Episode Transcript
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(00:09):
Hello, Jill here with TSC Talks, the podcast, the niche podcast that
I ended in twenty twenty two.I'm coming back on for a revival episode
with Justin Leslie, who is sharinghis story about being a whistleblower and he
has a video out called Project Whistleblower, which you want to check out.
(00:31):
The links will all be in thisepisode. Justin was one of my first
guests on TSC Talks when I hadjust started doing the podcast. Was friends
with his mother and she suggested Iinterview him. He was the first one
outside of my family that I interviewedto talk about the experience of tuberous Gross's
complex, which causes benign tumors togrow in all the vital organs of the
(00:53):
body and kind of like throwing awrench in it creates a lot of havoc.
And part of the discussion Justin andI have is going from really kind
of thinking that the way out ofmanaging or finding a cure for TSC was
through pharmaceutical research and other types ofresearch kind of coming around to seeing that
this whole condition is being exacerbated bythe huge increase in mandated hexing. Arona
(01:19):
Ruski's understanding that there's a lot thatwe've been taught about how to manage this
condition that actually, you know,I'm not saying no, anybody needs to
go off their meds. There's alot of systemic dependence that comes in very
early in someone that receives this diastlife. So for Justin, he was
not diagnosed till he was ten yearsold with this condition, which is a
(01:40):
little longer, and he had thefacial belief of facial patch that one of
the hallmarks of Tuberth's Grosses complex isthe facial manifestations that keyed off a doctor
and they did the testing and itwas a really really overwhelming thing for a
ten year old to start to understandthe impact of it, to see where
Justin's come or I've and understanding thatwe are set up to be very dependent
(02:02):
with this condition. There are thingswe can utilize in the alternative realms,
and how very, very difficult itcan be once you've become very systemically dependent
on a lot of pharmaceuticals, dealingwith a lot of different doctors that are
in different various silos, and asa caregiver, you're trying to network that
(02:23):
and maybe trying to consider moving moreinto alternative encouraging your loved one to move
more into an alternative space. It'sreally a mind twister. So Justin kind
of being on the other side ofthat and even pulling away from the understanding
of germ theory to more terrain.And you'll hear about it in the podcast.
(02:43):
You know, I want to dothe whole thing here. It's mostly
focused on his whistleblower experience, butwe do go down a lot of quote
unquote rabbit holes, all very Ifeel like, very worthwhile tangents that we
go on, and I'm just gratefulto him for just standing in these really
dense fields of half truth, lies, deception, just not frank behavior and
(03:09):
just wanting to know more and wantingto figure it out, wanting to bring
in the light of truth. Sothis is Justin Leslie with Truth under Fire
on TSC Talks Revival podcast. Yeah, so I'm here with Justin Leslie.
(03:34):
Justin is well to me. Hewas one of my first He was my
first podcast guest on my podcast TSCTalks, which I don't do anymore.
I stopped it probably in twenty twentytwo, but it was a kind of
a series of conversations with individuals affectedwith two berths grosis complex, which causes
benign tumors to grow in all thevital organs of the body, having children
(03:58):
with them out compelled to start apodcast and interview, you know, different
individuals affected, doctors, professionals,and Justin. I met Justin's mother back
in I think like twenty sixteen orseventeen. She was super supportive of some
advocacy work. I was running amarathon and we were in a Facebook group
and she reached out to me andshe was just like, so like the
(04:21):
first person I met that was reallylike, you know, you're doing great,
you have you have kids with thisdiagnosis and you're out running marathons,
and she just built me up,and I to this day, I'm so
grateful for her. And so westarted to become friends. And then when
I started doing the podcast, shesuggests She's like, why don't you interview
(04:43):
Justin my son? And I waslike, oh, okay, And so,
you know, I think it wasa phone call. We did it.
We recorded a phone call, andI used to be able to That's
how I did all my first podcastsbecause there wasn't the law or I don't
know the app they let you use. Now, I've tried it before and
it's it's too complicated to try todo it on the phone. And then
(05:06):
you know, we had COVID andzoom Kit and so yeah, university,
So university, I'm Jill, You'rewelcome. So yeah, just so so
anyway, so Justson was on andwe were both in really different places together
in our understanding of the medical system. At least, this is my perspective,
(05:26):
and you can change this. Andyou were you were going to school
to study pharmacology and you were goingto find a cure for TSC. That
was one of your missions. AndI just felt like I was a junior
in college u R I and Iremember doing the interview, I think just
(05:46):
upstairs in the night in my collegelike house with my buddies, and I
just I did the call on thephone with you, and yeah, I
was just I was going through mypharm ecology classes, my my pharmaceutic classes,
my pharma code dynamics classes, andI remember speaking with you and just
(06:06):
saying yeah, kind of virtual signalatingin the sense of like I'm gonna make
this cure. I'm gonna come upwith the drugs that are gonna fix this
disease. Right, And that's kindof right like where I was at,
you know, where there's no shaminganybody who's who thinks that pharma itself is
(06:27):
the cure or the end all beall or fixing TSC or any other rare
disease. But ultimately have come acrossthat that, you know, there's two
hundred and fifty thousand drugs out thereand none of them cure anything. So
what does that tell you? Youknow, what's the root? Cause it's
(06:48):
it's some sort of like inflammation andamong other things, right that that causes
what they call disease, where it'sreally it's really just your body is at
disk ease. Right. So I'veI've done a bunch of on learning and
(07:09):
unknowing since that talk, for sure, Jill. And it's it's just a
daily, on long journey that Ihad to go through. It's not easy
either, because I mean I totallycould just be working for a pharmaceutical company
right now making like one hundred kdoing whatever. But you know, I
(07:30):
have to follow my my divine accessand speak truth versus lie to myself.
So yeah, yeah, it's quiteas it can be a little bit of
a harsh awakening, At least itwas for me. And that was,
you know, part of the podcastwas each interview I do, I was
a little more horrified and then startingto realize that I don't know that the
(07:56):
things that I had counted on tobe helpful and support of and promoting quality
of life, we're actually more trappingus, trapping people in the systems and
with these treatments and these medications.And I started to notice that like the
pharma profit off of off of theTSC, Like I started clipping articles and
(08:20):
I'd see these the market shares,and you know, people were like,
this is a cash cow for thepharmaceutical industry. They are not invested in
finding akira, They're invested in capitalizing. And I'm not saying that it's all
straight black and white, but youknow what I'm saying, So I get
your harsh awakening there. Well,it's right. I mean even in the
(08:41):
Bible tells us like beware of pharmakia and it's it's called pharmakia. We're
dealing with pharmacies, right, Pharmaitself is literally farm like in pharma like
it's farm harm the karma right inthe middle. It's pharma, right,
so you can capitalize the harm rightin the middle. It's like it's all
(09:01):
subliminal messaging in a sense that I'veseen and you know, gotten myself out
of in a sense. But it'sall part of this journey. So I'm
still getting grounded in the sentences towhat I'm gonna be doing next after the
release of this huge whistleblower story Projectwhistle Blower, I understand that it's it's
(09:28):
a really important story and I reallyhope it touches the people that it needs
to touch. I mean, it'sgot to grow in a sense, right,
I mean it's only a few daysold at this Yeah, it's only
six days old. Zero Hedge actuallyjust published an article on it. I
saw it. So they have likea little under two million followers on Twitter.
(09:48):
So it's kind of creating line aline in the sand, essentially,
is what I'm calling you. Whereyou know, I've I put so much
out there on the line, right, putting my neck out there, putting
the truth out there, and whatI really feel about all of this,
and you know it's going to triggersome people, that's for sure. Oh
(10:09):
yeah, I'm sure it already isjust to kind of connect the dots here.
So you're on my podcast back Idon't know, twenty eighteen, and
so you were in pharmacology school,and so why don't you kind of update
because I do want you to sharebefore I go into the other questions,
(10:30):
to share this trajectory that you've beenon. So you were like all in
with the pharma mentality and so kindof walk me through that as you have
like one hundred times already before Ieven actually touch on that when you interviewed
with me back in twenty eighteen.Do you know if you were you tapped
into more of the holistic stuff orI have the transcript. In fact,
(10:52):
I was reading it before we cameon, and we were both like talking
about certain doctors and yeah, likedoctor Tomrio, doctor Demario was in there,
and you know it was it wasjust really supportive of the community and
kind of really we're talking for thecommunity. It's just I don't know if
(11:13):
they support what I'm going to betalking about. So so I mean,
you sent me some questions and youbasically said, you know, walk me
through your timeline since eighteen, soI can do that. What was it?
It was twenty eighteen. Right,it was what the spring I think,
so I was, I was finished. I remember it being my junior
(11:39):
year. I'm not sure if itwas my my fallow spring semester, but
that would change the year technically,but it's okay. Yeah, I was
going through pharmacology. I loved thepharmacology and everything and going through all that
and learning about drugs and thinking thatthis is so cool, you know,
(12:01):
like we're we're learning how we're gonnabe you know myself, I'm gonna learn
how we're gonna fix people in away. But always subconsciously, I look
back, I'm like, subconsciously Iacknowledge that there was no presentation of like,
this is a cure, this isa cure, this is a cure.
(12:22):
Right, it was all you're takingthis drug for this disease or this
symptom or this virus or this thisbacteria that you're sick with, or if
you have strap, this is whatyou're gonna take penicillin A, or if
you I don't even pay attention relateto medications anymore, just because I'm like
(12:43):
so far out of all that now. Yeah, I mean I was taken
pharmacology classes to the point where Imean I didn't even really get into this
probably with you, because yeah,I think it was actually the beginning of
my junior year that was chilled.So it took me you know, talking
on your podcasts and then boom,like I really had to buckle up and
(13:09):
get ready for the ride of whatpharmaceutical science school was like you know,
yeah, like pharmacology that puts youthrough the wringer, like you have to
study like nobody else. Oh,I bet the chemistry and all that stuff.
