reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @JEM_Books

reSee.it AI Summary
I recommend watching the 57-minute "Trial by Media" documentary on Rod Blagojevich for a refresher on his story. I'm glad President Trump pardoned him, and I really admire his wife, Patricia, for her unwavering support throughout everything. She's truly amazing!

@JEM_Books - Jan Evelynโœ๏ธ๐Ÿ“–๐ŸŒป๐Ÿคบ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธAmericaFirst Never Surrender

If you want a refresher on what happened to Rod Blagojevich or don't know what happened, watch this 57 minute Trial by Media 'Blago' documentary (2020). It was good President Trump pardoned him.๐Ÿฅณ๐ŸŽ‡ And Blagojevich's wife Patricia stuck with him through it all and helped him immensely. She is an amazing person!

Video Transcript AI Summary
I was greeted enthusiastically everywhere, engaging with people and addressing their concerns. I had a knack for media attention, which helped me win elections. Some saw dealing with the press as a double-edged sword. I was accused of trying to sell Barack Obama's senate seat, with my own words describing it as "golden." My wife stood by me, knowing my heart and intentions were never to break the law. I rose from a humble background, and my political journey was about making things better for people. As governor, I championed big ideas like healthcare expansion and minimum wage hikes. But I overlearned the importance of raising money, leading to campaign finance issues and ultimately, my downfall and impeachment. Despite everything, I maintained my innocence, leading to legal battles and media attention. Ultimately, I was convicted and sentenced to prison, a decision that devastated my family.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: He is greeted by enthusiastic groups wherever he goes. He stops to talk with people, to shake hands, to sign autographs, and at times gets an earful about the issues. Speaker 1: Rod was a natural talent in that he loved to jump on something that would get him on TV. Joining us tonight, Rod Blagojevich. Speaker 2: The first member of congress to alert the public about the napalm recycling plan. Speaker 3: Congressman Blagojevich helped negotiate the release of the three US soldiers. Speaker 4: I don't Speaker 5: think we're heroes. I just think we're looking after our own. Speaker 6: He absolutely embraced the media's attention. He lived off and he thrived off of it. That's one of the reasons he never lost an election. Speaker 7: I think the press is just a necessary part of the job. Speaker 8: But for Rod Blagojevich, dealing with the press really is a double edged sword. Speaker 2: Justice Brevoire has rested twenty five days. Speaker 4: Governor Rod Blagojevich is accused of trying to sell Barack Obama's Tennessee to the highest bidder. Speaker 2: While he may be the nation's least popular governor, he's been the most popular news story. Speaker 9: Political shit. Speaker 2: It was appalling. Like a sports agent shopping the highest bidder. Speaker 10: The governor's own words describing the senate seat. I've got this thing Speaker 2: I've got this thing Speaker 11: I've got this thing, and it's Speaker 10: golden. It's effing golden. Speaker 2: Bleeping golden, and I'm just not getting Speaker 4: it up. Speaker 12: Just giving Speaker 2: it up for bleeping Speaker 7: and nothing. Speaker 10: For nothing. Speaker 2: For nothing. Did you say this? Speaker 12: When somebody gets indicted marriage, majority of the times, they get divorced. I suppose I could have packed my kids up and said, good luck with that, you know, we're gonna go live in Wisconsin or something like that, you know, call us when it's done. But the thing is, I couldn't let the father of my children and my husband for years fight that battle alone. I know Rod, and I know his heart, and I know his intentions, and I know that he never intended to break any law or commit any crime. Rod was all about trying to make things better for people. Speaker 13: When they talk about term limits for Illinois politicians, they don't mean how long they can serve in office. No. They mean the prison term that former governor Otto Kerner served for taking racetrack stocks in return for favors. Or the year and a half former governor Dan Walker served for a bank fraud after he left office. Or the six and a half years former governor George Ryan is now serving for selling off licenses and contracts. Speaker 4: Illinois is probably the heavyweight champion of corruption in that sense. We've had five governors that have been indicted in this state. Speaker 14: After years of ethics scandals and investigations, there was a man who ran on an anti corruption platform. Speaker 4: Thank you. Thank you very much, mister chairman. As a native and lifelong resident of Chicago, I wanna welcome all the delegates and visitors to this most American of American cities. Speaker 7: So there Speaker 8: was a time in Chicago when Rod Volkowich was seen by the press as being skilled as a politician. And some of my first impressions of him were, yeah, just that he was really good at it. He had this really outsized likable personality, which was engaging for a lot of people. Speaker 1: Here's this guy from the neighborhood come in, and I'm gonna take down these elites who've been in power for twenty six years, and we're gonna have a new day. Illinois and people are like, that's my guy. Speaker 6: Rob Gojevich's history is very different from those Chicago Politicians that a lot of people have heard about. Came from nothing. Five room apartment, two flat, in Chicago on the Northwest Side. Speaker 12: His dad was an immigrant from Serbia who worked in factories. His mom worked for for the CTA taking tickets. Rod in Speaker 1: high school went to work on the Alaskan pipeline because that was the only way he could get through college and be there with all of what he would call the dilettantes. Speaker 12: He knew the struggles of regular, solid, blue collar workers. Speaker 6: He really did come from nobody and nowhere. And his only way to push for changes in how things are done was to meet people and to play the political