance abuse history. Now in Europe, Russia, Asia,
this stuff is starting to be more and more and
more regulated.

Speaker 19 (57:37):
Never got approved in the US.

Speaker 13 (57:39):
Why, I'm not sure, right, I don't think it was
because it had very negative side effects. In fact, I
think this drug, with further investigation, very tight regulation, dosing
regulations by the doctors, can have significant impact on depression, anxiety.
In fact, it's also used for asthma IBS potentially PTSD.

(58:02):
I don't know, but I'm saying it's not a bad drug,
just like many drugs can have an abuse potential, but
they can be prescribed in a very very controlled environment and.

Speaker 16 (58:14):
Close monitoring of the physician.

Speaker 13 (58:16):
But it was never approved in the US, and I
suspect that had to do something with patents and finances,
doesn't matter, But nevertheless, it made it into this illicit
well into this not illicit but legal market of dietary supplements,
and they have been pushing it, whether it's online or
now we're hearing about the gas station over the counter

(58:39):
dietary supplement.

Speaker 19 (58:40):
That people started to take an abuse.

Speaker 13 (58:43):
Okay, we know that intoxication as it has presented to
a lot of the poison centers. Poison control centers has
intoxication is with lethargy and sort of anxiety and dyscoric mood.
We also know that withdraws are very similar to opiate withdrawals, sweating,

(59:04):
abdominal issues, GI issues, anxiety, muscle agches, and paints miolgerists
they call it.

Speaker 19 (59:12):
So where are we at with this stuff?

Speaker 11 (59:14):
Okay?

Speaker 13 (59:14):
It just seems like every single day something new comes up.
The point of what I'm trying to describe is to
educate and give you a formal understanding of what these
things are and take sort of the magic out of it.
This stuff is pretty dangerous because one other thing that
you should know is the average dose that's prescribed per daily.

(59:37):
It's something like twelve point five miligrams twice a day.
It could be up to fifteen milligrams total a day.

Speaker 19 (59:43):
The people that are.

Speaker 13 (59:44):
Abusing it are taking fifty to one hundred times more
of that in a day. The withdrawals are horrendous. And
have been using it for a long time. Keep in mind,
this stuff is not just hitting the opiate receptors. We're
dealing with many other receptors and neurotransmitters. And we already
know a lot of people that are on any kind

(01:00:07):
of psychotropic, whether it's benzo diaspines or antidepressants or some
of the other ones, are having significant withdrawl issues.

Speaker 19 (01:00:15):
Now you're throwing this in the mix.

Speaker 13 (01:00:18):
And it's not regulated, and people are putting themselves at
incredible risk. And when they say that it has less
overdose potential, I disagree because I think we're going to
start to see that as people combine this stuff with alcohol,
with opiates, with benzo diazepines, or even with methamphetamines, and

(01:00:40):
this kind of adds to their cardiotoxicity of the methadon fetamines.
So this stuff is pretty dangerous and I think some
of the states are going to start to really come
down on this stuff.

Speaker 19 (01:00:51):
One last thought I want.

Speaker 13 (01:00:52):
To leave you with is the issue or the point
that here we have an antidepressant and before they even
knew it. Eventually they found out this stuff hits the
MEW receptor and increases dopamine, and oftentimes I believe it
has been used for treatment resistant antidepression. That being said,

(01:01:14):
what a lot of people don't know is that there
has been quite a bit of small studies. I haven't
looked lately, but traditionally in the past there was multiple
small studies where they used low those beeper norphine for treatment.

Speaker 19 (01:01:30):
Resistant depression and they got.

Speaker 13 (01:01:33):
Significantly reduced symptoms and statistically meaningful results, even though they
were small studies.

Speaker 19 (01:01:44):
And this is a little bit of a side step, but.

Speaker 13 (01:01:48):
Think about the complexity the intermingling of a lot of
these issues, including opiate abuse, substance abuse, anxiety depression, which
came first, what's the person's clinical history where they ended up. Nevertheless,
sometimes you can't teach through that as you're treating a

(01:02:11):
patient dealing.

Speaker 19 (01:02:12):
With substance abuse.

Speaker 13 (01:02:14):
But to know that beeper norphine product can also be
used to treat the depression after stopping the use of
opiates is very important, significant and somehow it ties into
this whole issue of why gas station heroin may be

(01:02:34):
a substance of significant misuse, abuse, and illicit consumption at times.

Speaker 19 (01:02:42):
Thank you this prior authorization information blocking.

Speaker 5 (01:03:05):
The committee will come to order.

Speaker 1 (01:03:14):
Round y'all Jesus right. Other than hearing well, y'all can
even keep it to given.

Speaker 28 (01:03:28):
I apologize to you for that outburst, Secretary Kennedy. I
notify everyone else in the audience. Comments from the audiences
our audience are inappropriate. If there are any further disruptions,
the committee will recess until the.

Speaker 5 (01:03:47):
Police can restore order. Mister Secretary, please proceed.

Speaker 19 (01:03:52):
As I was saying, prior authorization information blocking and healthcare
interoperability where ending canter function research, child mutilation, and reducing
animal testing. We are addressing cell phone use in schools,
excessive screen time for you, vacation so.

Speaker 1 (01:04:18):
Full, vaccinated feel any killing children, work.

Speaker 19 (01:04:26):
For youth, the lack of nutrition education in our medical schools,
sickle cell anemia, appetitis see the East Palestine chemical spill,
and many many others. At FDA, we are now on
track to approve more drugs this year than at any
time any history. I'm also proud to say that HHS

(01:04:49):
under President Trump is doing more with less. We have
taken measures to fight waste fraud. And abuse. Just by
eliminating duplicative enrollments and cem as, we are saving taxpayers
fourteen billion dollars a year. Meanwhile, we are expanding access
for people that need it. We are ending races diversity,

(01:05:11):
equity and inclusion practices and instead focusing on aiding low
income and vulnerable families regardless of their race, which was
the original ten intent of Title ten. We're also growing
a billion dollars into head Start and the Administration for
Children and Families. Compassion need not be the casualty of efficiency.

(01:05:35):
I'd like to highlight some issues that have not gotten
media attention. First, we are doing our part to fill
the President's commitment to stop human trafficking, especially of children.
We inherited a terrible humanitarian crisis from the previous administration
with its open border policies, which allowed the appalling laws

(01:05:56):
of four hundred and seventy six thousand uncom of each children.
We have implemented policies now to ensure that that appalling
tragedy can never happen again. We have not done eighty
two thousand tours and located twenty two thousand of those children.
I promise you that we will do more in the

(01:06:17):
next three years. We are also addressing the disastrous health
conditions in tribal communities on Native American reservations. I've met
face to face with tribal but tribal leaders in dozens
of communities and tribes in Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, New Mexico,
and elsewhere, and I look forward to making HHS resources

(01:06:40):
more available to those communities. One of the most significant
initiatives under President Trump is the Rural Health Transformation Fund,
part of the President's Big Beautiful Build, which will provide
the greatest investment of federal money into rural healthcare any history.

Speaker 22 (01:07:00):
Jerry, in June, you fired every member, Miss Secretary, You,
miss Secretary, that my time back, Mister Chairman, Thank you, Miss.

Speaker 5 (01:07:12):
Secretary, Thank you for your attention.

Speaker 22 (01:07:13):
In June, you fired every member of the Well Qualified
Panel it was charged with recommending vaccines to the CDC.
No one in your job has ever fired every committee
member all at once. That month, you told the American
people that you were quote going to bring great people

(01:07:34):
onto the ACE panel, not anti vaxers. Are you aware
that one of the people you put on the panel,
doctor Robert Malone, claimed that the commonly used mRNA of
the vaccine. Quote causes a form of AIDS and can
damage children's quote brain.

Speaker 17 (01:07:57):
I'm not going.

Speaker 11 (01:08:02):
My gosh.

Speaker 1 (01:08:03):
Yeah, first of all, I am not I am not
a doctor. But as a doctor, that's aggressive, he said.

(01:08:25):
He said the mRNA vaccine. Okay, his gig, I said
that's aggressive as stuck to be abundantly cle I personally
would not attack a virus until the virus gig.