Like yeah, I mean the chemistry, the biology, like it's it's
(13:30):
a combination of everything. Mechanism ofaction, right, and like when you're
dealing with certain drug classes and thenyou're dealing with drug drug interactions and all
of these things coming at you allat once, and you can be tested,
you know, like it's a fiftyquestion or seventy five question or sometimes
one hundred questions multiple choice exam onthe smaller exams might be like two or
(13:56):
three drug classes at a time.Right, So doing the cardiology drugs and
you know, wow, we wouldgo into gi we would go into neurology,
we'd go into you know, anyany class you name it, right,
I wasn't necessarily learning drugs that peoplewould take for TSC specifically maybe some
(14:16):
some drugs for epilepsy that you know, but I don't fully fully recall all
of that, of course, butyeah, it was. It was a
lot, and I did thoroughly enjoyit in a sense of like I had
my buddies that I would study within the library and we would pull all
(14:37):
nighters and it was like, we'rein this together. Were miserable, but
we're doing it together. Yeah,Like I remember finals classes or finals like
my junior year were like myself anda group of us were literally like slamming
red bulls, slamming coffees, likeand it's really not uncommon at all for
(15:00):
you know, people to like getit take literally take like amphetic means in
a safe sure, you should stayawake, right, and so you know,
they're they're kind of like candy incollege campuses. So you know,
I would utilize that as well fromtime to time, and it really became
almost not a problem for me,but like it was just something that I
(15:24):
wasn't necessarily proud of, but itwas something I thought of as like necessary
of like, hey, like Ihave so much information to get through that
this is this is gonna make orbreak me in a sense, you know.
So there was a lot a lotof pressure to to uh yeah,
oh, Junior year was really youknow, tough in a sense, but
(15:46):
I powered through. I got likelike a three eight, three nine or
something GPA like or maybe even youknow, close to a four zero like
Moost semesters, you know, andit was still like enjoying my time in
college too, but it was itwas brutal, you know, because that's
how you like lose sleep essentially,because you know, I'd still like go
(16:10):
out on the weekends and stuff andyou know, or when I could.
Right, So, in my senioryear is kind of where COVID actually starts
rolling itself into the world awareness.Yeah. Yeah, so I was,
you know, living with a differentgroup of guys, and you know,
the first fall semester kind of flewby and then spring starts and there's already
(16:37):
rumblings around COVID, right, becausethat was happening like October twenty nineteen is
right when all of this started,like rumbling of Wuhan and there was a
ventuoh one that occurred and right right, I don't know, I wasn't afraid
of whatever virus that they're talking about. I'm like, okay, like it's
(16:59):
it's seems like it's all nuts,kind of a lot of hype, a
lot of pipe. Yeah, like, oh, the media is really picking
this up, you know, likethey're really trying to do something here,
and but it's not like I was. I was either in a way right,
So that all semester and then itreally kind of gets interesting where I
(17:26):
went on spring break to for Lauderdalewith my friends and it was like right
when COVID technically hit. At theend of towards the end of my spring
break is when they started shutting downin c A A tournament, They shut
down the NBA season, they shutdown the MLB season. I think it
(17:49):
was what like it must have beenMarch March. I think it was actually
a year ago or a year ornot a year ago, excuse me,
A day or two would go wasMarch eleventh, I think was the the
four year anniversary of COVID. Okay, like technically like hitting in the United
States, right, you know theyhave to announce these things. Oh yeah,
(18:12):
so right, all all these seasonsare like coming to a complete halt.
And I'm just I'm like, okay, this is nuts. I was.
I was on top of a rooftoppool in Fort Lauderdale, like I
had like a day left of springbreak, and I was like trying to
enjoy it. But at the sametime, I'm like, yo, like
(18:33):
everyone's saying COVID's COVID, right,Like if I get it, I get
it, and like if we die, we die, you know, And
you know that was your mentality oryour kind of attitude, then well I
wasn't scared of it. Well no, just not playing into it the hype.
Like I already was looking into whata coronavirus is and it's like it's
(18:55):
literally just a common cold. It'slike, okay, this is kind of
a joke, Like why are theymaking such a big feel about it.
So I flew back all the wayon a plane. Right. There were
some people with masks on, someyou know, but not like it became
where you had to wear a mask, I for like American Airlines or any
(19:15):
of the other big ones, soyou literally had to have a mask on,
you know, months later. No, it wasn't like a mandated thing.
And I mean mandate is if youlook up the word mandate. It's
literally it's not mandatory, or youcan decide to participate or not, all
these subtle ways they manipulated us.Oh yeah, So I got back and
(19:40):
I continued zoom university right like theyshut down university wound. They they were
like, yep, no one's oncampus anymore for the rest of the entire
school year. I didn't get towalk for my college graduation, right,
So then, you know, thosefew months were like kind of insane to
(20:02):
me because I was like I didn'tknow whether I should go home to Connecticut
or if I should stay in RhodeIsland. So I went back home,
and then I did go back toRhode Islands too, like just enjoy my
final time there with roommates and youknow, just get whatever college experience I
could. Well, you paid tuition, so yeahs I'll get the most out
(20:26):
of it. Cheese. Yeah.Well, it was just it was a
ridiculous time period in so, yeah, I didn't get to walk. And
then so once I gratuated, itwas kind of just like all right,
like here's a handshake with your roommates, like you did it. So I
didn't have a job out of college, and so I was applying to jobs.
(20:48):
But it was just to remember youreached out, I think, and
I was. I tried to shootyour resume around to people I knew.
Yeah, it was a time,Jill, because I mean people were telling
me like, oh, you're inPARM like you're always gonna have a job.
And they're like, oh, comeon, it's COVID, like all
these pharma companies are hiring, Likecome on, like eyebrolling at you know,
(21:10):
you should be able to find something. And I'm like, yeah,
I guess so. But it's it'salso the midst of this, you know,
scandemic in a way. Right.So I was applying to graduate programs
pretty much specifically at Rutgers because Iwanted to work on like research for tuber
(21:33):
sclerosis. Actually, so, Gabriellad arch Angelo is a professor at Rutgers
who has done research on like ntour C one pathways and it's connections to
tumor suppressor jeans one and two,which I have to do with se Right,
So I was like, this isthis is gonna be a match made
(21:55):
in heaven. Absolutely that this lady'smaster's student and she's gonna love me because
I have TSC like right, SoI reached out to her like after I
applied and thought it was all gonnawork out, and like, turns out,
nobody's allowed on campus at Rutgers unlessyou're like some unless you were basically
(22:15):
you know, doing your master's likeresearch right on campus. And that was
it. There was no in personclasses, none of that, and it
was just it was kind of ridiculousbecause I didn't know what to do.
I'm like the type of person whoalways like wanted to be doing something and
felt like I needed to be go, go go, like don't stop,
(22:37):
you know, like you gotta havesomething going on, otherwise you're gonna look
like you're you're doing nothing with yourlife. So, like I studied for
the GIRE. I applied to Rutgersboth campuses UH Newark and UH New Brunswick,
and I got in and then Itook the New Brunswick one, and
like, I just I don't know, looking back, it's it. I
(23:03):
still haven't finished the degree, andlike nor will I be able to because
they literally make it so that youhave to be vaccinated in order to be
in their school. And so youknow it, that wasn't something that happened,
right, away because I was onthe Zoom University when the vaccines were
(23:23):
going through operation warp speed in asense of like, yeah, they what
do they start making them right awayin March, right, and then they
said they're ready by January of twentytwenty one. So yeah, I was
in my first semester and I feltlike I was waking up entirely to COVID
(23:48):
itself and how it was a completeplandemic at the time, not a complete
scam in the sense of but Iwas. I was so close right to
Joel and I in Project Whistleblower righthammer Home obviously, and we've we've talked
about how virology itself is pseudoscientific,where you know there there are multiple,
(24:14):
multiple proofs, right, it's notjust coming from like one source, it's
it's it comes from all over thatwe've been at war with. Oh yeah,
essentially in our minds that being toldby the people that are educating us
that what makes us sick are theseinvisible enemies of viruses. And so you
(24:37):
know, I was still stuck inthat world a little bit, and I
thought that COVID essentially was the flurebranded, which it was in a sense,
right, I mean, nothing wasreally changing. Nobody was really dying
that had different symptoms from the flu. So that's that's what my analogy was.
It's like, this is the flu, and it all right, it's
(25:00):
COVID and it just came from alab and it's it's not like, come
on it it didn't come from abat or a wet market. Right.