game. Speaker 12: I first met Rod at a fundraiser for my father. I had just broken up with a long term boyfriend on, like, on a Wednesday. Rather than feeling sorry for myself, I decided to go to my dad's fundraiser, which was on a Sunday. We were introduced by a mutual friend at that fundraiser, so my husband was literally like the rebound. His car was always getting broken into. So we're in the car and there's no radio, and he was just singing the Elvis songs to me. I thought, you know, there might be something there. We ended up dating for a year and then were engaged for a year and then got married. And at that point, Rod was a young lawyer, but he always was interested in politics. I think when he was in fifth grade, he knew all the presidents backwards and forwards. Speaker 1: Nobody really knew who he was back then beyond he married Patty Mow, who's Alderman Dick Mow's son-in-law. Speaker 12: I have a long family history of politics here in Chicago. Speaker 1: Dick Mehl is the Chicago political machine. Just loud, in your face, opinionated, and just at the center of everything. Speaker 6: Dick Mehl was an alderman, which is a very powerful person in Chicago City Council. And he had this political army who helped him win elections and keep power. Speaker 12: A couple years into our marriage, my dad needs a candidate for state representative. Rob had one question. Am I free to vote the way my conscience urges me to vote? My dad said, yeah. I don't care about that. Speaker 1: These were elite politicians who control everything, and there were real consequences to either being a part of the machine or taking on the machine. But Rod recognized that was the only way he could get into politics and get things done. Rod was a guy that was very, very restless. He just wanted to shake things up, change things, but he didn't have any power. He was a state rep, very quickly gets bored and decides who wants to run for congress. Speaker 2: The well financed democrat with powerful family ties. Speaker 10: Rod, your father-in-law is a very powerful Chicago Alderman. You wouldn't be in this race if it weren't for Dick. No. Speaker 7: Well, I think it's fair to say that he's certainly been a big help to me. Speaker 1: Rod gets elected to Congress. What's the first thing he starts thinking about? Maybe I'd have run for governor. We felt like for Rod to be known as more than Dick Mehl's son-in-law, you gotta have a million dollars. We said, Rod, you get that, people will start taking you seriously. He would go anywhere to raise money, and there were no limits back then. So he was raising 25,000, 50 thousand, hundred thousand at a time. Speaker 12: One of the most expensive primaries the state Speaker 2: of Illinois has seen. Mastering a huge campaign war chest. Speaker 5: Had been in Speaker 4: third place for a short time. Blagojevich already has $3,000,000. We'll get to second place. But more is needed. So we'll take PAC money. We've been raising money. We play by the rules. Closing in slowly on first place, Speaker 9: he had the most money to spend. Speaker 1: And here, Rob Bogojevic learned the lesson that raising money equals power, and it changes everything. Speaker 4: The next governor of the state of Illinois, Rob McGlavett. Speaker 12: By all accounts, it was a pretty quick rise to power. 10 from the time he started in politics that he was governor of Illinois. It was crazy because I was only 38 years old when Rod won for governor. I was seven months pregnant with our second child. So it was a very hopeful time all my life. Speaker 2: Governor, may God bless you. Speaker 7: I wanna make clear that business is usual in Illinois state government is a thing of the past. Speaker 14: There were Speaker 1: two things that Rod liked. One was winning, and two was champion the big idea. He loved to be part of something innovative. He was a political entrepreneur. Speaker 8: He was able to do some expansion of health care for children. He very famously offered elderly people free rides on public transportation. Speaker 1: He passed a minimum wage hike, one of the first states to do that. He forced pharmacists to dispense birth control and not allow their veto just because of their political beliefs. We said, we're gonna tear down all the tolls. We're gonna do this open road tolling, and it cut commute time for everybody. And, of course, he couldn't help himself. His name was on every one of those open roads. Rod Bogojevich, governor. Speaker 12: We were doing the best we could for the people of Illinois, and the press was all very good at, you know, at that point. Speaker 2: Charismatic populist with a possible White House future. Youngsters clamored for his autograph this morning. Speaker 12: It was almost like you were like a rock star. Speaker 2: The voters have overwhelmingly said they want a second term as governor. It's not a wonder what is he thinking of where he'll be going after this term is over. Speaker 4: You ain't seen nothing yet. Speaker 1: He's got this perfect pathway to the White House. But the problem with Rod Bogojevic, he had overlearned the lesson of how important raising money was, and he was willing to do just about anything to raise money. Speaker 6: There was this real dichotomy in Rob Bogojevich as he got more powerful because Dick Nell didn't let Rob Bogojevich forget that he was a bit of a creation of Dick Nell. And Rob Begoyevich wanted to think of himself as Alexander Hamilton who came up, you know, out of absolutely nothing and made something of himself all on his own. Rob Begoyevich wanted to be independent, and the way to independence in politics is through money. Speaker 1: Dick Mehl was the primary engine of raising money. So there was always this tension. He needed Dick, but he resented Dick at the same time. Somewhere along the line, Rod meets a couple of fundraising people, and they started working for him. Every campaign tries to push the envelope on campaign finance law. These guys had torn up the envelope, and they just didn't care. Speaker 8: They were going around seeking campaign contributions in exchange for things that Rod could do as governor, different contracts