Speaker 4 (01:08:49):
That, in my.

Speaker 1 (01:08:51):
Opinion, is inappropriate. The virus should be offended. And that's
actually a like, why is why the homophobia? I feel
viruses have the right to decide who they want to
effect and not. I don't believe it should just be

(01:09:13):
struck stuck the hetero sexual out. But he assumed that
the virus was gay. And then the context and subtext
of that is that because it was engineered, that game's
why engineer?

Speaker 11 (01:09:28):
That's the fun.

Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
No, he's aggressive. He just said the COVID vaccine is gay.
I'm like, God, dang me, I'm like, I like, you
could have eased it in there, bro, you didn't have
to just jump out the window and said the COVID

(01:09:51):
vaccine gay y'all, and you're gonna get aged that's a lot.
He's like, y'all, he said. Jesus said, y'all, have you
over because you remember, don't You have to remember that
the church said that age was God's curse upon the gays.

Speaker 2 (01:10:12):
So but for the church to push the vaccine like
they pushed the nomo sexual out.

Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
Of death, it's aggressive. But to assume that the virus
is gay, in my opinion, like it's getting the virus
out of the closet. Maybe the virus didn't want people
know that it was focused on that type of situation.
But this doctor's like, no, damn, Marne, vaccine is gay,

(01:10:40):
I said, Jesus, And that was an aggressive decoration in
vapor that because he said, I have concrete scientific evidence
that the virus is gay. I said, you know what,
the review studies are a little bit different. I guess though,

(01:11:04):
I believe you. The tad y'all was supposed to be
focused on shit that mattered, not the sexuality of the virus.
But we just jumped out the window and said, fuck death,
it's gay, yo yo. I would have been fine with
them saying it led to people's imminent death. I would say,
you know what, that makes sense. It's an engineer type thing.

(01:11:25):
Hold the herd because most of y'all need to die anyway,
But from to aggressively say it's gay. Yeah, we didn't
need to know all of that certain you'd have to
just jump to aids are saying the virus be out
at the virus. The virus was trying to keep his
own five low key, and this niggas just out here

(01:11:47):
saying this virus is out here going to the glee
the gay club on MLK, and the virus is like,
damn nigga, I ain't ask you all that, Sam Achiltes, mother,
don't just out here say that. I'm what I'm doing
in my private life. I'm a problem with the medical field.
They're too evasive. These viruses can't even just mind the

(01:12:10):
fucking venison.

Speaker 5 (01:12:11):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:12:11):
It's like the virus got to be heterosexual because.

Speaker 22 (01:12:13):
Of Jesus, and they're hard their immune system and their
ability to have children in the future.

Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Yes, he said, you are going to be infernal, you
nasty gay bastards. This doctor is insane, he said. Not
only is the he said the virus is gay and
will make the sterile you nasty. Listen, I will just

(01:12:45):
type the cat Nobel peace of Lord, because he's out
here saying, let me tell you he's like he said,
he said, Pfizer is creating gay viruses. That's gonna make
the sterrups. You're focused on the wrong ship. This doctor's

(01:13:05):
out here out virus and saying he's gonna make all
you niggas sterile. The m R and man with the
one you got to keep getting so it's like you've
getten kept getting jabbed by a gay virus that is
set you.

Speaker 4 (01:13:21):
What was.

Speaker 1 (01:13:25):
Why would he publish it? No again? People think I'll
be a fucking decision. I said it this man with
this with his hand that is absolutely unhim and said,
he said, order listen. No, this man is like he said, RFK,
you gonna listen to me? Mind you all? RFK did?

(01:13:48):
I don't know if he was wife or somebody in
counsel were just whispering in the man ere. He said,
I want my time back. Until he paid attention to me.

Speaker 18 (01:13:56):
R K.

Speaker 1 (01:13:56):
He's like godda.

Speaker 8 (01:13:59):
He like just to order.

Speaker 1 (01:14:01):
He's like, I'm going to be yelling.

Speaker 29 (01:14:03):
Why are you yelling?

Speaker 4 (01:14:04):
Her?

Speaker 1 (01:14:05):
And did you hear the gabbl bitch? I said, why
is this man again? This is what's happening in the
Congress that y'all elected. He is out here saying the
virus is gay and it's going to make all y'all sterile.

(01:14:31):
I think that's aggressive.

Speaker 19 (01:14:33):
This is about kids being pushed in harm's way. Is
gravely question whias happened? Whyas and make a lot of
money as idiot. I don't thank you very much, chump's chauman.
I've made it clear. I think that.

Speaker 22 (01:14:54):
Are you aware that one of the people you put
on this secondary thank you for your attention. In June
you fired every member of the well qualified panel it
was charged with recommending vaccines to the CDC.

Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
He doesn't know they're well qualified, But this is the
warm up. Y'all don't know what's going.

Speaker 22 (01:15:13):
No one in your job has ever fired every committee
member all at once.

Speaker 5 (01:15:19):
That month, you told the American people that you were
quote going.

Speaker 22 (01:15:23):
To bring great people onto the AC panel, not anti vaxers.
Are you aware that one of the people you put
on the panel? Doctor Robert Malone claimed that the commonly
used mRNA of the vaccine quote causes a form of
AIDS and can damage children's quote brains, their heart, their

(01:15:44):
immune system, and their ability to have children in the future.

Speaker 1 (01:15:49):
He said, it is not just gay, it is attacking
the children and making them stupider, infertile, and possibly weaken
their immune system so they can down early. So not
only is it gay, it's saying fucked them kids, and

(01:16:10):
them kids got to that, and he said, are you
aware that this man said that?

Speaker 9 (01:16:20):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
Yes or no, mister Kennedy.

Speaker 19 (01:16:24):
And doctor Malone is one of the inventors?

Speaker 11 (01:16:27):
Yes or no?

Speaker 5 (01:16:27):
Are you were you aware that he had that view
when you pointed into this.

Speaker 19 (01:16:31):
Panel, Dr Malone is taking as I said, doctor mall
that's the inventors of the empire. That's that's.

Speaker 5 (01:16:41):
Mister chairman.

Speaker 22 (01:16:43):
That statement is not true that doctor Malone made, just
as it wasn't true when you wrote the.

Speaker 21 (01:16:49):
Quote African AIDS is entirely.

Speaker 22 (01:16:52):
Different from Western AIDS. Are you aware that another one
of these new members.

Speaker 1 (01:17:02):
Now, I'm not going to stay the because that is
crass and low hanging free. You expect I'm going to
do it. I'm not. I'm not going to point out

(01:17:22):
any of the things that you think I'm going to
point out. All I'm going to say is incorrect. What
part than incorrect? So he said that RFK was incorrect
writing that Western age and African age are different. He

(01:17:45):
is positing that Western AIDS and African aide are the
same as an individual who was not a doctor. He
also told the man who created or helped end near
the mRNA vaccine that he assisting in the engineering is

(01:18:08):
merely a theory and means nothing. Therefore, you engineering it
and knowing the possible outcomes, ince you're the one who
engineered it, is a hardwash and or poppy cock. So
with that said, I'm just saying there's a possibility that

(01:18:37):
African age is slightly different for Western ages off of
the strength that he called it and referred to it
as African aide. Now, again, there's a lot that we
can attack with this entire sentence and the and the

(01:19:00):
person who was saying these are easy attacks that could
be made. So we're just sing tosipity say him and
his hair is incorrect.

Speaker 22 (01:19:12):
Doctor Levy wrote that quote evidence is mounting and indisputable
that mRNA vaccines cause serious harm, including death, especially among
young people.

Speaker 5 (01:19:25):
Yes or no? Are you aware that he said that?

Speaker 19 (01:19:27):
I wasn't a ware he said it, but I agree
with it.

Speaker 5 (01:19:30):
You agree with it.

Speaker 19 (01:19:31):
It's not true.

Speaker 5 (01:19:32):
It wasn't true when he said it.