You know, they're pulling they're pullingthat narrative out of their what because they
are messing with us, right,And a lot of people don't don't have
your background or to grasp these things. You know. It's so it's so
(25:22):
insidious how they indoctrinate, you know, how that system just indoctrinates us from
so young. So it's hard togo to the no virus. That's I
totally understand. Yeah, yeah,I'll address that and I'll just why I
believe that is so, and thenwe can continue on. I think what
really gets people hung up on whenyou say, like, oh, there's
(25:45):
no virus that's making you sick,right, Well, these people who hear
that then say, what do youmean, of course I'm getting sick,
It must be something. The realityof the situation is that we as mankind
men and women. We don't understandthe phenomenon of contagion itself and like what
(26:07):
makes us sick truly? Right,like because there's there's the the topic of
the bio field and you know,when or even shedding in a sense with
the COVID nineteen vaccines, right,people are like, oh, you're shutting
on media. I got sick andyou you know, you messed up my
mental strike goals. Or I gotsick after you were vaccinated, right and
(26:29):
I wasn't vaccinated. Is that shedding? Maybe? Maybe not, But that
experience with that is we have theseyou know, fields around us of energy
that can communicate with each other thatwe're not you know, we're not conscious
really all. Yeah, it's yeah, it's resonance. And so you know,
(26:53):
I've I've experienced that in a senseeven just recently with my sister to
her where she was not feeling well, she gave me a hug. I
was perfectly fine. I went tobed, boom, woke up feeling like
you know cockro sense, right,I felt felt horrible and I was like
puking up bile. I had nothingin my stomach and it was just like,
(27:15):
dude, what like Julia's biofield musthave commund you needed to have the
experience, and so yeah, soher it was a detox. Yeah,
the detox princess, the detox signalessentially coming from her is the way I
look at it. And so,you know, I went through that and
(27:37):
I did a fast for about twentyfour hours and I woke up the next
day feeling great, didn't need anyhabiprob and didn't need nothing by just that,
you know, I rested. Youknow, resting is really one of
the most important things that can helpwith healing. Right, So but okay,
(27:57):
so now I'm going on a littlebit of tangent. But okay,
So at Rutgers, right back toRutgers is when I was fully waking up
to COVID itself, and I wrotea huge paper called, you know,
COVID nineteen Uncovered and it was liketen plus pages long. It was supposed
(28:21):
to be a case study for mydrug development class. And my professor was
very he was probably left leaning inthe sense of he was liberal and you
know all that, and I'm nota political guy at all. An yeah,
you know, I'm very much likeit's all two wings of the same
bird. Oh yeah, right withyou. So with all of that,
(28:45):
I decided to watch the documentary Plandemictwo done by Mickey will Oh yeah,
I've seen it. So yeah.A lot of a lot of people in
the you know, the truth orworld have seen it. And so I
watched that as like a resource forwhat I was going to be putting into
(29:07):
this. Wow this research paper.It had all these patents, David Mark
gone through all of them. Ohyeah, he was. I just I
looked him all up and go,bang bang boom, write this pattern for
this right, and they're talking aboutcryptocurrency and all these crazy crazy things,
but linking it to you know,these these quote unquote like man made viruses,
(29:32):
man made coronaviruses, sar As Kobetwo and outlining how Carrie Molis himself
was, you know, he diedfrom a pneumonia right before COVID started,
and how he would rip Fauci,how he said Fauci doesn't know anything about
anything. That was like all inthere in this research paper, and it
(29:55):
basically was dismantling the COVID nineteen narratives, saying that like it did come from
a lo it's not from a wetmarket, but that the virus itself is
quite literally like blown out of proportionas to how deadly this thing is.
And I wasn't fully tapped into likethe hospital protocols yet that were killing people
(30:17):
actually, right, so you knowwe can touch on that now where I
mean, I've learned since that rendeservereis one of the major drugs that was
given people as well as I meanventilators in general too, were it's going
to say ventilators were murdering people essentially, right, like I heard that it
(30:38):
was like eighty percent of people thatwent on a ventilator ended up passing the
way. And fine, it's horriblebecause I mean what that what a ventilator
does to your lungs is it takesyour alveoli, which are like really like
micro level a micro level cell oryou know, little branches in your lungs
(31:03):
and events later goes right, makesthem go up by some mountain right up
and down, up and down.But once you get off of the ventilator,
then you're all of Yola, Idon't even function anymore. So you're
essentially you you're shooting yourself in thefoot. I believe is a good analogy
for that, where once you goon it's really hard to fully recover from.
(31:26):
So the fact that they were doingthat to people is also kind of
sinister in a way. Yeah so, and it's I mean, my friend
Alexach talks about this all the timethat like literally I think the top symptom
during COVID nineteen, right during thepandemic period, the number one symptom was
(31:48):
anxiety and fear related disorders. Iwas just thinking that it was all fear,
well, that all stem like Iremember going through. I was literally
walking on eggshells every single day ofmy life watching the news, remembering how
CNN is like just got this tickerticker ticker ticker of people dying, people
dying, and are you serious?Like this is this is our world,
(32:12):
so we have to absorb this information. Why are they putting this in front
of us, you know where?And if you go outside, it's not
like you're gonna like acknowledge it,you know, or see it, you
know, go for a walk,and like, right, you're really describing
just the mind Efferey so well,because I forgot all that, Like I
(32:32):
never took it. I never couldtake it yet serious, I mean,
what compassion for people that were dying? And but I just seemed something.
It just seems so strange and wereclassical. Well and yeah, and I
mean I might be triggering some peoplebecause people think that, you know,
it was COVID that was killing themor their family members right where. I
(32:57):
mean there was half the time massfive G tower rollouts as well, you
know. And I mean once weget into the topic of vaccines, like
people have talked about how graphie oxideis in in these shots, and you
know, some people have said thatthat's debunked, and other people say it's
ninety nine percent graphic oxide. SoI'm really not sure. Yeah, what
(33:22):
what is exactly in these files?Someone from the truth seeking world needs to
do mass spec on Furious Life filesthemselves, right and really get to the
bottom of it. So, butthose machines are like seventy thousand dollars,
I think, so really, yeah, so it's it's crazy. So let
(33:45):
me get back on top. Right, I'm trying to think where were you
that was? I wrote that rightpaper uncovered paper, and I lid to
you know, wanting to utilize myundergraduate degree at a job because I was
(34:05):
like miserable and I essentially like reversedmanifested. I guess working at Visor because
I I was like, there's noway in hell that I'll work for Johnson
and Johnson Maderna or Pfiser, youknow, I said. I literally remember
saying my sister and like we werejust first manifest. Yeah. I was
(34:29):
like, there's no way now,like, I'll do any other one,
but not those three. And thenit turns out that, you know,
I got a call from this Mindlandcompany and they said, hey, Pfiser's
hiring in in mass and I wasI was like, okay, Like I
guess I felt like I had totake the interview in a way. Yeah,
(34:52):
I told my mom I was goingto take interviews, right so I'm
like, all right, I'm goingto do it, like figure out if
I couldn't even get hired the problem, just give it a shot, Yeah,
give it a shot, right,Like, and it's just oh yeah,
yeah, like they were the onlycompany that wanted to hire me out.
Well, I feel like it wouldspirit put you there. You're supposed
(35:14):
to to be there, you know. Yeah. Well, so when I
was offered the job after doing likefour other interviews or like four total interviews
like for pharmaceutical companies over the pastseven months and I got offered the job
in like late February early March.I was like, this is must be
God offering this for sure. I'mlike okay, like it's I guess this
(35:37):
is my car going no, no, like let me think about this though,
you know, oh I bet.It's almost like your ego and spirit
were like arguing and like you couldsee all that pull. But you know,
just to be an insider, Ithink my ego didn't want to be
part of any of My go waslike dude, like you gotta like stop
(35:59):
this. Yeah, I gonna dothis, what are you doing? But
my spirit was like for sure,I have no doubt. Justin when your
mom told me that you were workingat Fizer, I was like something's like
shot into me, like oh that'sbig. There's a reason why he said,
yeah, so going, So yeah, I took a job as a
(36:21):
formulation analytical scientist, and I didn'teven know really during the interviews that it
was going to be like directly onthe COVID nineteen MR and injection. They
were telling them, oh, yeah, we work on all these projects like
COVID a little bit here and there, and then we got we got the
ESSA RNA and this and that,And it didn't really hit me that I
(36:43):
was working on the COVID vaccine untilI like stepped in to work and like
I was working on them, andlike, wow, I'm actually doing this.
Yeah. I bet that had tobe. That has to be like
a powerful moment. Yeah. Well, I mean first day on the job,
I was asked, oh, areyou vaccinated? And I was like
no, And then they're like,oh, well we'll get you signed up.
(37:05):
Here's your computer. You don't haveto stay here. You can come
back next week and go through yourtrainings at home. So I was like,
what I just I just came uphere and it's a mass and you're
telling me that I can just gohome again, Like okay, oh my
god. Oh So it actually itworked out because I was, you know,
(37:28):
like in the process of moving toMassachusetts anyway, so it provided more
leeway in that way. Yeah.So yeah, that was cool. And
then were you in Boston or wherewere you? Yeah? I was in
Boston. Okay, where I wasat so like thirty five forty minutes south
of Andover, which is where thePviser campus was. Okay, you'd say
(37:52):
like articulate through the progression of yourawareness of each new level of half troops
and deception. Thought didn's blank greethe pharma world, the round the role
that I was in, So yeah, I I was the fuckery is that
(38:12):
I was like the only one Ifelt that or no one was really like
asking questions to any of it.And so the vaccine rule, I was
already coming down the pipeline. Youknow, there was no impact that I
was gonna have from like making surethat the vaccines were going to be stopped
entirely. I was asked, asked, first day, Harry vaccinated, and
(38:37):
I mean it wasn't like mandated yeteither. So there were some colleagues that
weren't vaccinated at least like right away. But like so you know, I
had this one colleague friend who washired around the same time and all over
and nameless, but she was alsounvaxed, and like she asked me,
(39:00):
like, oh, are you theaccident. I'm like, uh no,
and she goes, oh, meneither. I'm like, oh shit.