or different appointments. Speaker 11: Blagojevich was steeped in a world in which seeking to make money off of your public position was not weird. I would imagine the types of exchanges didn't seem criminal even or weird to him. It seemed like what politicians do. Speaker 1: And all of a sudden, Rod starts raising this big money and said, I don't need Dick anymore. And Dick gets left behind. Speaker 12: From that point on, we were at odds with my father. Speaker 7: When you have a situation where family's involved, there's a recipe for the politics being brought into the household. That's not healthy. That's not something I'd recommend to people. Speaker 1: At a family dinner in 02/2004, Rod's political life starts to unravel. Dick is very, very resentful of Rod. He feels like you danced with the one who brought you to the dance. And Dick's the jilted suitor here. Speaker 12: My mom was, of course, on my dad's side, and I'm, of course, on my husband's side, and it was very difficult. Speaker 1: Right after dinner, Dick says this offhanded statement to a reporter. They're giving away board and committee assignments for $50,000 a piece. Boom. It's big headlines. Speaker 12: My father then, of course, recanted, but things were forever gonna be different. Speaker 1: That's not just bad press. They can see FBI's attention. Speaker 14: The FBI starts an investigation with credible indication that perhaps a crime has occurred. We were out there pulling together records, and we had picked up clear information that Rod was being very blunt about trying to raise campaign dollars in exchange for things that we could do as the governor. So the next step was to get a court order to go up on Ralph Glitch's telephones, a wiretap. Speaker 8: By that point, his inner circle are under investigation, and everybody knew it. If you know you're under investigation to the level that Rod was at that point, step number one is to take your phone and bury it in the backyard and stay off of it. And Rob Gojevich basically does the opposite. I think he felt like there's no way that his phones would ever be compromised. As a sitting governor, and that's really where he gets into the trouble is he continues to run his mouth like he always does. At that stage, this was still an investigation about campaign contributions, but they started to hear, wait a minute. What's he doing with the senate seat? We need to let some of that run. Speaker 6: When Barack Obama got elected president, Rob Bogojevich as governor was the only person who had the power to appoint Barack Obama's replacement in the senate. And he decided, essentially to start listening to everybody about what they could offer. And he started talking to some of his closest advisers and speculating and plotting how to exchange that decision for something for his benefit. Speaker 5: I got some lady calling my aunt for Jesse Junior here a little while ago. We were approached to pay to play. But, you know, he'd raise me $500, an emissary came, and the other guy would raise a million if I made him a senator. Speaker 8: The Jesse Jackson Junior camp and some of his supporters had come forward and offered to give campaign contributions in exchange for Jesse Jackson junior being appointed to the senate. Speaker 6: There was talk of him deciding to, you know, hey. Maybe I can exchange this for somebody who Barack Obama wants replaced him. Speaker 5: The phone was Valerie Jarrett? Yeah. We should get something for that, couldn't I? Yes. How about health and human services? Can I get that? You and ambassador, I take that. How about India? India is vital. Yeah. India is vital. I'd say India Is that realistic, or do we need to reject that? No. That's really. Is it? I think so. No shit. Speaker 6: They weren't sure what Rob Bogojevic was gonna do next, and the prosecutors felt that if they didn't move quickly, Rob Blagojevich could actually appoint somebody senator. And as soon as he appoints it, it happened. Speaker 5: I told my nephew, Alex, he just turned 26 today. I said, Alex, you know, I called for his birthday. And I said, it's just too bad you're not four years older because I could've given you a US sentencing for your birthday. I mean, I I've got this thing, and it's fucking golden. And, I'm just not giving it up for fucking Speaker 14: nothing. We had enough with recordings we obtained, with telephone records we had pulled, and we knew it was time to take the whole case down. Speaker 12: That morning was like that scene from The Godfather where they're doing the baptism and all these people are getting murdered around them. They went to my brother-in-law. They went to Rod's chief of staff, and they just, like, hit everybody all at the same time. Speaker 14: Dan, myself, and another agent, Kathy, approached the door. And we purposely picked Kathy because she had training in hostage negotiation. The Illinois State Police put a call into the governor's home. Speaker 12: It was somebody saying, it's the FBI. We're at your door. Let us in. And I thought it was a joke, and I said, oh, who is this? And I hung up the phone. Speaker 14: Call back. Speaker 12: And they said, no. This is the FBI. We're downstairs. Come open the door. Otherwise, we'll bust it open. Speaker 14: Patty's state was mostly irritated. I'd say very irritated. Speaker 12: They brought a SWAT team. They bought brought hostage negotiators with them. I mean, what did they think? My husband was gonna hold his children hostage or I mean, it was the craziest thing. Speaker 14: Rod was on the stairway, and one thing that struck me as peculiar that still told me that he wasn't totally grasping the situation is before we walked him down the stairs, he asked me how his hair looked. Speaker 12: And they brought him downstairs, and the FBI agent said to me, well, we have to get going because the press isn't here yet. Speaker 4: McCoy, bitch. Get busted. Read all about it. Speaker 2: Today's headlines stunned a state accustomed to politicians in handcuffs. He's charged with racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud, extortion conspiracy, attempted extortion, and making false statements. Speaker 15: The