Speaker 22 (01:19:34):
It's not true when you said it, Secretary Month, Secretary Kenny.
Later this month, your new panel will meet to consider
changing vaccine recommendations for American children. In addition to the
COVID nineteen vaccines, their center review recommendations for the hepatitis
B vaccine, for musicals for months from rubella and vericella vaccine,

(01:19:58):
and the RSP vaccine. These are common back to school
vaccinations for children all over the industrialized world. If you
change that, few old parents in Colorado and across the
country the benefit of some transparency. I think if your

(01:20:20):
panel recommends changing the vaccine schedule for children, do you
anticipate that fewer children will receive these common vaccine vaccinations?

Speaker 11 (01:20:29):
Yes?

Speaker 18 (01:20:29):
Or no?

Speaker 19 (01:20:32):
I would say in the Senator.

Speaker 5 (01:20:33):
The obvious answers.

Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
Yes.

Speaker 22 (01:20:35):
Should parents and schools of Colorado be prepared for more
measles outbreaks as a result of that? Mister Secretary the Senator,
how about more months outbreaks?

Speaker 19 (01:20:47):
I did not anticipate a change in the MMR vaccine,
you know, as it is an independent panel.

Speaker 22 (01:20:56):
Well, it's a panel you just put those folks on.
From what you said, there are people would ideas that
are completely outside the mainstream.

Speaker 19 (01:21:07):
I'm out of the pharmaceutical paradigm.

Speaker 22 (01:21:09):
Let me just say, mister secretary, all these vaccines that were.

Speaker 1 (01:21:14):
I don't know why y'all didn't think he was gonna
be cutting up. Y'all brought him here and y'all put
him on the age age as panel. He said, he said,
he simply asked, He said, do you think they're going
to get rid of the meebles in the mumps vaccine?
He's like, they're on a different program than on a

(01:21:37):
different platform or whatever. He's like, you put the people
on there. He said, yes. He's like, you believe that
their opinion is outside of the mainstream. He's like, you
mean the pharmaceutical paradigm. He quickly pivoted because he saw
the Pfizer check immediately deduct from his account. Now, I
personally understand how compniss is don't bring like this because

(01:22:02):
Pisa said, bitch, wash him out. You better shut him
down because the checks will stop. How media is he
Pizer didn't have to listen. Pizer, who had him he
was on the earpiece of head. Shut him down. He's
out here call the vaccine gave we got a lot

(01:22:24):
of gay people on the panel who are getting offended
because he feeling that he's they're pushing the eye of
ours young vaccine. I don't, we don't need this type
of publicity, so we need you to shut him down.
He just said word like pharmaceutical paradigm. Cut his mic off,
he lisen't I understand what's d I'm no better.

Speaker 22 (01:22:45):
We're talking about today are free and accessible to parents
today in America who have the freedom to be able
to make that choice.

Speaker 5 (01:22:54):
For their children.

Speaker 22 (01:22:55):
Will that be true after your handpicked panel makes their
judgments about these vaccines.

Speaker 19 (01:23:01):
I think that parents should be free.

Speaker 5 (01:23:05):
I know you said that before.

Speaker 22 (01:23:06):
I do too to make your choices, So will they
be just as free after these I assume well.

Speaker 5 (01:23:14):
I will hold you to that, Secretary.

Speaker 22 (01:23:17):
Kennedy, because this is not a podcast. It is the
American people's health that's on the line here. This is
the last thing, by the way, our parents need when
their kids are going back to school, is to have
the kind of confusion and expense and scarcity that you're
creating as.

Speaker 5 (01:23:37):
A result of your ideology.

Speaker 22 (01:23:41):
I think it's critical for you to share the evidence
that this panel will rely on. Will you give the
American people six months or six weeks in advance the
record that they're going to rely.

Speaker 5 (01:23:53):
On to make these decisions. Will you make it transparent
for the American people?

Speaker 19 (01:23:57):
All the evidence is transparent.

Speaker 22 (01:23:59):
Will make it in advanced transparent for the American people.

Speaker 19 (01:24:02):
They can all the evidence since transparder for the first
time in histry. And you were never there complaining when
the pharmaceutical companies were picking those people and then running
their products with no SA If you can.

Speaker 22 (01:24:14):
Make you can characterize it any way you want. I
quoted them today. What I said was accurate. What you
said were Lise, you just sator moving?

Speaker 5 (01:24:25):
They are you?

Speaker 11 (01:24:28):
Mr?

Speaker 19 (01:24:28):
And I asked, has never been this?

Speaker 5 (01:24:30):
I was here, my car. I am saying, I am simple.

Speaker 19 (01:24:35):
You're trying to tell you.

Speaker 22 (01:24:36):
I am simply trying to say that the people that
you have put on that panel.

Speaker 21 (01:24:41):
After firing the entire hurting the question you No.

Speaker 5 (01:24:46):
I'm asking the questions here in that question. I'm asking
the questions.

Speaker 19 (01:24:50):
I asked the question.

Speaker 22 (01:24:52):
I'm asking the questions for mister Kennedy on behalf.

Speaker 14 (01:24:55):
Of parents and schools and teachers all over the.

Speaker 22 (01:25:00):
The United States of America who deserve so much better
than your leadership.

Speaker 5 (01:25:05):
That's what this conversation is about.

Speaker 19 (01:25:08):
Or they deserve the truth and that's what we're going
to give them for the first time in the history
of agency. Thank you very much. On mister Chairman.

Speaker 30 (01:25:21):
I've made it clear I think that Secretary Kennedy is
dead set on making it harder for children to get
vaccines and that kids are going to die because of it.

Speaker 19 (01:25:32):
And miss Chairman, I'd like to put.

Speaker 30 (01:25:33):
In the record today and op ed written by Susan Monares,
who was fired by.

Speaker 19 (01:25:39):
Mister Kennedy without objection.

Speaker 30 (01:25:42):
So what we know and doctor manares you know it's
approved by Republicans. She wrote an op ed today in
the Wall Street Journal, which I've just put in the record,
and I quote her. She said, I was told to
pre approve the recommendations of a vaccine advisory panel newly

(01:26:03):
filled with people who have publicly expressed anti vaccine rhetoric.

Speaker 11 (01:26:08):
So it's not some.

Speaker 30 (01:26:11):
Liberal philosopher or something. This is the CDC director who
tells the Wall Street Journal, which is not exactly interested
in progressive.

Speaker 19 (01:26:21):
You know, theories and the like, that she was told
to preapprove the.

Speaker 30 (01:26:25):
Recommendations of a vaccine advisory panel filled with people who've
publicly expressed anti vaccine rhetoric.

Speaker 19 (01:26:32):
So my first question, mister Secretary, is.

Speaker 30 (01:26:35):
Did you in fact do what Director Wneris said you did,
which is tell her to just go on with vaccine
recommendations even if she didn't think such recommendations aligned with
scientific evidence.

Speaker 19 (01:26:49):
I yes, that's a yes or no.

Speaker 30 (01:26:51):
So you have an opportunity to call her a liar
if you say that you didn't do it.

Speaker 19 (01:26:56):
But I'd like to see you respond to this. Yeah.
I not say that to her, and I never had
a private meeting with her. Other witnesses to every meeting
that we have, and all of those witnesses will say
I never said. So she's lying today to the American
people in the watry journeys.

Speaker 5 (01:27:15):
Yes, sir, okay, let's.

Speaker 30 (01:27:17):
Talk now about what's coming up, because I made it
clear what I've thought about the two hundred and three
days with my colleagues Center also Brooks. In two weeks,
CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will meet to make
decisions about critical vaccines that protect us against hepatitis, being, measles,
and more. The committee's got a profound impact on vaccine access.

(01:27:42):
But these aren't ordinary meetings. You've stacked the deck to
ensure the panel benefits bends to your views. In June,
you fired all seventeen committee members who were respected scientists
and doctors. You replace them with non experts, vaccine skeptics,
and conspiracy theorists. As a result, this critical advisory panel

(01:28:03):
has lost scientific credibility after years, colleagues, we spend so
much time not looking at this as Democrats and Republicans,
but it's good science and scientific credibility.

Speaker 11 (01:28:14):
And now the.

Speaker 30 (01:28:15):
American Academy of Pediatrics has warned that the committee is
being politicized at the expense of children's health. American Academy
of Pediatrics, you think they're lying to I think.