She's like, but I'm getting minelike next week or something. And I
was just like, oh, okay, yeah, me too. I'm scheduling
mine now, and I just Idon't know. I look back in hindsight,
I'm like, I wish, Ilike, I wish I could have
(39:21):
used my my critical thinking to maybelike pressed into a little more with someone
like her or just I don't know, I could have maybe sent out some
more egregious emails and complaints and bringup the notice of what was really happening,
because I look, I wouldn't secondguess yourself, though, I think
(39:44):
you were handled a lot energetically.Well absolutely, I mean there were I
was crying to and from work sometimes, you know, like paying attention to
the alternative media circles God two peoplelike passing away and even just hearing real
world anecdotes like so you know,I for the audience who hasn't seen Project
(40:07):
Whistleblower, I we will have thatin LinkedIn all that. Yeah, it's
a documentary where I line out thisentire journey. But you know, when
I was doing the the undercover obtainingof information everitas during my time inside Advisor,
(40:28):
right, like I literally had areal world experience where you know,
my mom connected I forget the actualexample, but like my mom's friend's friend
like person. You know, itwas like a seventy five year old seventy
seven year old I think is inthe video, but they had passed away
(40:49):
right after the booster shot, likethe day of or the second the day
after it was. And so mymom tells me this, and I to
me and it just says this inthe in the video, that this information
you know, it was only ffisorat the time. So I'm like,
Okay, that is the drug thatI'm working on. How am I not
(41:14):
supposed to raise these questions? Youknow? When this is this is the
biggest clinical trial in the history ofthe world that is just being tested on
mankind right now, and I'm workingon it. I have the I have
the privilege of working on it ina sense, and I have the privilege
to ask these difficult questions and getto the bottom of everything in a way
(41:37):
and call it out for what itis. And so I was doing that,
right, But I also my credibilityas a young twenty three, right,
I was going to say scene wasnot as high as say, my
other colleagues, right, they wereup right here. I'm like, all
the way to the bottom. You'rebalancing that, like you don't want to
(41:59):
lose the job, but yeah,you know, you want to ask the
question, so like you're kind ofbalancing absolutely, so, Uh, it
was really difficult, like tiptoeing aroundwork. And I mean yeah, we
were we were all wearing masks everyday. There's were not coming off unless
you were eating or drinking water,right, or drinking coffee. And like
(42:22):
even if you were like in theweight room, like drinking coffee, like
some people would literally like go down, boom boom, and I'm just like
this is insane, like come on, yeah, or it was just ridiculous
and I can imagine how did welet this play out? I too,
(42:43):
you know, I think like whenwe look back in our history, oh
hundred years, this is going tobe like a laugher. Well that I
mean not to be in my sufferingsa crime against you man, yeah,
laid out you know. And sowe can get to that. But I
mean I have filed Affter Davids forcrimes viability of crimes against humanity Advisor.
(43:04):
So so you're working at Visor andyeah, I was working at Advisor.
And we can touch on how youknow James O'Keefe's organization Project Veritas. Uh,
they come across as this truth seekingorganization of of journalists, right,
And yep, I kind of gotsucked into even what they were doing with
(43:27):
like all of the election fraud andall of that right before I even took
the job. That's actually why Ihad reached out to them before, because
they were doing, in my eyes, great work, right, me too,
I followed them, right, So, but I'm so like tapped in
now where I basically say that elections, there are selections, and that we
don't really have a say anymore anyof that chunk, you know, And
(43:51):
then it's yeah, it's all play. I feel like the strings are way
above our level. Yeah really,yeah, but that's one of the reasons
I reached out to that. Andthen so you decided to reach out to
Project Tests you work in advisor feelingon this like I'm I want to say
obligation more like it had to dosomething like a moral compass of like you
(44:14):
have to do something, bro,because you're here inside, better reach out
to this company that can help you, right, And they came across like
they were very trustworthy and and thewhole thing like I just looked back and
I just I wonder how it whyit played out the way it did in
(44:39):
the sense of they provided me theundercover recording equipment and like basically said,
have that friend, you know,go for it. But you're an insider
whistle blower, you're working on thisthis crime against humanity vaccinting, like put
your money where your mouth is.Yeah, And so I'm like, all
(45:00):
right, cool. So I literallyjust signed the contract and like didn't really
read any of it and like justsaid, okay, like I'm gonna do
what's the best for the world,you know, and right right, No,
I totally get that that impulse starsbecause I turned like they they don't
tell me until like three months downthe road that like, hey, by
(45:23):
the way, you know you're you'rebreaking this recording consens statute and we like
we ended up doing a vile transfer, like you broke those laws. And
I'm just I I was shocked becauseI'm like, Okay, if if you
weren't going to release it because ofrecording consent in the first place, then
(45:45):
why would you have given me thisequipment to go get this information in the
first place? Then? You knowit just it doesn't add up. Did
they give you training on any ofthis in a way? Yeah, they
did. It was it wasn't likethey were doing it illegally though, you
know, they they were helping inthe sense of they were saying like,
(46:06):
oh, if I were you,I would say this, you know,
or if I were you, Iwould do this right in order to I
guess illicit information from people. Soit was more about getting It wasn't about
any of the legality or the ethicsaround. No, never was that mentioned
interesting, at least from from me, like remembering that I had no idea
(46:29):
and these people also should have knownbetter that I was a twenty three or
just a kid, yeah, literally, just a kid being fed to the
wolves. Because like in the contractit goes, oh, you can seek
legal counsel to like make sure thatyou know you're you're doing the right thing
here, And I'm like, well, guys, like I don't have a
lawyer, so I'm just gonna dothis Like it was. It was about
(46:53):
I guess maybe a little bit recklessbut on my part, But I mean
what was I supposed to do.I wasn't going to be hiring a lawyer
or five hundred dollars consultations, right, so like you know, tell them,
hey, I'm right. That's justa lot of like lack of real
communication there. Yeah, so youknow, definitely a ridiculous concept for them
(47:19):
too, at least not like kindof like throwing you out to the wolves
a little bit. Yeah. Well, I mean they could have just brought
up like they didn't even have tosay in Massachusetts, they'd be like,
oh, justin you should like lookinto recording consent and you know, if
they really cared, well yeah,I mean, and yeah, okay,
so there you are going into workwith a camera and whatnot. Yeah,
(47:45):
so I was doing what I wasdoing then, I was obtaining bombshell information
after bombshell information, And I meanit starts with Conwall talking about how co
Wait, who's Conwall again? Conwallwas my manager manager. Okay, very
sweet lady. Really, this isa very sweet lady. She's just obviously
(48:09):
programmed to trapped in the system.Yeah, she's totally trapped in the system
making a ton of money right now. And yeah, but she's very sweet.
I think she's doing the right thingand doesn't totally get it like I
did. I think. And soshe goes on in the expos a to
(48:34):
explain how back in twenty eighteen thatWeiser was working with buyon Tech right the
the overseas company Ugar Saw. Hecalls Katherine Jensen explaining, Hey, I
have this RNA I need help formulatingit and manufacturing it. Can you help?
(48:57):
And Advisor goes yes, Katherin Jengoes yes, I will help.
And so they were working on modifiedRNA flu back in twenty eighteen, and
then it just so happens that twentynineteen we have, you know, this
new virus that doesn't exist that I'vecome to understand, right and rightfully right,
(49:22):
you come to see this conspiracy itselfwhere Kamal lays outic conspiracy in itself,
and once you apply the virology andthe pseudoscience, it's like, wow,
this really was something that came minda plandemic in a sense, right
(49:44):
because Maderna, which I also technicallybelieve is like a DARPA project of the
military. Probably they were a companyfor around ten years and they were doing
the research on RNA or that amountof time, and they could never get
a single product approved. And sothis weren't the people dying and stuff in
(50:07):
the truck or they were the animalssymptum people dying, you know, having
really hard you know, probably heartattacks and things of that nature, and
mild caarditis, you name it.Yeah, you could never ever get approved,
right, And so Kamwall goes onto say, like, while we
have this emergency use authorization with COVID, so we meaning Pfizer and Maderna,
(50:31):
would like to get through it nowin the sense of like, oh,
we have this opportunity to basically usherin our urname projects and put them in
to formulate them into vaccines. Andit was just when she said that to
me, I was sitting there like, that sounds like the most ridiculous planned
(50:52):
thing in the history of anything,Like, yeah, on, how does
your you're answering into Oh, Likeit was just it was a ridiculous thing
to hear perspective, you know,because and now it's even it looks even
(51:12):
worse because we've seen how this wholething is played out and more and more
people are truly waking up to thewhole the narratives that and that's the beauty
of it played out right, andit's it's really damning. So that was
a couple of things that were saying. And she goes Albert borla Uger saw
(51:34):
hean basically, you know, aregenerating this is a weird time this is
like real time data that we're generating. We don't know anything. And she
was calling the RNA and l MPsvery sneaky after talking about how Johnson and
Johnson was having like clots, right, where only like clots that happened apparently
with Johnson and Johnson, Right,But I'm hearing people dying from these boosters
(51:57):
with coke, you know, withwith the Pfizer shot, and I'm just
like, this is crazy on thenuts, So like, thank God I'm
doing this because it feels like God'swork at this point, because you know,
this this expose that I'm gonna bedoing, the project Veritza is gonna
like help save millions of yep,eventually taking this vaccine. So like patting
(52:22):
myself on the back and way right, But oh yeah, yeah, so
that's great. I mean it's supercourageous just to to like jump into that
and gosh, yeah, so itall plays out like that. And then
I even met Carrie Minday and wedid this whole microscope violexpose and like that
(52:42):
whole experience itself was really scary andnightmarish in a sense, yeah, because
I didn't know what I was lookingseeing real time like what it was,
this is going inside people, Likethere were things like spinning around, like
the Johnson and Johnson had a littlelike water pair site or something like literally
spinning around the black disc and itwas just wow, night blowing when I
(53:07):
didn't know what to think, youknow, I was like, this is
awesome, but it's also super scarythat this has gone into what billions of
people at that point, like abillion probably right worldwide scale. Yep ye.