most serious charge alleges he offered up the appointment of president Obama's vacated senate seat to the highest bidder. Speaker 8: Gleipich's arrest in Chicago was obviously a nuclear weapon going on. Speaker 2: The whole world was listening. Mhmm. Is this the dumbest guy ever? What did you call him? Speaker 4: Blagoleyevich. Blagoleyevich. Speaker 10: Sound like? Speaker 12: The press, they like to build you up and then they start trying to tear you down. Speaker 2: Rod Blagojevich has gone from being an embattled public official to a disgraced private citizen. Speaker 9: That will earn him a permanent place in the political hall of shame. Speaker 4: What a moron this guy is. Speaker 13: But even recently, the governor characterized himself as Speaker 4: a popular guy. Speaker 14: There's any number of critics who wonder if he's delusional or not. Speaker 16: I talked to a number of psychiatrists and said, is this guy nuts? They came up with narcissistic personality disorder. Speaker 4: Governor this. Governor, the suggestion that you might not able to think rationally at this time, how do you respond to that? Speaker 7: I may come out to Speaker 5: what's your question? Speaker 13: A Chicago Tribune poll showed the governor's approval rating at 13%. Speaker 2: With a recent approval rating of just 4%. Speaker 4: Maybe the lowest in American history. It's an embarrassment. The arrogance of governor Blagojevich is beyond bail. Speaker 9: And tomorrow's lead editorial, already posted on the Tribune website, calls on Blagojevich to resign. Speaker 12: I personally think he should at least step aside. I really Speaker 6: think it's time for him to go, but, unfortunately, I think he's gonna drag this out as long as he can. Speaker 2: Governor Blagojevich turned 52 today, not exactly the best of birthdays. His once promising political career now in shambles. Speaker 7: Thank you very much. I'm here to tell you right off the bat that I am not guilty of any criminal wrongdoing, that I intend to stay on the job, and I will fight this thing every step of the way. I will fight. I will fight. I will fight until I take my last breath. Speaker 10: My father called me up and said, come down to the office. Rod Blagojevich may wanna hire us. And so I came down and it was right then. I I fell in love right right then. My father asked me after the meeting was over, do you wanna do it? I said, the governor of the state, especially that guy asks us, that's an honor to to represent someone like that. Yes. I'm in if you're in. Alright. Go. I put Speaker 8: He knew Sam Adams junior actually from the R. Kelly case, and he thought this this guy could get R. Kelly off, then maybe he can help me. Suggestion is Sam was kind of an extension of Rod's personality, very just out there and gregarious and aggressive. Speaker 10: Point out to me one single action that's in a criminal complaint here that says the governor did anything. Maybe there was talk. Now if you're just asking me about tapes, oh, I know Speaker 4: we're doing the tapes. There Speaker 10: are no damaging tapes. When you take an elected official, a governor, rip him from his family at 06:00 in the morning, and then say, he did all these things, but you can't answer it? Speaker 2: Is that really where we are? Speaker 8: Conventional wisdom in Chicago would say, you get hit with a corruption case of this size, dry up immediately. Don't say anything that's gonna get you in any more trouble. But the Blagojevich defense team took the opposite track. Speaker 10: When Rod was arrested, basically, he had a zero approval rating. They showed him with his crazy hair, looking like a common everyday criminal, and so I had to deal with that. But I'm a salesman. Typically, in my case is you have a old beat up Chevy you gotta make look like a brand new Mercedes, but that's that's the nature of the business. And so we tried to get back to to even just all we wanted was people to listen. Speaker 2: Hi. How are you? Speaker 9: The former Illinois governor came to New York today to launch a media campaign. Speaker 4: The Fox and Friends morning show was the first of a flurry of of even more media interviews today. Speaker 2: He's doing everything but stick his head in the sand as he continues to make the rounds and his case before the media. Speaker 17: When it came to media strategy, you had an individual who wanted to speak. Speaker 2: You don't just give it away for nothing. Are these your words? Speaker 7: That's subject to many interpretations that could mean I want them to help us pass health care. Politics and routine politics and political horse trading and discussing what may or may not be available, is how the business works. Speaker 4: You think Speaker 9: that's just routine politics? Speaker 7: Absolutely. I did nothing wrong. And I can leave any criminal wrongdoing. Speaker 18: Don't say I am not Speaker 2: a crook. Do it. Speaker 8: Part of the strategy was we put him on TV because he still had this outsized, likable personality. Speaker 7: Hi. I'm Rod Blagojevich. I'm backstage at the Ellen DeGeneres Show. Speaker 2: Please welcome Rod. Speaker 8: Make people laugh, make him the sympathetic character because they thought that that could ultimately play out in court. Speaker 1: Governor Rod Blagojevich talking on TV as he did all day yesterday. Speaker 7: This week, we believe, is the best possible forum that I have. Speaker 4: I saw you on The View. I saw you on The Today Show. I saw you on, I think, every other show that is in production currently. Speaker 2: Many believe this media blitz is an attempt to influence potential jurors. Speaker 4: Well, you wonder whether that's strategy or whether he just likes to be on television. Speaker 17: During the pretrial media strategy, Rod did become the butt of the joke. Speaker 14: This seat that you're sitting on right now, Speaker 11: you could sell this vacant seat, okay, Speaker 14: on eBay. Speaker 10: You can own Rod Blagojevich's empty seat, and the winner gets a clump of Blago hair found between the cushions. Speaker 17: That being said, it's better to be the butt of the joke than to be a criminal. So we