Speaker 19 (01:28:31):
The American Academy of Pediatrics is gravely conflicted.

Speaker 5 (01:28:36):
They get.

Speaker 19 (01:28:38):
Their biggest contributors are the four largest vaccine makers. They
run a journal Pediatrics, which they make a lot of
money on, that is completely dependent on pharmaceutical companies. So
I don't think I wouldn't put a big stake in
what they say that benefits for missidical interest. Senator, I
didn't politicize a sif. I deeply the Congress has all.

Speaker 30 (01:29:03):
Over the country, mister Secretary, scientists and doctors are saying otherwise.

Speaker 19 (01:29:09):
They're all wrong too, They're all lying. According to you,
scientist doctors are supporting me all over the country's division
on opinion.

Speaker 30 (01:29:18):
I don't get letters from thousands of people who are
not political saying that this set of changes is going
to damage American healthcare and particularly these healthcare agencies.

Speaker 5 (01:29:30):
For decades to come.

Speaker 19 (01:29:32):
I don't get any letters law and they to make
a big children forever. And maybe you're listening to a
selective Wikipedia. You get me, I will find I will
tell you what Senator I got. I will put my
mail bag against your mail bag got thirty day ago
thirty seconds.

Speaker 30 (01:29:50):
Dangerous respiratory viruses like RSV are on the agenda for
the next advisory meeting.

Speaker 19 (01:29:58):
Countless parents have been awake into.

Speaker 30 (01:30:00):
The dead and night by a weezing kid, gasping prayer,
forced to rush their little winto the yard. There's no
worse heart wrenching fear. The RSB vaccine offers these kids
protection against the worst effects of the virus. But now
it looks like you're on a crusade to make infants
and babies more vulnerable to the terrible illness.

Speaker 19 (01:30:20):
That's what we're doing with the COVID changes.

Speaker 28 (01:30:24):
And please make your answer brief, mister Secretary, I've said that.

Speaker 19 (01:30:29):
A position is indefensible. I think it's Pophondris has been
investigating that committee for twenty three years because it is
it is pervaded with conflicts of interest. Well we did
is we got rid of the conflicts of interest when
we put we deep politicize it and put grace scientists
on it from a very different group.

Speaker 5 (01:30:49):
Let me close, very Borough vaccine.

Speaker 11 (01:30:51):
Let me close with this.

Speaker 19 (01:30:52):
Because, like sener Craig Bauma a few.

Speaker 30 (01:30:54):
Seconds over, I don't think, mister secretary.

Speaker 19 (01:30:57):
This is about you and me.

Speaker 30 (01:30:59):
This is about kids being pushed in harm's way by
reckless and repeated decisions to get scientists and doctors out
of the way and allow conspiracy theories to dictate this
country's health policy. I don't see any evidence that you
have any regrets about anything you've done or plans to
change it. And my last comment is I hope that

(01:31:21):
you will tell the American people how many preventable child
deaths are an acceptable sacrifice for enacting an agenda that
I think is fundamentally cruel and defies concepts.

Speaker 11 (01:31:34):
Thanks I do.

Speaker 19 (01:31:35):
I got to reply, Senaty, You've said in that chair
for how long, twenty twenty five years, while the chronic
disease and our children went up to seventy six percent,
and you said nothing. You never asked the question why
it's happening. Why is this happening today? For the first

(01:31:55):
time in twenty years, you've learned that infancuchiality has increased
in our country. It is not because I came in here,
is because of what happened during the Biden administration that
we're going to end.

Speaker 5 (01:32:05):
I'm going to let Senator wide and respond briefly to.

Speaker 28 (01:32:08):
That, and then we're not going to go over like
we just did this committee on a bipartisan basis.

Speaker 30 (01:32:14):
Colleague, colleagues, might Cabinet Secretary says that we have no
interest in chronic cares.

Speaker 18 (01:32:21):
Secretary Chairman, could we have regular order please, there's a process.

Speaker 30 (01:32:24):
Of turning around the Medicare program with the chronic care
building Chairman hats when he was chairman, and this committee
putting together on a bipartisan basis.

Speaker 28 (01:32:32):
All right, We're going to proceed, and I don't just
want the rest of the members to know. I gave
Senator widen As ranking numbers some leeway there, but we're
going to stick to the five minutes.

Speaker 6 (01:32:42):
Let me go back to policy for come, so maybe
lower the temperature a little bit. I got a bipartisan
bill that would be a systemic fix, not a vote
buying mechanism when Medicaid's getting cut.

Speaker 19 (01:32:55):
That what was put in on the Royal hospitals.

Speaker 6 (01:32:57):
One of the things we could do as a secretary
is make sure that the folks who work in rural
hospitals to get an eighty percent reimbursement of what folks
get in more urban centers.

Speaker 5 (01:33:07):
Will you support that legislation?

Speaker 19 (01:33:12):
Are you talking about the area age index?

Speaker 6 (01:33:15):
I'm talking about the area wage indecks and moving that
up to eighty percent so there is an actual ability
to get rural providers.

Speaker 5 (01:33:23):
President Trump supports that and.

Speaker 19 (01:33:26):
We do support so you will work with us to
get that passed.

Speaker 6 (01:33:30):
Yes, that will increase costs on both Medicaid and Medicare,
So you are a committed to that.

Speaker 19 (01:33:36):
I appreciate that.

Speaker 6 (01:33:37):
What about center riding that I've got to build because
across America? What about hospitals are shutting down on their
OBGYN services.

Speaker 14 (01:33:45):
Try to have a baby.

Speaker 19 (01:33:46):
I don't know about all of my own.

Speaker 6 (01:33:48):
Friend states, but in south side Virginia, you can't find
a hospital. We work with us to make sure that
before obgyn services are taken out of a rural hospital,
there has to be a process and procedure.

Speaker 13 (01:34:00):
Have it.

Speaker 19 (01:34:00):
Work with you on that, Senator to meet with you
and see if we can work with you on it.
I don't know exactly what the issue is.

Speaker 6 (01:34:08):
Well, again, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, who
has said he doesn't know how many people died from COVID,
doesn't know if the vaccine saved lies, doesn't understand all
of a sudden there's a more flying rural America because
they can't afford it, and what the cuts that are
coming up is going to be exponentially worse. I would

(01:34:30):
invite you, sir, to come with me to a community
health center in Virginia and hear what is on people's mind.

Speaker 21 (01:34:36):
They want to get healthier.

Speaker 19 (01:34:37):
Absolutely help me in, but they also don't.

Speaker 5 (01:34:40):
Want their basic health care remove.

Speaker 19 (01:34:41):
Thank you, mister chairman.

Speaker 8 (01:34:44):
Thank you, mister chairman.

Speaker 31 (01:34:45):
So last November, while you are under consideration to become
Secretary of Health and Human Services, Mister Kennedy, you said, quote,
if vaccines are working for somebody, I'm not going to
take them away. No, if SAMs or but you would
not take away vaccines from anyone who wanted them. Then,

(01:35:07):
last week you announced that the COVID nineteen vaccine is
no longer approved for healthy.

Speaker 14 (01:35:12):
People under the age of sixty five.

Speaker 31 (01:35:14):
In announcing the change, you said the vaccine will be
available for anyone who wants it.

Speaker 11 (01:35:19):
Now.

Speaker 31 (01:35:19):
Obviously both things cannot be true at the same moment.
So let's clear this up right now, Secretary Kennedy, will
you tell America that all adults and all children over
six months of age are eligible to get a COVID
booster at their local pharmacy today.

Speaker 19 (01:35:39):
Anybody can get the booster. I'm sorry, anybody can get
it to anybody.

Speaker 25 (01:35:44):
So you're saying that is now the official rule of HHS.

Speaker 31 (01:35:49):
Anybody is eligible to get a booster by just walking
out the pharmacy.

Speaker 19 (01:35:53):
It is not recommended for healthy people.

Speaker 5 (01:35:56):
No.