People were freaked. People were yeah, oh yeah, so I've I
like was freaking out in real time, and they carried like went viral on
(53:30):
Stu Peters literally talking about everything itsaid Project Various Spies or whistleblower or stay
tuned, long story short, right, I remember that. Yeah, So
it was really interesting because it wasit was supposed to be coming out right
(53:51):
that that's even what the journalists weresaying, like justin you got this is
like a prelimb for you. Andthen Melissa mcte who I'm friendly with,
who was also Project Veritas and Pfizerwhistleblower is you know, she was coming
out around that time as well,and I don't know her, but I'm
sure that I would I would heis great. She's been a huge support
(54:15):
for me. No good UNLESSA wasblowing the whistle on Lucifer race and okay,
but for Pfizer it was excuse me. For the Project Veritas expose,
it was primarily twenty two ninety threecells and how you know, in vaccine
research in general, there were fetalcells that were used for the research,
(54:38):
like in cell cultures and things ofthat nature. So Project Verita is kind
of only one that to really touchthat, which it was already kind of
public information, you kind of justhad to really dig for it. So
right, I learned about that.It was nice to hear it from like
internal emails from people inside Peiser,right from like Vanessa Elements. Wow.
(55:00):
Yeah. Advite was one of mycolleagues actually who worked in the Boston area,
and he was part of the emailsthat works posts. So you know,
these people just they got exposed.But Melissa didn't actually get to tell
her Lucifer Ray's story, and soshe started going on stup Peters and Candice
(55:22):
Owns to talk about that, andProject Veritas was like what are you doing?
And and Melissa's like, I'm awhistlebler, I'm gonna talk like,
what are you talking about, dude? Right, the job is yeah,
so in Project Truths yep. Soit's all it all gets really interesting because
(55:44):
you know, I wasn't sure whythat why it wasn't included in her story,
uh with PV right yeah, yeah, with Melissa at the time,
So I didn't know, you know. And but they kept calling me like
a secret weapon essentially, and justlike stay tuned us and remain patient,
like your story is going to behuge, and so I just kept keeping
(56:08):
the faith and so what else couldyou do? I mean, you were
like chopping at the bit though,to like get to the bottom of this.
That's what it feels like, likeyou just absolutely let me get this
over with, get these things stopped, you know, right, So I
got exactly I just wanted it tostop. And so I got more information
(56:29):
from Ramine saying that there were zillionsof adverse reactions and reports after I talked
to him about my mom's friend ofa friend basically dying. Yeah, and
like correlation is not able, causation, not our concern, like, don't
worry about this, and then helike makes a metaphor about the heart and
(56:51):
that like nobody's talking about that,and I'm like, dude, what in
the project Veritas production team told thejournalists that I was working with like,
hey, this is huge, Likethat's a huge admission. So you know,
I'm like, okay, cool,more more content, you know.
And then yeah, the big youknow, tailor on the donkey was,
(57:14):
uh, with my vice president NickWarren. After they approved the Emergency Use
Authorization or the COVID nineteen wesor vaccinefor kids, they actually literally changed the
formulation scene in it with the bufferand so they downplay it so they didn't
(57:37):
even test it. Basically, yes, so they downplayed in the meeting that
there's a bioequivalents. A visor inthe FDA had consultation after consultation that like
this was okay. And then youknow, Bill Gruber actually was a senior
VP for Advisor for Clinical Trials ofVaccines, admits at like the two hour
(57:59):
and thirty nine minute mark and intothis this video that they didn't do any
clinical trials on it. In thatPfizer and the FDA basically said like that's
okay, you know, and thatthey they did the clinical testing on the
the fot fate buffer formulation versus thetrysts one that was being approved, and
(58:20):
the reason that they were going toapprove trust well, they were approving the
tryst because of the manu ease ofmanufacturer abilities to stability and storage for like
pharmacists, because what pharmacies have minuseighty degree freezers? Like none? Yeah?
(58:45):
Right, Like who owns that?You know? So it was definitely
ridiculous that they were even working witha product in my opinion that was the
minus eighty degrees Celsia's story temperature rightkind of setup for for just complete mismanagement
of it right at the start.Oh yeah, it was absolutely ridiculous.
(59:05):
So you know, they proved theeasier storable product that didn't go into any
people's arms, which is crazy andreally it's fraudulent, and yeah, scent
of it like makes me want tocry. Yeah, and it breaks my
heart that I knew this information backin twenty twenty one too, but I
(59:28):
was manipulated and coerced and threatened andtold out part of the process you had
to go through to be here nowtalking about it justin Yeah, I mean
literally threatened with like jail time andwhat seriously why I was working with?
So it's crazy, right, SoI was getting all that info. There
(59:51):
was an FBI rate of Project Veritasduring my time as the Sourus, which,
in hindsight and even in real time, like looking at him like that
was like really nuts, you knowit was it kind of felt like a
part of a movie, right,like, oh, this is a perfect
part of the script to just insertthat into my Wow. Yeah, like
(01:00:12):
you're sitting there watching the Truman Showplay out. Yeah, now, what's
that? After the Jordan Tristan Walker. No, that was when I was
a whistleblower source. Okay, soJoe, Yeah, I was a whistle
blower. And then James had metme like a month after that, after
(01:00:32):
I was going so hard as asource and he's like, oh, yeah,
like we're not gonna tell your story. I'm like, dude, what
do you mean? Like this isa this is a crime against humanity,
this is genocide. This is soimportant for the world, right, like
more important than anything, really content, and then offered me a job and
(01:00:54):
then left after reading a bowl ofsoup. And I was like this is
ridiculous, you know, And Ididn't know what to do other than drive
home and cry. And it wasit was one of the worst is my
life. Actually, the day Imet James like probably the worst day ever,
because if he had the quote unquotetesticular fortitude to go to bat with
(01:01:21):
that information, how many people wouldhave been saved? How many people would
have woken up to the vaccine agendais, how many people would have stopped
taking booster shots after booster shot afterbooster shot. I don't know, but
we will never know. And it'struly incredible because, you know, after
coming out with Project whistle Blower,I have an anonymous source who called me
(01:01:45):
and said justin thank you for doingthis, like you you know your story,
like they were they were working withme in a way when I was
at PV and they called me andsaid, Project Verita spent two million dollars
of donor funds on your story asa whistleblower, and they decided to throw
(01:02:07):
that all that investment away and justnot tell it. Wow, which is
mind blowing. Yeah, million dollars. That's a lot of money, my
friend. It's hard to hold thatinformation. Yep. So it just makes
(01:02:28):
you questions like, Okay, ifthey spent two million dollars investing that into
me in my story and then likeknowing how powerful also, is right since
it's coming out now, like peopleare telling me this is huge, Yeah,
and I feel like it is.Imagine in twenty twenty one what it
would be like, Yeah, whatit would have been like? You never
(01:02:49):
know. I guess you know,it's painful as it is. There's no
going back and hijacking the time itis. It had to play that way.
Well, So I was just Imade mistakes and so you know,
I had to go fix it.And so the way I was going to
go fix it was by taking thatjob of offer four months later and said
I'm gonna like I made a makessense God, Jill, like it was
(01:03:15):
meet and God, I'm like,yo, I don't know if I'm supposed
to stay advisor or not, butsome something telling me to go work for
Project Veritas and go get the visorstory back because like I was like,
oh, I could go to anothercampus maybe and work there and try and
do the same thing. But Iknew how powerful all that information was,
(01:03:37):
so you know, I was exposedto it all. So I go get
it back. Absolutely so totally.I can I can feel that you were
like at that point where you yeah, I can feel that what I had
blood on money and just like Ilike to just working on something that I
(01:03:58):
considered to buy a weapon death shotor clot shot or a toxic poison bomb,
something that should not be giving.Yeah. Sure, so yeah,
so you take that job. Idon't blame you, like you're going great
guns. I am not going tobe done with this until this is out
kind of thing. Yeah. Soit took me like six or seven months
(01:04:19):
to learn undercovered journalism and I meanto get to like my progression of waking
up to have truths in deception,Like there are so many there's so many
layers to it all, where youknow, I was like still kind of
stuck on the flu in saying COVIDwasn't isolated, so I thought it was
(01:04:42):
the flu. And then it reallytook me towards like the end of my
time at Pfizer to the point whereI was like, Okay, virology itself
is really like faulty, faulty,questionable, like what are viruses? You
know, like we don't even seethese things either in the end vis a
bull enemy. So it was agradual awakening to that. And I don't
(01:05:04):
have like an exact date in myhead of like, oh it flicked.
But right, it was basically betweenthe bridge of going from Peiser to PV
basically where I like truly woke upto it. Yeah, And so I
started working as an undercover journalist andI was always going to be on the
(01:05:25):
Peiser beat. I was always lookingfor someone from Visor to like explain,
sure, explain to me what washappening and the bait and the game to
the FDA stuff from Nick Warren orjust any of that. But you know,
I went on meetings with some likeone person from Visor prior to Jordan
(01:05:46):
Walker, and it was just theyhad no idea what was going on.
They were like, oh, Idon't really want to talk about work,
Like, yeah, this isn't that. Yeah, yeah, I'm sure,
yes, you know. So Iwas really wondering, like, Okay,
maybe I shouldn't have left Phizer,but it's all gonna work out. And
so, you know, one thingleads to another. And I was sitting
(01:06:08):
down in front of Jordan Walker towardsthe beginning of twenty twenty three, after
connecting with him around Christmas time thefollowing year. Right, so we were
communicating and we sat down and itwas very cordial, very nice guy,
very I had a huge smile onhis face, so it was excited to
(01:06:29):
see me, and it was itwas interesting because I sat down with him
for like forty something minutes before weeven really discussed work. You know,
I danced around the whole thing.But my alias itself was built around like
the bottomedical world yep, and soyou know it, it it led to
(01:06:54):
me asking like he just said somethingthat led to me asking the question,
so as Fizer ultimately thinking about medadeing COVID and then it almost feels like
it was like scripted in a waybecause he's like, don't tell anybody this,
don't tell anybody this. Wow,So like double agent, double agent.