saw this as improving his position. Speaker 19: This governor has violated his oath of office. This governor has breached the public trust. This governor must be impeached, and I urge your I vote. Speaker 20: Rod Blagojevich is no longer the governor of Illinois. He was ousted from office late today after being convicted by the state senate. Hours before the vote, Blagojevich made a plea. Speaker 7: You guys are in politics. You know what we have to do to go out and run and run run elections. Speaker 2: But his performance didn't seem to change any minds here. Speaker 4: I now pronounce the judgment of conviction against Radar Blagojevich with his removal from office as governor. Speaker 3: The senate also voted to bar him from ever holding state office again. As a matter of fact, we understand they've already changed the locks on the doors to this governor's office behind me here. Speaker 4: That way, you're right there in money. How do you feel about that? Governor, what are Speaker 0: you gonna do about your legal defense? For everybody Speaker 7: to do with that. Speaker 4: Do you have prospects for Speaker 21: a job to pay the bills? Speaker 4: You know, I'm obviously, very interested in, finding Speaker 7: a way to earn Speaker 4: a living spot. Right. And, and our family is, is this Speaker 13: the toughest day? Is this the toughest day you have? No. Speaker 21: It's time for a new deal. It's time to get back to work. It's time for the celebrity apprentice. Speaker 4: With Rod Blagojevich. Speaker 7: I'll do anything. Right? Legal and ethical and honest. Speaker 8: Rob Blagojevich's defense team very purposefully decided that they were gonna turn him into even more of a celebrity than he already was. Speaker 7: I'll tell you what you guys think. I should hate you guys on as a politics. Speaker 8: See, that's all I'm saying. Speaker 7: Yeah. First first thing I would've Speaker 10: told is, like, hang up the phone. Yeah. Hang up the phone, man. Speaker 8: The defense team wanted to put him on TV and make a national personality out of him because they saw the OJ case, the R. Kelly case. Speaker 4: How about taking a Come on. Speaker 8: They knew that in the American system, it's a higher bar to convict a celebrity for sure. Speaker 7: I have great respect for your tenacity for the fact that you just don't give up. But, Rod, you're fired. Speaker 4: Top 10 questions Rod Migoievich asked himself before appearing on Celebrity Apprentice number 10. Can I get paid in shampoo? Yeah. Speaker 10: When a media tour first started, people started saying he's nuts. He's crazy. Blago's crazy. And then they started saying, well, you know what? There's gotta be something to this because no man's gonna go around the country for a year and a half and claim his innocence. And by the time we got to, trial, the polling showed fifty fifty. 50 people were coming in believing that he was guilty. 50 said, you know what? Maybe Blago's innocent. And so it gave me real confidence. It gave my father real confidence to go into that trial with that strategy. Speaker 2: The corruption trial of Rob Blagojevich opens this morning. Did you sleep well last night? Not great. You tend to forget that Blagojevich could spend years behind bars if he's convicted because he seems to have made such a mockery of the pretrial process. Speaker 15: Judge James Zagle warned Blagojevich against making daily statements to the press and Twittering updates from the courtroom. He does have a following. And in the criminal context, Speaker 4: he just needs one person. Go Buff. Speaker 7: Thank thank you. Appreciate that. Really? Speaker 2: What's this about? I'm gonna drive. Hang on. Speaker 4: I killed you. Thanks, man. Speaker 8: Inside the US attorney's office, this was being handled by very experienced, very tough people. They're best of the best. Speaker 15: In opening arguments, US attorney Kerry Hamilton included the senate seat in a series of alleged shakedowns establishing a trend. What about me? What's in it for me? Speaker 8: The US government had such a complicated case that there was a lot of minutiae that the jury was asked to deal with. Speaker 13: Trying to connect the dots between Blagojevich and a close inner circle Speaker 2: with an alleged dispute. Pro quo rewarding friends. Speaker 4: This trial is not expected to go by quickly. Speaker 8: They were relying a lot on what was known as honest services, the legal expectation that an elected official owes the public governing free from corruption, and that that had been violated. The presentation of that was really kind of winding and complicated, and the jury probably didn't understand it. Speaker 2: More of the same, the slow, tedious, but careful process. Speaker 4: Today, a little boring. Speaker 2: I think that's a fair word. Speaker 8: So you had the US government coming in very kind of bookish, and what they wound up facing was really a street fight. You had Sam Adam junior coming from the world of the criminal court in Chicago, Twenty Sixth Street, where it's bare knuckle, and I think that caught the federal prosecutors off guard. Speaker 15: In a loud rambling opening fit for the theater, defense attorney Sam Adam Junior mentioned Blagojevich's now famous hair. Speaker 2: Sam Adam junior shouted at the jury. Speaker 4: Waving his arm and pointing his fingers. Speaker 2: Using a fire and brimstone approach said the governor was the victim. Speaker 10: All of the articles said they're 20 Sixth Street Clowns. What we were trying to do is be regular. We gotta be regular. These are people who who get up in the morning, put on their pants one leg at a time, and go to work. They're not gonna see these technical laws and all that and think to them, oh, well, this one has a comma here. This one has a semicolon. What does that mean? And so our entire defense was all of this was political horse trading. You may not like it. You may want to change it, but that's politics. Speaker 14: There are a lot of other people that profited from this corruption. We actually used the evidence we gathered against them to help convince them to cooperate with us, but you just don't know what's