Speaker 31 (01:35:56):
No, If you don't recommend then the concept points of
that in many states is that you can't walk into
a pharmacy and get one. It means insurance companies don't
have to cover the two hundred dollars or so cost.
As Senator doctor Cassidy said, you are effectively denying people
vaccines and.

Speaker 19 (01:36:16):
Not going to recommend a product for which there's no
clinical data for that indication, which is that what I
should be doing.

Speaker 31 (01:36:23):
What you should be doing is honoring your promise that
you made when you were looking to get confirmed in
this job like this. That is, you promised that you
would not take away vaccines from anyone who wanted them.
You just changed the classification of the COVID vaccine.

Speaker 19 (01:36:42):
I'm not taking them away from people's center here.

Speaker 25 (01:36:44):
It takes it away if you can't get it from
your pharmacy.

Speaker 19 (01:36:48):
Well, most Americans are going to be able to get
it from their pharmacy for free dollars. Most Americans will
be able to get it from their pharmacy.

Speaker 25 (01:36:56):
Frue question is everyone who wants it? That was your promise.

Speaker 11 (01:37:00):
I know I can't.

Speaker 19 (01:37:01):
I never promised that I was going to recommend products
with which there is no indication.

Speaker 14 (01:37:06):
When you said, and I know you've.

Speaker 19 (01:37:08):
Taken eight hundred and fifty five thousand dollars from pharmaceut
If the top of.

Speaker 31 (01:37:12):
Day, Senator did you hold up a big sign saying
that you were lying when you've said that, because you
are the one who said you.

Speaker 5 (01:37:19):
Would not take them away.

Speaker 19 (01:37:22):
Now, Senator, I'm not taking them away from that.

Speaker 25 (01:37:24):
Secretary.

Speaker 19 (01:37:25):
You want me to indicate a product for which there
is no clinical data?

Speaker 14 (01:37:31):
Says how what you want?

Speaker 25 (01:37:32):
Secretary Kennedy. You said you wouldn't, and now you did.

Speaker 19 (01:37:36):
I'm not taking them away. Everybody can get access to them.

Speaker 31 (01:37:39):
No, they can't walk into a pharmacy the way they
could last month and get access.

Speaker 19 (01:37:45):
It depends on the state, It depends on the stags
a year ago. They can still get it.

Speaker 29 (01:37:51):
Everybody can get it.

Speaker 19 (01:37:53):
Everybody can get it, Senator, So look, let's move on.

Speaker 25 (01:37:57):
You clearly are taking away vaccines.

Speaker 31 (01:37:59):
I've seen the list for what's coming up next, and
that is the agenda for the next CDC Vaccine Panel.
And first up is ratifying your COVID action. Second is
hepatitis B is on the agenda. So should Americans expect
you to take away hepatitis vaccine access as well.

Speaker 25 (01:38:22):
Even though you promised not to.

Speaker 19 (01:38:24):
As I said, I'm not doing vaccines away from anybody.

Speaker 31 (01:38:27):
The same answer, right, You're just going to deny that
when people can't get access that you're not taking it away.

Speaker 25 (01:38:35):
Then let me ask you, is that the same game
you're going to play with you?

Speaker 19 (01:38:39):
So you want me to recommend every product in the
world without any clinical.

Speaker 25 (01:38:45):
Trial data brou on your promises.

Speaker 19 (01:38:48):
Yeah, my promise was to get a month.

Speaker 25 (01:38:50):
Ago, we could get covid vaccines.

Speaker 19 (01:38:53):
By just walking. You can still get covid vaccine. Senator
taking that away? Oh you are still You can still
get the girl back. Care will still pay for them,
and medic Kids will help.

Speaker 31 (01:39:04):
The head of the CDC that if she refused to
sign off on your changes to the childhood vaccine schedule
that she had to resign.

Speaker 15 (01:39:13):
No.

Speaker 19 (01:39:14):
I told her that she had to resign because I
asked her, are you a trustworthy person? And she said no.
If you had an employee who told you they weren't trustworthy,
would you ask them to resigns?

Speaker 25 (01:39:30):
So I'm sorry, but this is not what she has
said publicly.

Speaker 19 (01:39:35):
She has said I'm not surprised about that.

Speaker 25 (01:39:38):
So you're saying she's mine.

Speaker 19 (01:39:40):
Yes, every conversation I had with her that were.

Speaker 1 (01:39:43):
That's just straight.

Speaker 31 (01:39:44):
This is the same person that less than a month
earlier you stood next to her and described her as unimpeachable,
and you had full confidence in her, and that you
had full confidence in her antifate credentials.

Speaker 25 (01:40:01):
And in a month she became a liar.

Speaker 19 (01:40:04):
Yeah, we should ask her what changed? And by the way,
a month ago you were voting a cancider, oh, because
you thought she was either incompetent, ineligible, or unsuited to
the task.

Speaker 31 (01:40:17):
So I was afraid she was going to bend the
needy you and Donald Trump. And it looks like she
didn't bend the niece, so you fired her. Look, you're
putting America's babies health at risk, America's seniors health at risk,
all Americans health at risk, and you should resign.

Speaker 18 (01:40:33):
Senator Sanders, President Trump, Why don't usually agree with quote
COVID vaccines quote one of the greatest miracles in the
history of modern day medicine that saved tens of millions
of wives worldwide.

Speaker 19 (01:40:46):
Side that the community agrees with Trump lance.

Speaker 18 (01:40:49):
And study found that it prevented almost twenty million deaths
during the first year of use. Secretary Kennedy, President Trump
and the medical community.

Speaker 19 (01:41:00):
Right, or do you still believe.

Speaker 18 (01:41:02):
That the COVID vaccine was quote the deadliest vaccine ever made.

Speaker 19 (01:41:07):
Oh, I know, first of all, I didn't say that.
I said that it in terms of of AIRS reports
a while ago. I've said today I think that President
Trump should get the Nobel Brant.

Speaker 5 (01:41:18):
So who's right?

Speaker 19 (01:41:19):
Is Trump?

Speaker 5 (01:41:19):
Is the medical community?

Speaker 26 (01:41:20):
Writer?

Speaker 5 (01:41:21):
Are you right?

Speaker 19 (01:41:22):
President Trump? An extraordinary piece of leadership?

Speaker 5 (01:41:26):
Is he right or wrong? Did COVID say millions of lives?

Speaker 19 (01:41:31):
As I said? He got Americans back to work at
that time, that particular vaccine, which perfectly matched the virus
that was circulating. Man, and I have no idea how
many lives, say, but it's saved.

Speaker 5 (01:41:42):
Quite a few.

Speaker 18 (01:41:45):
You know what, I find a little bit weird in
this discussion. I'm hearing it over and over again this morning,
Mister Chairman. He's got the entire medical community on one side.
You got the AMA representing hundreds of thousands of doctors,
the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Public Health Association,

(01:42:06):
All of these organizations are telling us that COVID vaccine
and vaccines in general are safe and effective.

Speaker 5 (01:42:17):
You are casting doubt on that.

Speaker 18 (01:42:19):
Who are your scientific Who are the organizations that are
agreeing with you and casting aspersions on vaccines.

Speaker 19 (01:42:27):
The primary advisors are Martie Mcarey, Jay Buchara, doctor Eyes.

Speaker 18 (01:42:38):
Then I pursue, you've got a few doctors who agree
with you, and I'm giving you the.

Speaker 19 (01:42:41):
Few doctors what you're talking about. There's a big difference, Senator,
between established science and the scientific establishment which has been
co opted by the Pharmashola.

Speaker 18 (01:42:53):
So you're telling me, you're telling the American people that
the American Medical Association, representing one hundred treds of thousands
of people, have been co opted and that they should
not trust about this head.

Speaker 19 (01:43:04):
I'm the Aragon Academy of Pediatrics the American And by the.

Speaker 18 (01:43:07):
Way, just for the record, every single Republican I don't
mean to be politically in mister Chevan has to receive
pac money from.

Speaker 5 (01:43:14):
The pharmaceutical industry. Are they all corrupt as well?

Speaker 19 (01:43:18):
And I'm telling you the American Heart Association has been
co opted by the everybody.

Speaker 5 (01:43:22):
But you said it. But you know what, when you
read for president, you know we have.