Yeah, I'm like, all right, I won't say anything like your
(01:07:15):
secret safe with me. You fistbumped him and then you know, he
goes on to explain how there's someserial dilution going on and with monkeys and
all that all that, and I'mjust like this is like I was already
conscious at that point to turn andso my head was kind of exploding during
that meeting and walked away, right, And you know, when you're doing
(01:07:36):
undercover journalism as a as a gayguy, apparently you know, like when
you're under when you're undercovered, you'resupposed to be gay. Like sometimes you
get a little you know, frisky, and yeah I didn't. I didn't
get kissed or anything, but youknow, we gotta hug these people look
about and it gets a little weird. Wow. So yeah, so,
(01:08:00):
you know, went on a secondmeeting after James saw my footage, loved
my footage, was like, thisis bombshell. Let's go. Yeah,
just like, oh, guysurs isare real though, don't know. So
you like, at every level you'retorn. I'm in a matrix of Yes,
they're jumping through matrixes. Oh mygod, you said that. On
(01:08:20):
one I was thinking, that's perfect, jumping through matrixes. So I went
on a second meeting, went reallyhard on that one, in the sense
of asking really difficult questions, andthen one thing leads to another. We
go to the third meeting, they'relike, you have a story. It's
gonna be bombshell, Like let's go, you know. And then so I
(01:08:42):
went to this we actually had Iwanted to do it in Brooklyn, the
Dumbbow area, at this like reallynice restaurant, and so Jill, I
like to make this really interesting becauseI don't want to like be super repetitive
for all these interviews, right becauseI've I've definitely talked about all this stuff
before. But I connected with someguy named Jacob who's very been very cordial
(01:09:09):
with me through Twitter DMS, andhe has like vetted me essentially through through
Twitter, asking me questions, saidlike, oh, like where it was
this spot? You know that youwent to this meeting, and I was
like, it was in Brooklyn,it was in this Dumbo area, and
like, let me just confirm withyou that it was here and not there
(01:09:30):
and or et cetera. And itjust gets really interesting because he starts decoding
all of this and he was literallytalking about I'll share share all this information
with you, but he essentially afour hundred and one days prior had done
(01:09:51):
a full blown decode of saying thatthis video was all about like satan in
like Seatanic worship, it had todo with the Kraken, Like the cracking
is like the release of like Satanism, and it was really interesting the way
that he was portraying it. Youknow, those aren't my words. Jacob
(01:10:13):
was like decoding. Wow, Likethere's literally with Jordan Walker getting surprise interviewed
right by James. He's like,there's a picture of him on the phone,
right, He's like on the phonelike this shocked, caught, caught
red handed, And there's a pictureof a kraken right on the ceiling of
this restaurant, and he just like, you know, there was also Jesus
(01:10:39):
and Mary and and pictures in therestaurant. And so the pizza restaurant was
called Ignausio's Pizza ha, And thatall decoded is connected to Ignacious, which
is connected to the Jesuit order.Right. He's the founder of the Jesuits,
(01:11:00):
who are part of the people thatultimately control narratives around the news and
everything else, you know, likethey're one of the high up controllers like
deep yeah, the ball or DeepState. Yeah. So it's really interesting
because he was saying, like whomade those decisions? Like was it you
(01:11:23):
or was it James? Was itwas it? Was it another journalist?
And I was like, dude,it was all me. He's like,
dude, So God literally was likeinside you, like pulling these strings,
you know, And so I haveto like look more into what he even
said back. That's really interesting,wow, Ago, But yeah, he's
like, there's so many synchronicities withyour stories that God used you as a
(01:11:46):
pawn to do all of this youand I feel that the minute your mom
said you were working at Pfizer,I'm like, oh yeah. And then
when I saw you with yeah,anyway, I saw you with Alec and
I was like, You've gone theway around. Yeah, totally to the
camps. Did the Jordan Walker story. I got fifty million views, and
(01:12:09):
like, I was like happy,but also concerned because I'm like, at
the same time obviously conscious to terrain, and I'm like, this is literally
affirming virology on a subconscious level,affirming dangerous viruses being mutated. And I
was like, this is not partof my story, this is not part
(01:12:30):
of my divine access. This isthis is extremely opposite of what I actually
stand for. And so I continueto just do my job, continue to
do undercovered journalism. I did agreat expose of this ed camp organization in
Long Island, which is a professionaldevelopment of teachers that pushed like LGBTQ,
(01:12:53):
oh wow the kids and yeah.So it was definitely an agenda too,
it felt like because I mean itended with this professional development day on a
Saturday that literally has to do withtelling kids like, by the way,
top surgery is okay, you know, like we're getting rid of boys and
(01:13:14):
girls in classrooms, and let's dothis at the elementary level. I'm like,
this is insane. Yeah, it'sin the it's in at schools now.
I'm not against people that are gay, elgabracy, you or any of
it. It's more like, hey, don't push it on children, right,
don't exactly exactly, you know,like if you're to you, but
if you want if you're eighteen inyour year all about like going through gender
(01:13:41):
transformation, by all means at thatpoint, I'm not going to stop.
You're a go ahead and do it. Go ahead, I don't like it.
I'm also going to tell you aboutthe repercussions and be like you're mutilating
yourself as well. You know,and you know you might disagree with me
at first, but there have beena ton of people who have gone through
those certain inies and I now likewalked back on. There are affirmations and
(01:14:04):
say I screwed up too, Liketwenty percent people of will come out and
say that a lot of it it'sa trauma thing that it just gets morphed
in with the indoctrination. A goodfriend of mine is gay, and she
she's really educated me on this,and she's she almost had the transition.
She was considering it. She shouldn'talmost have it, but considering that,
(01:14:26):
and then she like she had todo a lot. She did a lot
of like it our work, andI don't know, she came out the
other side of it and now islike very outspoken about this issue, especially
with the kids. I have afriend who's gay too, and he's like,
you know, I don't. It'snot like he's like pushing being gay
on anybody else. He's just he'slike, I think it's ridiculous that there
(01:14:47):
is an agenda with it all exactly, you know, like people can be
gay. I'm saying that that's bad. It's more like what comes from pushing
being anything onto kids, Like letthem go about their own way, go
about their own growth and all ofthat. Organically, you're dealing with another
(01:15:14):
parent's child, like this is notcool. So glad. So I basically
had to leap from Project Veritas toOMG right after that story was released because
I just I didn't see how Iwas going to be able to corob rate
my whistle blower story without access toJames, and so I joined OWG.
Then I worked there for like fivemonths, six months, however long it
(01:15:39):
is. And so I started workingwith sources as a journalist. And so
this is where I started to accumulateor see like where the filter is,
you know, because I had thesesources where I thought had bombshell stories.
Like I flew all the way toMinnesota to interview with Kim Whitsac who was
(01:16:01):
an FDA committee member, and shehad this crazy whistle blower story that you
know, there was like one articlemaybe written about this back in twenty seventeen
about her where you know, soit's not public and she'll like tweet about
it from time to time. Butlike she was taken off of this board,
(01:16:23):
from this black box warning boat.And it actually involves Pfizer in chantis,
right, So it's Peiser's grantics,Yeah, And gantics is a smoking
cessation drawing that you have to becautious with because there is a connection to
violence and they're leadally excuse me,there are literally people that psychiatrists that will
(01:16:45):
not prescribe chantis based off of thesereactions. Anymore, you know, and
there is no black box warning onit still, so it had a black
box on it for like nine orten years, I believe, and they
had friends that took it and theytalk about their crazy drink. Yeah,
yeah, that's not what they see. And Kim was taking off of this
(01:17:06):
committee vote because she's like the safetyconsumer advocate, and you know, Pfizer
paid off like two hundred and fiftymillion dollars of like lawsuits to like keep
people shut up sign NBA like insane, and then in two years, you
know, their investment paid off becauseKim wasn't able to downvote it and bread
(01:17:28):
awareness and the black box had takenoff, and then the drug itself saw
nearly a billion dollars in profit intwo years from twenty sixteen you know,
twenty seventeen border and then into twentyeighteen. Right, so it took off
and went from black box to blockbusterdrug. Right. So it just to
(01:17:50):
show that there is so much corruptionin the farmer realm Oh, don't get
me started with what they've done withepidialects, the TSC drug, the cbd
H. They basically took the cannabisplant, which you really need a whole
plant cannabis to really be super effective, and they stripped stripped it down to
(01:18:11):
a you know, just a completeisolate, and then they dumped a bunch
of food coloring and stuff in there, and they somehow there's all these politics
around how they got that drug tocome to come to be approved and it
hijacked the cannabis industry, the otheraspects of it. It's really insidious.
I don't I can't explain it thatwell, but that woke me up big
time. I was like, what, Yeah, they're getting into like the
(01:18:34):
patenting of nature and and it doesn'twork, Like I have two kids on
it, and it's it's might bea little better than some of the other
harsher pharma epilepsy drugs, but they'restill having the breakthrough. Yeah, because
they've got Yeah, because doctors don'treally understand the mechanisms of that plant because
(01:18:58):
there's no research. That's a lotof anyways, I hear you on that
SDA. So Kim has this crazywas the blow her story, and it
wasn't told because my colleagues and Jamesjust never never bought it. They didn't
think it was powerful. So Jamesdid an interview with her it took her
(01:19:18):
like nine or ten months to finallyinterview on redacted, so she got to
tell her story. But that's good. It took a long time, you
know, to go through all ofit, you know, and it was
like just a waste of my time, a waste of hurt, and so
I felt it was just to puther into the film as well as the
(01:19:43):
Raymond hard who has this clean Twitternow story which you know is not trending
on Twitter by any means, becausebut Twitter ran their shadow banding me,
I'm pretty sure at this point.But Raymond has a very powerful story as
well. He's a human rights activistand he's done this with Facebook, so
it's not like it's a one timething or in Facebook. In twenty twelve,
(01:20:05):
he came across like child pornography andexploitation on the on the social media
platform Facebook, and you know,it got the attention of a lot of
people. Also, his credibility inthe sense that he's been in Congress like
fighting for this before. Right.So, but he also has a book,
(01:20:27):
right, He's done this all overand he flies all over the country
in the world, right, notjust in the States, like he goes
to like Mexico. He probably goesto London and he's all over the place.