gonna happen when you're in court. Speaker 4: Line was a difficult to testify against. Speaker 10: Their witness, Lon Monk, who was Rod's chief of staff, he said he was taking money himself. The US attorney asked him, so how much of that money did you give Rod? And he said, oh, I would never give Rod any money or tell him I took any money because that's not who Rod is. Right there. That's it. If you are his best friend and you're taking money, but you refuse to give it to him, So what are we doing here? What are we talking about? He didn't get any money. Not 1 dime. Speaker 5: Alright. But you understand, it's very important for me to make a lot of money. I need the independence. I I I need freedom. Okay? And then I have a personal issue, which is I feel like I'm fucking my children. That's what I feel like. The whole world's passing me by. And Amy Speaker 2: And she's going to college in six years. Speaker 5: Amy's going to college in six years, and we can't afford it. Speaker 17: They claim all these crimes, and not once has money exchanged. Speaker 10: This is a little mystifying to me. Speaker 8: Sam just pounded on that. If he's supposedly making all this money, where are the fancy cars? Where are the vacations? This guy can't even afford to send his kids to college. That's why he's, you know, complaining about needing money and trying to get a job running a charitable organization or something in exchange for the senate seat is because he doesn't have enough money. So he's if he's a criminal, he's not very good at it. Speaker 4: What's your level Speaker 10: After five weeks of presenting testimony, prosecutors in the corruption trial of Rod Blagojevich have rested their case. Speaker 4: A jury will decide if Illinois will send its second straight governor to prison. Speaker 10: If convicted, he could face up to $6,000,000 in fines and a sentence of four hundred fifteen years in prison. Speaker 1: Have you thought about what life would be like for you in prison if in fact you get convicted? Speaker 7: I'm human. Of course, sometimes you get those moments. Planting at my little six year old sitting in the at her kindergarten graduation around the circle with her classmates and wondering whether or not I might not be able to see some of that as the years go on. But those are just little moments. I know what the truth is, and I'll be fully vindicated. Speaker 14: Reporting tonight, George Stephanopoulos. Speaker 4: Good evening. For two weeks, the fate of former Illinois governor Rob Lagojevich has been in the hands of six men and six women in a Chicago courthouse. Late today, the divided jury returned its verdict. Guilty on only one count in the corruption trial. Deadlocked on 23 other charges. Speaker 2: Blagojevich was convicted of lying to federal agents, but the jury could not reach a verdict on 23 other corruption charges. Among them, attempting to sell the US Senate seat once held by President Obama. Speaker 13: This is a stunning verdict, a major victory for Blagojevich, a stunning upset for federal prosecutors. Speaker 2: I mean, I Speaker 18: think there was a sense of overconfidence by the government, and the defense did a really good job of getting back to the simple concept, follow the money. And there wasn't a dime the prosecution showed went into Blagojevich's pocket. It was all talk. So, you know, is he a bad governor or a criminal? Speaker 7: We'll be seeing you around. Speaker 4: Good. Okay. How you doing, man? We're doing good. Good. Good. Good. You're great, man. Thanks. None of it's true. Okay. Now we can really say what it matters. You know? See you guys. Speaker 12: We were elated for the hung jury, but it was a very much of a sense of dread because you knew they were gonna come back at you again. They weren't gonna let it rest. They were coming right back. Speaker 17: Going into a second trial, most people believe that we were going into a worse position because we knew that the government would clean up any errors that they made, and then we certainly had a much smaller team. Speaker 10: The government got to know my father and I and the lawyer tricks, if you for lack of a better term, and how we were gonna present evidence. And so the best thing for Rod was to have the second in command, Aaron Goldstein, come in and step to the forefront. Speaker 17: I decided to stay from the first trial to the second trial because I don't leave my clients. I don't believe in abandoning them, and that's just a fundamental belief of mine. Speaker 2: Are you ready for round two? Speaker 7: I waited a long time to get this indication that I deserve and that that I owe to the people of Illinois. Speaker 4: With jury selection underway in Chicago, Chicago, Rod Blagojevich made his first appearance at a second federal corruption trial Thursday. Speaker 9: Blagojevich says he is more optimistic than ever of a future not behind bars. Speaker 17: The second trial changed a significant amount, and and one of the most significant changes was the prosecution really streamlined their case, and they focused primarily just on the recorded conversations. We didn't know necessarily that they were gonna do it that way. They just sort of sprung it on us from at day one. Speaker 8: The government came out swinging. They recorded many hundreds of hours of his phone calls, and they were able to pick and choose because they're the ones trying to prove his guilt or not. Speaker 5: Do they think I would just appoint Valerie Jarrett for nothing? Just to make him happy? Give this mother his senator him for nothing? Him. Speaker 6: The judge was not letting in a whole bunch of other tapes that Rob Inglejevich felt were helpful to him. Speaker 4: From the very beginning, I said play all the tapes. When was it that you've ever heard the guy Speaker 7: who is accused of wrongdoing Speaker 4: saying play all the evidence? Speaker 8: He felt hamstrung by not being able to present some of the calls which sound a lot more political. There are only so many conversations to sell the senate seat, and then there are 50 other times you're talking about a political deal. He thought that that would communicate to the