Speaker 18 (01:43:25):
A corrupt campaign finance system.

Speaker 5 (01:43:28):
Maybe you will agree with me on that. Okay, you
have wort president, you had a billionaire behind it.

Speaker 18 (01:43:33):
You received three hundred thousand dollars from people, not from
the industry, people in it, as.

Speaker 5 (01:43:38):
I did from individuals.

Speaker 1 (01:43:40):
You corrupt.

Speaker 19 (01:43:40):
President Trump got.

Speaker 5 (01:43:42):
Three million dollars.

Speaker 18 (01:43:44):
Every Republican got corporate pack money for the pharmaceutical industry,
Democrats as well. Everybody is corrupt, but you it's not
what we're looking at.

Speaker 5 (01:43:53):
I don't think so. And I think the issue.

Speaker 19 (01:43:55):
Haven't even know what you're talking about.

Speaker 5 (01:43:56):
Well, I think you're doing what I'm talking about.

Speaker 19 (01:43:58):
I don't know what you're talking about. You is every
time anyone are you saying that what they're u saying
the pharmaceutical industry was supporting my presidential go So I
don't think.

Speaker 5 (01:44:07):
No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying that the.

Speaker 18 (01:44:09):
Pharmaceutical industry is a greedy institution with the charge agust
the highest prices in the world.

Speaker 5 (01:44:15):
They are pervasive. But to suggest that every institution, the AMA.

Speaker 18 (01:44:20):
The pediatrics people is corrupt because they disagree with you
is an insult.

Speaker 19 (01:44:25):
People disagree with me all the time.

Speaker 5 (01:44:27):
I have arguments in my agency.

Speaker 19 (01:44:30):
He needed arguments every day with Jay Boddach, with Martin McCarey. Doctor,
you have given the names of a few people.

Speaker 18 (01:44:37):
I have given you the names of organizations representing hundreds
of thousands of doctors in scientis.

Speaker 21 (01:44:42):
My yield the Senator till Us, Tedator Luhan, thank you,
Miss Sherman, Secretary Kennedy. Doctor dusk Lakis, who recently resigned
as director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.
His resign resignation letter stated he and his team were
never allowed to brief you. I'm curious who you're listening to.

(01:45:04):
Since it's clear you're not listening to qualified experts like
doctor dusk Galacis, can you give the committee the name
of the person I don't consider doctor, mister Secretary, The
question that I have for you is, can you give
the committee a name of who you're getting brief by.

Speaker 32 (01:45:20):
I'm getting brief by all the time. I see just
a name, doctor William Thompson's one. Nay, thank you very much, sir. Now,
but I think, mister Secretary, that's not a hard question.
You know, you know a lot of answers I'm not
being and you answered it.

Speaker 21 (01:45:37):
Let's go on now. You you said that you're soon
going to release a study claiming to reveal the cause
of autism. Tim done. Surprisingly with the upcoming Act meeting
to justify taking vaccines from Americans. Now, as you know,
autism affects millions of children, so I guess you'd have
the nation's top medical experts working on this. Mister Kennedy,

(01:45:58):
you hired a man named David Geyer to conduct this study.
Is that correct?

Speaker 19 (01:46:04):
No?

Speaker 21 (01:46:05):
Is mister David Dyer working for HHS.

Speaker 19 (01:46:10):
He's a contractor, but he's actin a study.

Speaker 21 (01:46:13):
He's a contractor. He's a contract Do you know who
works for you, mister Kennedy?

Speaker 19 (01:46:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 21 (01:46:17):
Do you know that mister Gyer is listed as an
HHS on the employee directory as a senior data Analysts,
not a contractor.

Speaker 19 (01:46:26):
He's a contractor.

Speaker 21 (01:46:27):
He's not an So is your website wrong?

Speaker 19 (01:46:30):
He's not an you know, I don't know what.

Speaker 21 (01:46:32):
I'm going to pull up the website for you.

Speaker 19 (01:46:35):
He's a contractor.

Speaker 21 (01:46:37):
If the website says he is a senior data analyst.

Speaker 19 (01:46:40):
Will you come?

Speaker 5 (01:46:40):
Will you?

Speaker 21 (01:46:41):
At least I moved to the couch.

Speaker 19 (01:46:42):
I don't know ro contractor can be classified as a
senior data anna.

Speaker 11 (01:46:46):
Rights or not?

Speaker 21 (01:46:47):
Is mister Dyer a doctor?

Speaker 4 (01:46:49):
No?

Speaker 21 (01:46:50):
Did you know he never went to medical school?

Speaker 19 (01:46:53):
He's not He's not or not he's not practicing medicine.

Speaker 21 (01:46:57):
Did you know that he got caught in Maryland and
was charged for practicing medicine without a medical license.

Speaker 19 (01:47:04):
He was charged by a medical board and suit the
medical board, and the medical board was found to have
acted an actual malice and was fined two point six
million dollars by a judge in Maryland for doing that.

Speaker 21 (01:47:17):
See, so you choose to know a lot when you
want to know a lot. You're it's incredible, Kennedy, the Senator,
You're ridiculous. So here here's the question. I have you
brought him in to do this study? I think there's
no question.

Speaker 19 (01:47:30):
I told you he's not doing a study.

Speaker 21 (01:47:33):
Is he participating in the study? No, he's doing any
analysis in regards to this No.

Speaker 19 (01:47:38):
What he's doing is getting access to the Vaccine Safety
Data Link, which is the biggest repository for vaccine information
that but your friend would not give us for seven months.

Speaker 21 (01:47:50):
Mister Mara, I asked you this question just because you
know the answer. What is mister Dyer doing?

Speaker 11 (01:47:56):
He is.

Speaker 19 (01:47:57):
He is the only one because con ordered the CDC
to open up the VSD to him in two thousand
and two. He is the only outside who has ever
seen it. So because because you.

Speaker 21 (01:48:11):
Stary, is he participating in this thing? You just said,
he's the only dude that knows puts in here?

Speaker 33 (01:48:18):
Do you want me to explain it to you, Senator,
because you want to use your show you just want
to show I'll subm you just want to show Bud
for your ads or do you want to hear a
real answer to your question?

Speaker 21 (01:48:30):
Mister secretary? You you choose to know answers to questions
with some colleagues.

Speaker 19 (01:48:35):
I'm going to the answer answer.

Speaker 21 (01:48:39):
Someone should have asked you. Maybe President Trump should have
asked you, are you a trustworthy person? I wishould have
waited for an answer. Then let's want to know what
you're talking about.

Speaker 19 (01:48:49):
They're talking gibberish.

Speaker 21 (01:48:50):
Mister Secretary. Let me speak slowly and clearly so that
you can understand me through my new Mexico and then
give me a chance this help. Can you understand me?

Speaker 19 (01:49:01):
Yes?

Speaker 21 (01:49:01):
Appreciate that, mister Secretary? Yes or no? Did you hire
mister Dyer to do this study? No, mister Chairman, Well
let me ask me. Maybe we'll just get a good
answer here. Mister secretary, will you commit to sharing the

(01:49:22):
protocols used for the Autism Study.

Speaker 19 (01:49:24):
With Congress and to the public. They are public.

Speaker 21 (01:49:28):
Will you commit to giving it to this committee.

Speaker 11 (01:49:30):
By the end of the week.

Speaker 19 (01:49:31):
No, not because you commit, That's the way it works.

Speaker 21 (01:49:34):
Will you you don't even know what you're talking mister secretary.
Will you commit to sharing the protocols for the study.

Speaker 19 (01:49:40):
By the end of the month. We already have you
just said the public, We put out the notice of
funding opportunities, and then the scientists all over the world.

Speaker 21 (01:49:50):
You're not understanding me, lad, you're not understanding how the
world were Do.

Speaker 5 (01:49:54):
You understand what the protocol?

Speaker 21 (01:49:56):
Do you understand what they are?

Speaker 19 (01:49:57):
The scientists? We're doing this yet submit the protocol?

Speaker 21 (01:50:01):
Okay, so you you have what's coming from us. So
will you commit to sharing those protocols with this committee?