So he interviewed with James, andJames was like nonchalant during the entire
interview, didn't really care. Andso after the interview, I thought otherwise.
(01:20:50):
I thought the story was great,and Raymond was like, dude,
he's not going to release that,like really you think? So yeah,
so you know, and thing leadsto another James said, no story basically
no smoking gun. It's you know, so he's opening up these Pandora boxes
and then just kind of like lettingit go like yep yep. So like
(01:21:15):
certain levels, certain truths are areallowed, and then certain one time well
and the story itself was cut up, which was pretty crazy. And the
other journalists I was working with alsothought it was a big story. So
yeah, I did that in thefilm as well. And then it leads
to James. Right after that,it leads to hearing the rumors that James
(01:21:39):
is going about you mean growth andright, you know, Once I hear
that, I'm like, all right, I gotta fine, no way out
of here because bohemian grove. Ido not want to be associated with that.
Yeah, whether you've heard of theAlex Jones Bohmian Grove infiltration or not.
It's it's just a sketchy, sketchything, right, And I mean
(01:21:59):
the timing of all this is interestingbecause I mean there's this YouTuber who's named
Dancer one actually infiltrated Bohemian Grove atWow twenty twenty three UH encampment this year,
and they they caught a lot ofinformation on the second infiltration and they
they saw the owl both times,and they they've you know, saw like
(01:22:23):
we're confirming the encampment slips and like, oh, they were here this year,
the ones that is twenty twenty three, and it's just like cremation of
care posters and it's really just it'sit's so ripe convert conspiracy because nobody will
speak on this at all. Youknow, that goes you know, there's
(01:22:44):
a statue there literally that like asit's handle over its mouth, like to
remind you that you're sworn to secrecyand you can't talk about it. So
wow, that's just uncovering Bohemian Grove. I didn't know what it was till
we talked in January. I hadnever heard of it. I had to
go look it up. To behonest, a lot of people actually don't
(01:23:04):
know about it, but a lotof people in truth their circles and conspiracy
and conspiracy circle, they really do. So it's a bad look, to
say the least bad look. Yeah, especially when you're doing these sting operations
like James's. You know, like, well you're getting invited there, but
(01:23:25):
you wear undercover cameras all the time. But it just like it doesn't make
sense. It, Yeah, itdoesn't make any sense. So my colleagues
and I like kind of banded togetherto see if he would go or not.
And then once he got back,he didn't say anything. I got
the tense slip information where it linesout the Bohemian grove tent slip and then
(01:23:50):
lead in film yep. And thenhe comes back from Bohemian Growth and I
got called. I called James becausehe apparently wanted to talk to me,
and he's like, yeah, Iwent to this bohemian club of what are
you doing? How do you feelabout it? Right? And I just
(01:24:13):
that's when I put my foot inthe ground and said that they're not thats
enough, you know, like that'stoo much for me to say yes to
James. And so that's where thisstory of my whistleblower story comes to an
end other than together this documentary totell the entire journey. So and then
(01:24:34):
documentary is fantastic. I watched it. I just you know, I that
was all from the all from youknow, my perspective speaking with Jill in
a conversation. But for those ofyou who are interested in watching it,
it's a two and a half hourfilm, got into two volumes, and
(01:24:54):
it's really well done, and it'scatching some steam in the alternative these circles.
But you know, the mainstream alternativemedia industrial complex is pretty much refusing
to report on my story. Andthe best part is that the information that
I am presenting as the Pfizer whistleblower is actually being reported on. Like
(01:25:18):
zero Heads just reported an article andthis is crazy. They're like, this
is wild. You know that ProjectVeritas buried this information, right, So
so keep going. And yeah,so, Jill, if you wanted to
touch on other things other than ProjectWhistles, you had four other questions that
(01:25:41):
we go through. It says talkabout rare disease and vaccines and TSC.
Yes, let's just TSC was initiatedby a vaccine and very obvious exacerbation of
manifestations with increase and mandated vaccines,and how unconsciousible this is, yet how
few people understand it well, Iwould just can I just add just a
(01:26:06):
note here that I started to notice, you know, I I parents have
three kids with the diagnosis. Theirtheir dad has the diagnosis, and his
father has it. So I've seenthe thread and one of the you know,
I think I had a lot offaith in the medical system having children
that came in with this diagnosis,thinking that there's more treatments, there's more
(01:26:28):
there's more support, and there isin a lot of ways, there's more
technology, and there is more awarenessaround it. But what I noticed was
the cognitive issues were much more profoundin these newer generations, Like there are
more people being diagnosed, and theyseem to be impacted for the manifestations are
just off the charts, like there'sand the number of vaccines that ex husband
(01:26:54):
and his dad had were just minimalcompared to the ones that my offsper had
been exponential. I start out slow, you know, with I mean when
I mean I woke up to withmy awakening. During this entire journey,
I was even in plandemic too.I'm pretty sure it goes into how the
(01:27:15):
entire pharmaceutical industry itself was hijacked bythe Rockfellers, and like, yes,
twelve nineteen thirteen, what is thisthe Flexner Report, the Flexner Report.
Yes, and then that just youknow, changes the medical world itself,
like it was primarily realistic before then, right, and cancer wasn't even a
(01:27:36):
thing. And then it goes onto explain, like ten twenty years later
in the twenties and thirties, thatthen the Rockefellers start like the America what
the American Cancer Foundation or something likethat. Right, it is like where
do cancer going from? You know, it doesn't You're you're making these toxic
(01:27:57):
poison bombers, creating the beast tofeed the beast. Yes, and so
we are going through generational traumas andexperiencing the what happens when you allowed generational
traumas to continue from generation to generation? Yes? So, and manifesting physicality
I mean yeahs and all the vitalorgans, right with rare diseases such as
(01:28:23):
to rasclerosis, right, since Ihave one, I mean, my diagnosis
I may contribute to vaccine injury itself. But I'm not really sure. Was
it something that's genetic? And Imean I myself am questioning even genetics nowadays
of like what are ges? Whata chromosomes are? They are those?
(01:28:45):
Even? Really? What's DNA?Yeah? What's DNA? Those are all
like that truth or circles are trulyactually asking nowadays, right, Like there's
the people are going down all ofthe rabbit hole of science. People.
It's great for discovering that, youknow, virology pseudo scientific bacteria is and
actually making us sick, and thatit's actually good for us. Right,
(01:29:09):
It's part of the process of likehealing, and it's supposed to eat up
the jump eat it up. Yeah, Like if you look at a log
that's decomposed. I think of natureso often and just that natural process how
you know it breaks down and it'sneeded to break down. Yeah, anyways,
but yeah, you wonder if somethinggets turned on, like some signal,
(01:29:29):
you know, the like that's thevaccine, like that whatever one it
is, it's there's some switch thatis and you have the genetic vulnerability to
it, or there's some diet thingor it's an epigenetic you know, trauma
like something activates it. But itdefinitely. Yeah, that'd be genetics is
huge, that's for sure. I'velearned that. And I'm not saying that
(01:29:56):
like I mean, I have Iwas diagnosed with two or scuros and I
show the symptoms of it. Butis it reversible? I don't know,
right. I've had people tell meit is, I mean, and I've
said, great, Yeah, I'veheard some some really interesting things that are
very unattainable for the average person withTSC. I don't take rap of mice
(01:30:20):
in anymore. I used to whenI was in my teenage years, and
even through college I was taking it, I believe, and I stopped just
because I was like, once Iwas really waking up to the corruption apathic
medicine, like this is not forme. And so when I stopped,
my bumps kind of went back up. But since I've been very conscious and
(01:30:44):
very health conscious, they've actually kindof just become good. You know.
They are hardly noticeable unless you getreally close up to my face, and
it's it is something I'll have topotentially live with for the rest of my
life. But if they can dumbdown, then they'll dumb down. But
(01:31:06):
the question was various. Yeah,so with vaccines themselves for people who are
maybe thinking a quack or something like, it's really it all kind of stems
from even the birthing world, wherewe we go to hospitals to have birth.
(01:31:28):
We have hospital births and then boomthey take your kid out and then
boom they take your kid away.Boom. Vitamin K shot right in Vitamin
K is even in the actual vitamin. And believe now, the ingredients in
that vaccine are like pure aluminum,mercury and all these toxic chemicals, and
so they go right into your baby. And the reason the other one that
(01:31:49):
have the these these vaccines are goinginto little kids that can't speak right in
the literally a gift from God,right like they coming out of the word.
They just get welcomed into the worldand then boom, evil boom evil
like they get injected with toxic chemicals. I know, Like you're telling me
(01:32:13):
that those kids gonna get hepatitis Bor whatever right away, and they scare
you with these horror stories. Yes, absolutely, well that's what doctors jobs
are really stuid they're smarter than youand oh yeah they know better. You
better be careful, don't do itby yourself, you know, they have
this god complex. Oh my gosh, yes, it's up hill. Oh
(01:32:42):
yeah, and we created that.I mean, and I collectively, I
think we put them on a pedestal. Like everybody. You know, I've
noticed that trend in my lifetime,like everybody is just oh, if you
find the right doctor. I thinkthat was my first like venture with TSC.