jury that his intent was more the political deal versus something that was criminal. Speaker 6: He was essentially put into a corner where the only way he was going to explain what he did was not wrong and was just politics, was to get on the stand. Here Speaker 4: we go. This Speaker 7: has been a long and very difficult journey for Patty, for our daughters Amy and Annie, and for me, of course. I've waited two and a half years to finally get a chance to get on the witness stand and and and tell the truth, and to, take as long as it takes to, answer every question as honestly and as fully as possible. Speaker 6: He really felt like he could convince anybody in any room that he was who he says he was. He had been doing it for his entire time in politics, so he had that confidence. But the very first question Reid Schar asked him was, you're a convicted liar, aren't you? Which, of course, put Rob Bogojevic immediately on the defensive because he was indeed a convicted liar. Rob Bogojevic did his politician thing as best as he could. But unlike talking to the press, he couldn't go on and on and on and answer whatever question he wanted to. Ryd Char was not going to take any BS. I knew a judge telling him, you have to answer that question. It became a very difficult situation for Puglaiyevich. Speaker 8: You could be likable. You could kind of put yourself out there on television, but that only goes so far when a jury is actually looking at the details of the case. You can't literally talk your way out of everything. And that created moments where jurors were rolling their eyes. One lady, you know, told the tribune afterward that she was drawing pictures of her cats while he was testifying. So it did not have the outcome that he wanted. Speaker 4: Rod Blavojevich was clearly knocked off stride by prosecutors very aggressive questioning. Speaker 2: His testimony yesterday, a little bit shaky. Speaker 4: But his interrogation put a very big dent in the picture that Rod Blavojevic had painted of himself. Jurors in the corruption trial of ousted Illinois governor Rob Blagojevich told a judge they have reached a verdict on 18 of the 20 counts. The judge says the verdicts will be read Monday afternoon. The announcement came after nine days of deliberation. On his way to Speaker 13: court before his fate was known, the quirky ex governor was quoting from his beloved Elvis. Speaker 4: You know, my hands are shaking. My knees are weak. I can't seem to stand at my own two feet. Speaker 17: We got noticed that there was a verdict, and we walked in, and the media comes in, and we hear this verdict, then it just becomes a haze. Speaker 2: After the long, unruly saga, the verdict is in, and it is guilty. 17 charges of corruption, including an effort to barter President Obama's old Senate seat. Speaker 7: There's not much left to say other than, we wanna get home to our little girls and, and and and talk to them and explain things to them and and then try to sort things out. Speaker 12: I think there was one man on the jury. It was all women. And, man, those women, without those tapes to be able to back up what he was saying, they just, you know, didn't buy it, and it was scary. It was a very scary moment. We felt that it was very clear that he was trying to make a trade for the senate seat. Speaker 4: The jurors themselves said, we wanna send a message that political horse trading is one thing. But when one attempts to personally benefit from that horse trading, that's when, one crosses the line. Blagojevich now faces a sentencing hearing in August. He faces a maximum of three hundred years in prison. Speaker 2: Just be ready, Vic, because it can happen any moment. Oh, woah. Vic. Vic. Here we go. Here we go. Here we go. Here we go. Good morning. How are you feeling today? Speaker 4: Are you showing something worse today in court? Speaker 9: Sentencing day today for former Illinois governor, Rob Blagojevich. Speaker 4: The prosecution trying to get fifteen to twenty years for the former governor. The governor needs to go in front of the judge today, plead his case, tell the judge he's Speaker 2: sorry. Any idea what you're gonna say today in court, governor? Anything you want people to know? Speaker 6: The only time he ever expressed even a scintilla of remorse was on that day of the sentencing. He gave a statement to judge Zagle where he apologized. It came across not super sincere, but he said sort of the right things. I think at that point, it was too little too late. Speaker 2: The maximum, fifteen to twenty years. Speaker 4: Governor gets, more than ten years, that would be the largest sentence ever to be thrown at any politician in the state of Illinois. Speaker 2: A ruling that will likely come today. Yeah. You're on speaker. He's coming Speaker 7: down. Okay. I'm not gonna say anything about, anything except something very, very brief. Patty and I, and especially me, this is a time to be strong. This is a time to fight through adversity. This is a time for me to be strong for my children, be strong for Patty, and this is also a time for Patty and me to get home so we can explain to our kids, our babies Amy and Annie, what happened, what all this means, and where we're going from here. So we're gonna keep fighting. Speaker 12: I think that was probably the first and only time in my life I actually thought I was gonna faint. You know, like when your knees, like, buckle. Speaker 4: In his fourteen years in prison for ousted Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich. Speaker 12: A fourteen year sentence, It's just so outrageous. Speaker 1: Did Rabin Gojevich do something wrong? Absolutely. But the fourteen year sentence was a huge miscarriage of justice. The press strategy horribly backfired because they just didn't antagonize this judge, and he decided he was gonna make an example of it. Speaker 8: That same judge had handled a mob case where there was a mob flipper who had testified about killing a number of people and had gotten about eleven or twelve years based on that. Jesse Jackson junior actually worked a scheme to pocket campaign contributions and got two years. Here's Rob Gojovich who