Speaker 19 (01:50:06):
Well, anybody can get a hold of the protocol. It's
published with the study.

Speaker 21 (01:50:11):
Mister Chairman. What I'd like to ask is for your commitment. Here,
I'll send a letter to the Secretary. I'll ask for
support from the leadership of this committee to ask for
those protocols.

Speaker 19 (01:50:22):
If those protocols are not giving to anybody can get
the protocol.

Speaker 21 (01:50:25):
Mister secretary, not talking to you mister.

Speaker 28 (01:50:29):
If the protocols are public, we can work with you.

Speaker 21 (01:50:31):
But I'm asking, mister Chairman, is that if those protocols
are not given to this committee, I'm asking for your
agreement that we follow through with a subpoena to get them.

Speaker 5 (01:50:41):
No, I will not agree to the subpoena anything.

Speaker 21 (01:50:44):
Let's say what, mister chairman, you'll help me get them
if they're available publicly. Yes, I appreciate that, mister Chairman.
Mister Kennedy. With all the questions here today, people just
want to know the truth. When I don't think so,
mister Secretary, you don't think so, They thank you.

Speaker 11 (01:51:00):
I hope so.

Speaker 21 (01:51:01):
I hope everyone recording that got that because they're explained
the secretary's tenure.

Speaker 11 (01:51:06):
Here.

Speaker 19 (01:51:06):
Look, two young ladies.

Speaker 21 (01:51:08):
In Las Crucestew, Mexico to town Hall recently gave me
this starfish pin. I was going to give it to
you today, but after your question each to day, I
don't think you deserve it because what this represents is
to remember that every one of us can make a difference,
or to something as small as the starfish on a.

Speaker 5 (01:51:25):
Beach that maybe got washed up and.

Speaker 19 (01:51:26):
You throw it back in the ocean.

Speaker 21 (01:51:27):
You might not save them all, but you can save one.
I'm sorry that you're not worthy of this nice little
pins or as a nice reminder, I'm going to play
for you, Secretary Kennedy. I hope we do better. I
want you to do better. But today was a failure
for you.

Speaker 19 (01:51:41):
Man.

Speaker 8 (01:51:41):
How you ope?

Speaker 19 (01:51:42):
Study eighty four of them and medicaids help.

Speaker 31 (01:51:45):
The head of the CDC that if she refused to
sign off on your changes to the childhood vaccine schedule
that she had to resign.

Speaker 5 (01:51:54):
No.

Speaker 19 (01:51:54):
I told her that she had to resign because I
asked her, are you a trustworthy person? And she said no.
If you had an employee who told you they weren't trustworthy,
would you ask them to resign center.

Speaker 25 (01:52:11):
So I'm sorry, but this is not what she has
said publicly.

Speaker 4 (01:52:15):
She is.

Speaker 19 (01:52:16):
I'm not surprised about that.

Speaker 25 (01:52:19):
So you're saying she's mine.

Speaker 19 (01:52:20):
Yes, every conversation I had with her, there.

Speaker 11 (01:52:24):
Were we that's just straight.

Speaker 31 (01:52:25):
This is the same person that less than a month
earlier you stood next to her and described her as
unimpeachable and you had full confidence in her, and that
you had full confidence in her scientific credentials, And in
a month she became a liar.

Speaker 19 (01:52:44):
Yeah, we should ask her what change. And by the way,
a month ago you were voting a cancer because you
thought she was either incompetent, ineligible, or unsuited to the task.

Speaker 31 (01:52:57):
Now I started, I was afraid she was going to
be the needy you and Donald Trump, and it looks
like she didn't then the knees, so you fired her. Look,
you're putting America's babies health at risk, America's seniors health
at risk, all Americans health at risk.

Speaker 19 (01:53:13):
And you should resign, Senator Sanders. What you.

Speaker 11 (01:53:52):
Don't give a.

Speaker 5 (01:54:01):
PTA only put ship with the compot.

Speaker 1 (01:54:05):
Don't to walk apart.

Speaker 11 (01:54:07):
About the what's the buy side?

Speaker 14 (01:54:12):
The different in the protect what they.

Speaker 8 (01:54:16):
Can't do it?

Speaker 19 (01:54:17):
I don't know what the pot do?

Speaker 14 (01:54:19):
Take what the gop?

Speaker 34 (01:54:22):
All you get about to give about success.

Speaker 29 (01:54:46):
At you give a say takes you a.

Speaker 15 (01:55:00):
What the selma that you.

Speaker 14 (01:55:04):
Also bota.

Speaker 35 (01:55:15):
Also bob their son.

Speaker 4 (01:55:46):
Was a.

Speaker 19 (01:55:48):
Something to.

Speaker 5 (01:55:51):
Was a wicked time.

Speaker 34 (01:56:45):
I up on mass successful, so mad I didn't about
that said it said.

Speaker 29 (01:56:55):
I can give up on that success and take you
so bad you.

Speaker 19 (01:57:08):
Can?

Speaker 4 (01:57:12):
And do.

Speaker 10 (01:57:22):
You think.

Speaker 11 (01:57:33):
Back got back.

Speaker 29 (01:57:50):
Starting stops.

Speaker 36 (01:59:05):
As a scout the building.

Speaker 11 (01:59:11):
The same s senters.

Speaker 36 (01:59:50):
Ab they got.

Speaker 11 (02:00:34):
Wind in my mother know that's not so. They love the.

Speaker 14 (02:01:17):
Frenzy terrible.

Speaker 37 (02:01:18):
They can call me yeah herby chicky because myself in
Shuran make it not a siu prelipic, it's the liparticulous.

Speaker 26 (02:01:23):
My moo resipis think.

Speaker 14 (02:01:24):
You must put the character britis the braidist.

Speaker 15 (02:01:26):
I'm always ever.

Speaker 29 (02:01:27):
Did Fritzie terrible.

Speaker 11 (02:01:28):
We can call me yeah her.

Speaker 37 (02:01:29):
A ticket because myself insurance make it's not a siu
presi by It wasn't lying particulous.

Speaker 38 (02:01:34):
My borsips think you must put the cherec of Britis
the brats I've always ever did for a terrible lady
American type of pristine ten in the payee forms got
some maleblas Britain the apocalyptic maybe politic kids.

Speaker 15 (02:01:46):
I think it's turn the prisons.

Speaker 11 (02:01:47):
At the moment, the breezy park.

Speaker 14 (02:01:49):
Never booking testape is fun to happen.

Speaker 8 (02:01:51):
They can see the.

Speaker 14 (02:01:51):
Book and thus cross from the pack for the test
the fire with them alone the first thing a pass
will leave the I'm in.

Speaker 29 (02:01:57):
The strict because of day to reason, so I'm trying.

Speaker 38 (02:02:00):
To soult's turn the binsaults and give them more than
that and because in the frost during the court the
badness they put them the better, bringing the world to
a thing ormmatically supplying his name from broken in the patient.

Speaker 14 (02:02:12):
It's getting fresh, breaking and getting respected. I guess, okay,
Fear he appeared to be the quickest and.

Speaker 38 (02:02:17):
Multitum and broke the nv is the nephth the coot
frist a terribly to call me, yeah herd chicky, because
myself a shirt making does us a sumprell Bit what's
the lip particulous mumbo recis, but you must put the
chreff to britis the practice. I'm always help a ten.

Speaker 14 (02:02:30):
Christ are terribly to call me, yeah herry chicky because
myself the shirts making dollars to spello.

Speaker 38 (02:02:35):
Bit what's the lip particulous? Humble sikes that you must
put the cherecter pritis the practice. I'm always help a ten.

Speaker 1 (02:02:40):
The sen patient is in the picture that Proba diagnosed.

Speaker 11 (02:02:43):
Just send them to the.

Speaker 14 (02:02:44):
Giving of couples and other thumbs.

Speaker 38 (02:02:45):
But giving me cre you're bringing this music is silent
and listen this gig wanted.

Speaker 14 (02:02:49):
That was his name up in the silence.

Speaker 4 (02:02:50):
The soulad said of travel.

Speaker 38 (02:02:52):
Reaching you get beach when he's run the imagines happened
and leave till they end up. My broth the one
the second, bring myself to send the methods to turn
the forces on the only waye will only man will.