If we find the right doctors,then we're gonna be able to manage.
This wasn't that, it was likea hundred layers beyond the definitely well,
(01:33:03):
but yeah, we put them ona pedestal. And and yeah,
it's a hard mentality and there areI mean, I don't want to bash
the whole system, because I thinkthere's it's just it's hard justin because you
you develop relationships with doctors and peoplethat are embedded in the medical systems and
they you know, I still needto depend on Uh. I can't quite
(01:33:25):
pull my I can't just pull mykids out, and so it's like this,
it's very it's a gut wrenching thingbecause they believe so strongly in what
they're doing that it's it's it's youcan't cut I can't cut through, and
I just kind of I want tosay, I play along and I listen
and I respect them as as asoul that's here. There are men and
(01:33:46):
women too, right, right,So it's it's just insidious how this has
kind of come along. But Ireally appreciate your having this conversation with me
because there's no one else in thisthat I found in the TSC world.
It'll talk the best. Yeah.So yeah, so it's it's pretty unconscioable
(01:34:09):
in it that that is how diseaseitself really manifests. Right, It's not
just too riskleross, no, right, it's it's autism, it's millions,
it's disease. Disease really does kindof stem from all of this, and
you know that's why detoxing is reallyimportant and eating healthy as best as you
(01:34:33):
can is really important. Anything sunlight, and then I use the beamer,
right, I was gonna say,what are your protocols? What are your
healthy beamer? Sometimes at night,sometimes I just do the red light therapy
where I put it on my eyesin the morning to give me like that
exposure. And you know, it'slike seasonal depression is a thing, so
it does help with that. Ozonetherapy is really big I've been using that.
(01:35:00):
I had this eye injury actually whereI was wearing contacts right too too
much, right, like way toomuch? And who were dailies? And
I was like wearing them. Ireused a daily contact post four or five
times. Yeah, why did Ido that? I don't know. But
(01:35:21):
so I got a little corneal abrasionand then okay, like the god complex
in me, it was like I'mgonna fix this myself. And so I
went to the doctor and I like, instead of just like letting it rest
and heal itself, like, Ikind of started treating it myself. And
one thing leads to another and soI basically blinded myself and I was like
(01:35:45):
ended up room and this is reallybad situation, Jill. Yeah, I
was blind in my right eye.Yeah. So it took the power of
manifestation, the subcome just mine everysingle day, like doing meditations and yeah,
(01:36:05):
I was doing that. I wasprescribed antibiotics and I literally didn't take
I was prescribed antibiotics. I said, nah, I'm good, Like this
was all inflicted. This is allmy fault, you know, Like I
literally I was told to do likesome castor oil solution and it was supposed
(01:36:26):
to be around my eyes, butI put it in my eyes with a
stick. Yeah, you live andyou'll learn, though. Yeah, shit,
I wanted to wash that out andso I blasted my eyeball with shower
water and then it was just out. Yeah, so I burned my corn
(01:36:47):
to you basically, And so itwas all this messed up situation. And
then but I've I've healed, youknow, not yet. I still have
a little of uh like the scarringthat I'm dealing with. But I could
have theoretically like lost my vision ifI didn't. Oh, so forever grateful
(01:37:11):
that God has let me still seeright Like it's it's truly a blessing to
be able to see every single day. Still, so gratitude that yeah.
So yeah, if you want tomove, is that is that? Yeah?
I think here, I know we'vebeen talking a long time. Let's
let's wrap this up. But so, yeah, the LifeWay patches you use
those still just yes, the lifewave also was helping for Yeah, just
(01:37:36):
a few more just to hear yourhealth protocols because life wave is a great
uh reached stem cells actually naturally inthe human body, and you don't need
to necessarily get stem cell injections thatare like two thousand dollars, right,
trying to put it in front ofit. Oh you got yeah, yeah,
I use them. Yeah, Igot one on my shoulder right now.
(01:37:59):
Yeah. So life Weave can helpwith pretty much any ailment for the
people that are wondering what it reallyis. And I'm I'm no expert in
speaking about it, but there's thisphoton like light therapy that right, it's
like a light therapy kind of stimulatesstem cells in the body and they you
(01:38:20):
wear the patch for anywhere from twelveto sixteen hours you're supposed to. Sometimes
that were too long, like twentyfour but oh yeah, you forget about
it. Affiliate. It's just I'veheard that you actually, you know,
you got to take it off forit actually to also have effect. Your
body has to like react to it. So I've been doing life Wave Ozone
(01:38:41):
therapy I've mentioned a little bit,and so I use I have an affiliate
with Promo Life where they're American madecompany, and they do you know,
my favorite is like the ear insulationsand then just ozone water and so ozone
is really poortant because it's triple lotoxygen to the cells. And what's the
(01:39:03):
most important thing that we need isactually oxygen. Yeah, Like you can't
go four minutes without breathing basically yep. And you can go forty days without
eating, or you can go fourdays pretty much without water. Right,
So what's the most important thing oxygen? And so this apparatus, it's not
(01:39:27):
the prettiest thing in the world,like you got to buy an oxygen tank
from like a welding store, butreally wow. Yeah, but it's it's
a really uh, you can utilizeit to be your own doctor and you
just also you know, for peoplewho are curious, dm me on Twitter
or you know, reach out tome on my emails through my website,
(01:39:50):
going to start to say dustintegrity dotnet. You can email me there for
the actual emails I have, likeit's it's called z oh, you have
a special email. I will putall these links in the description, all
your links. It's just integrity dotnet, right, which is where they
(01:40:12):
can find the documentary itself and thenall of the connections to these products.
Yeah, did I miss any Beamer, the patches, the ozone therapy.
Oh yas I'm working with my friendDanny Parrott who's the people's herbalist. He
(01:40:34):
has a ton of unique tinctures andthings of that nature to help self heal
as well. So if you wanta discount code, I believe I can
get you fifteen percent if you goto my website and just scroll and click
on the link. But for anybodythat's curious about any of these things,
you can go read about it onthe well this page of just integrity dot
(01:40:57):
net and just go through. Oryou know, if you want to email
me, uh my just integrity emailis justinat justintegrity dot net, or you
can you can email me on prettymuch. You know, I'll give you
a certain emails chill, but wecan find you. There's one more thing
I wanted to mention about that.Uh oh god, I just had an
(01:41:21):
old lady brain fart. Yeah.So yeah, And and to watch your
your documentary, it's it's fantastic.It's it's you'll get the whole, the
whole story, like the I don'tknow, I just just did a beautiful
job with it. And oh,I know your don't donation button. So
(01:41:42):
you have a gift send go,you have a zelle, you have a
cash app. Uh you know,if you want to support Justin and his
mission here his vision. Please donate, absolutely support this cause this is incredible
what he's coming out with. Andyeah, yeah, I do have a
give seng go link, so Jill, I'll share that with you. It
(01:42:02):
gives seng go dot com slash likeProject whistle Blower yep to just speak that
out. And then yeah, mycash app and zell are also linked on
my website. If you'd like tosend me a cash up or a zel
just you know, any any dollenough helps, just because you know,
I haven't exactly been working either.I've been doing full time working on this
(01:42:28):
project right and making the right networkand connections and you know so, but
this is God's work and it wasreally important for me to get this story
out to the world and ultimately willremove this weight off of my shoulders and
share this truth and let everybody knowthat you know, there are you know,
there's a veil in the media andnow there's a line being drawn in
(01:42:49):
the same end of truth and loveversus lies and deception and understanding that you
know, not everybody out there isreally out there fighting for you, are
actually you know, fighting against you. Keep your eyes open and your heart
open as much as you can.Yeah, beautiful, I'm so proud of
(01:43:09):
you and just like cheering you onall the way. Is it's just this
needs to come out, and whatbetter person to do it then, I
want to say, someone that hasTSC, which is one of the most
complicated on some levels conditions that youcan you can incarnate to experience. I
feel like there's they're all we're allangels that came down here to really teach
(01:43:30):
society about the crack the effery basically, Oh yeah, you know, we're
moving angelic presence. We're moving intothe new free world that is going to
be co created by people like youand me, and uh, we're we're
getting to a point where the financialsystem itself is you know, it doesn't
(01:43:54):
really make sense anymore. Yeah,we're moving as men and women. I
think away from that too, inthe sense of, you know, not
saying that like you need to beafraid of money or you need to worship
money. But your job is animportant thing right now, right in this
realm. But I've been told thatwithin the next five to ten years that
(01:44:15):
the financial system itself may cease toreally exist and that we as you know,
or within the next hundred years,like we're going to really realize that
as men and women that it's it'spretty ridiculous that we let numbers on the
screen really dictate who was a goodperson and who is a bad person,
and true who deserves a home andwho doesn't. Right, And so you
(01:44:39):
know, I'm not trying to getinto socialism or anything like that either,
right, it's it's the awareness thatis coming online is incredible, and I
think we're going to see massive changeand to stay you know, I don't
want to say override your your feelingsor whatever, but choose to be choose
to see it as transferformative and staypositive as much. Absolutely, positivity is
(01:45:02):
the most important mindset to have withany of those you know, because I
mean, my story is definitely heavy. You have, you have a story,
but if you look at it ina positive light, you can see,
wow, like this is exposing alot, a lot of narratives,
you know, and so man alot of them, and a lot of
deception and manipulation, and you know, so hopefully people can try and put
(01:45:27):
their feet in my shoes, althoughnobody can really do that, so at
least get a little glimpse of youryour walk here, so I don't know,
thank you justin on. Yeah that'shopefully something comes on from the other
side of this, you know.Yeah, stay in touch if you ever
want to do a podcast or youneed to support in a way that I
am on your team. So thankyou sooner right yeah bye, but