Speaker 11 (02:03:02):
Go to want to make the combat.

Speaker 1 (02:03:04):
Fourth hit before at ten.

Speaker 38 (02:03:05):
Because the day you come shift, don't pretty come back,
you said my mat and forth to say, give the
way that the rent is.

Speaker 14 (02:03:11):
Going to need to not the mad baby, but believe
it is.

Speaker 19 (02:03:13):
I can take a cause of pain.

Speaker 34 (02:03:15):
I'm a mass kid, my matter kids a free play the.

Speaker 14 (02:03:18):
Fall though to go and get you in high truth
to say the ones that's gotta you frizzle terrible.

Speaker 37 (02:03:23):
They called me your hered chicken because I saw the
church making dozens a samrella bit, what's the leaf?

Speaker 14 (02:03:28):
Pridiculous my moment sicks think you want.

Speaker 38 (02:03:30):
To put the sherfc to Britchets and braiders are always
up a ten frizzle terrible.

Speaker 37 (02:03:33):
We be called me your herod chicky because I sell
the church beckey does as a savello.

Speaker 11 (02:03:37):
Bit what's the leaf?

Speaker 8 (02:03:38):
Ridiculous?

Speaker 11 (02:03:39):
My momist it is thick.

Speaker 14 (02:03:40):
You want to put the shelfick to Britchet's a Pratics
are always up a.

Speaker 38 (02:03:42):
Tend welcome to the ruma fire where the strong every fire.

Speaker 14 (02:03:45):
In the week gett some out the heat and number.

Speaker 38 (02:03:47):
We're by the notion that they and that's whiskey with
the best fit for the fifth at the rest of
the day or a mass.

Speaker 14 (02:03:53):
A mess of content they content, the poor.

Speaker 38 (02:03:55):
Telling the stuff for prizess clearly out of the lead,
they go to weep and w craught necessarily coming because
if I's not respected, they're as all an emotion, so
devoting more focus. So said, they're just doing you, don't
worry about what the other men being to say, dude.

Speaker 1 (02:04:09):
Just keep the dream alone.

Speaker 11 (02:04:10):
You know that?

Speaker 14 (02:04:11):
More close to me, doctor Joe, because I'm gonna really thought,
I'm lessing flow through my NUSI.

Speaker 29 (02:04:15):
He bother you really are about you.

Speaker 8 (02:04:17):
We're out of.

Speaker 1 (02:04:18):
Death due to call them see it model the realers.

Speaker 14 (02:04:21):
That no double meaning if you're weak a week to except.

Speaker 4 (02:04:24):
To stand prith terrectly.

Speaker 37 (02:04:26):
They called me in herbted because mysef insurance makeeyns is
a pelopy.

Speaker 14 (02:04:30):
What's the le particulous?

Speaker 38 (02:04:31):
My momsips picking what the chard to printic the pratice
I'm always eptend prins the terrible with they call me
in hebted because myself insured making nothers.

Speaker 1 (02:04:39):
A the pelop it?

Speaker 14 (02:04:40):
What's the le particulous?

Speaker 38 (02:04:41):
My moor sis thinking what the chefick to preticiar bratice,
I'm always emptend.

Speaker 36 (02:05:21):
Because a tonic my good brother returning host.

Speaker 26 (02:05:25):
And my fraid my main day at Bay three.

Speaker 14 (02:05:29):
Main thing in the old day, I a crap.

Speaker 18 (02:05:40):
Like that?

Speaker 14 (02:05:44):
What thet really it is?

Speaker 19 (02:05:47):
PRIs maybe toms w.

Speaker 18 (02:05:56):
The person?

Speaker 11 (02:05:57):
Really what that's what?

Speaker 29 (02:06:01):
Things really got.

Speaker 4 (02:06:06):
Me?

Speaker 11 (02:06:09):
What is about that.

Speaker 19 (02:06:17):
I said I can see?

Speaker 14 (02:06:21):
Is the second sects in the scene?

Speaker 11 (02:06:24):
Anything?

Speaker 29 (02:06:25):
The name and what the fucking man said?

Speaker 26 (02:06:31):
You should be enough that I'm talking when.

Speaker 29 (02:06:38):
It's reality sid so society?

Speaker 11 (02:06:44):
What is it about?

Speaker 26 (02:06:50):
What is it about?

Speaker 14 (02:07:20):
You make me out and mead.

Speaker 11 (02:07:26):
You want you.

Speaker 29 (02:07:27):
When he.

Speaker 11 (02:07:36):
Sack me down?

Speaker 4 (02:07:39):
So need to help him?

Speaker 19 (02:07:40):
You be missing before you told.

Speaker 4 (02:07:43):
Me said when you bump down, you rack me down?
So did it help them? It wasn't. That's a couple b.

Speaker 11 (02:08:31):
Why doctor.

Speaker 4 (02:08:43):
Bag you make me out today?

Speaker 29 (02:09:00):
Anything?

Speaker 26 (02:09:34):
The pains bore the people looking when they come you say.

Speaker 11 (02:09:39):
You think you did you look at the mirror, bring
yourself and let the don say just let.

Speaker 26 (02:09:46):
The DNA se pas break the pain. These bore the
dust people puking when they say, you think you want
to take your.

Speaker 11 (02:09:54):
Toughing cold look at the mirror, bring yourself and let
the DNA se the man, I said, and I watched
the cards lovel the sick. But I've had the chaps
like that, only mand reverse.

Speaker 10 (02:10:10):
I've been permitting, meditating with the mind that you're raging
and McCain.

Speaker 39 (02:10:14):
This last of my loves, this word is do what
the talks the class class. I lost my mind myself
for I've been a challenge and motivate the cript for
the last to chill. I'm not the Cobles talks of
this flow accident enough that it's conspuns come must have

(02:10:34):
the can that they must be.

Speaker 29 (02:10:37):
I see the glass flow.

Speaker 11 (02:10:39):
We're both to caning, so without having been.

Speaker 1 (02:10:42):
It's all the same.

Speaker 11 (02:10:44):
Now used to come saying did you want to you.

Speaker 26 (02:11:04):
Look in the mirror, bring.

Speaker 11 (02:11:06):
Yourself and get the dun the scene. I just let
the dun.

Speaker 26 (02:11:09):
The same guys break the pain.

Speaker 11 (02:11:11):
These overdotyping women.

Speaker 26 (02:11:13):
Come say you you think you talk and got your pay.

Speaker 11 (02:11:18):
Look in the mirror, bring yourself and let the duc see.
I just let the don saying free.

Speaker 15 (02:11:25):
The same the poor just next his motion coming to.

Speaker 11 (02:11:30):
Less again the gravest man.

Speaker 15 (02:11:32):
I look at you the threeteen and so when the
papa bust generation.

Speaker 11 (02:11:36):
That's what's all to do.

Speaker 26 (02:11:37):
Why I have to chase my pull lit by the
u be pulling the baby in this trouble meaning what
you need to be a little bit but sweats when
you won't trust.

Speaker 11 (02:11:46):
So I'll just trust.

Speaker 15 (02:11:47):
Make your cremin pick on the blue along your bed.

Speaker 11 (02:11:50):
Faction did you dead?

Speaker 15 (02:11:53):
I just thought you resistances to the way from.

Speaker 26 (02:11:55):
Hilst so tempting to cover getting the pitch and they
pushing broth.

Speaker 11 (02:12:03):
You can not to see the patrol to the sensity,
decide to side.

Speaker 26 (02:12:08):
Little lad or the moss so it just can be
wearing before.

Speaker 15 (02:12:13):
The disparity side in poteen thousands they got this consumed.

Speaker 26 (02:12:19):
The brain the ore the donyople put you. When they
come to the same, do you want you to do something?
Go plate, look at the maver, bring yourself and at
the dog. See just let the don scene pries break
the plain. They call the donkey bo up and when
they come the sad do.

Speaker 11 (02:12:38):
Want you to do something?

Speaker 26 (02:12:39):
Go t at the mirror, bring yourself and let them,
just let the domoscene
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