didn't pocket anything, and he's in prison till 2024. So is that fair? Speaker 14: I've never been vengeful. I can count on maybe one or two fingers how many times I've actually wanted to see somebody sent off to be incarcerated for a extended period of time. I appreciate the fact that I caught the person and brought their activity to light, but I never took any great pleasure in seeing the hardships that it caused. But then again, Rob Bugewegas brought this upon himself. Speaker 11: I think it's really wrong to diminish the significance involved with campaign finance violations. They're important restrictions that we have for really important public purposes. And when you violate those, you ought to be convicted, and you ought to be sentenced to the full extent of the law. If he didn't know what he was doing, he should have, and he doesn't deserve our sympathy. Speaker 12: For me, my focus immediately became my children and making sure that they were not irreparably harmed by the this whole ordeal. And unfortunately, they were irreparably harmed by this whole ordeal. My children have scars that are so deep and that will last them their whole life. They were going to grow up without a father. Now there there's only one person whose hands our fate rests. Speaker 6: Could there now be a presidential pardon spree? Speaker 1: Today, the president said, I thought that he was treated unfairly. He shouldn't have been put in jail. Speaker 12: It all comes down to the president of The United States. And what's the best way to get a message to him and his his staff and his people is to try to appear on places where they're paying attention to. So here now for an exclusive interview on the story of Patricia Blagojevich. Speaker 2: Here with us exclusively are Blagojevich's wife, Patty, and Chicago Attorney, Len Goodman. One of justice exclusive is Patty Bogojevic, former Illinois governor's wife. Speaker 12: I know that you spoke with your husband today. What did he say when he heard this news? Well, you know, he was, and we are all so grateful that the president is thinking of us in this way. We know that president Trump is a kind man, and he's compassionate. He knows how important it is that my husband gets home to be a father to our daughters, that we can't help but, you know, to be hopeful. Speaker 17: It's ironic. It's strange. It's odd. No one expected Donald Trump to be president and then somehow have the power to to release Rob Bogojevic. But but life is strange, and I see this as a means to an end and the only means to an end. Speaker 12: Sometimes the courts and these prosecutors get it wrong, and it takes a strong leader like president Trump to right those wrongs. Speaker 1: I give Patty a lot of credit. I mean, here is, a loyal wife who's doing anything she can to get her husband and the father of her two daughters home. And so I good for you, Patty. Speaker 12: This year, we'll be married twenty nine years. We've been separated the last seven, but I talk to him every night. He gets three hundred minutes of phone time a month. So that's, you know, ten minutes a day. I like the idea of him coming home and us being back in our house and just picking back up. As long as we're all healthy, anything's possible. But who knows what the future holds? Speaker 8: Rod Bogojevic could actually walk out of prison much sooner than we all think he could. But I don't expect the Bogojevic who comes out of there is gonna be any different than the one who went in. I think it would be a a huge circus deal, and he would definitely make the rounds and go on all the shows and talk about his time in prison. All those things, I think he'd be, you know, he's probably a personality that's perfect for right now in America. Speaker 6: He'll want to restate his case yet again, and he'll wanna try to recreate his persona. So people don't think of him as the disgraced former governor, but just as a guy who got a raw deal from federal prosecutors. Speaker 12: I always kinda joke that if he ever wants to go back into politics again, he'll have to do that with his second wife. No. Speaker 18: Not the first wife. Speaker 12: I think that part of our lives is over, and I think that he understands how you put your family in danger by going into politics. We were at the mercy of forces beyond our control. Speaker 7: You sometimes have to take a deep breath and realize the blessings that you have. And, you know, I've been blessed with a wonderful wife. And Speaker 9: Can you imagine ever being in politics again? Speaker 7: If she's watching this show, the answer would be no. But if she's not, no. I'm not ruling out. I'm not ruling out. Speaker 4: Thank you very much. Thank you. Speaker 20: This is a Fox News alert. Former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich is a free man tonight after eight years in prison. Speaker 2: Moments ago, president Trump just announced that he has commuted the sentence of former Illinois governor, Rod Blagojevich. It's Speaker 4: your first Blago is a free man. Speaker 2: Blagojevich is someone the president has been considering commuting his sentence for months now. Was Patty Blagojevich and her media appeal directly to Trump that was convincing. Speaker 21: I watched his wife on television. I don't know him very well. I've met him a couple of times. He was on for a short while at the apprentice years ago. She looked like a very nice person. Speaker 4: I appreciate your time. Everyone. I'm Speaker 18: curious as to what you think happens next. Speaker 8: When we see him in political office again, Speaker 1: he could certainly do it. You know, he's there coming out of Speaker 14: jail, shaking hands like a politician. I Speaker 7: think this is the ending of the first act of a two act play. Tomorrow begins the second act so that wrongs that have been done can be righted.

@RogerJStoneJr - Roger Stone

๐ŸšจBREAKING: President Donald Trump pardons lawfare victim Governor Rod Blagojevichโ€”clearing the way for a Blagojevich bid for Mayor of Chicago. https://t.co/eCMkFoZBr6

reSee.it AI Summary
A recent poll by the University of Virginia Center for Politics revealed concerning views among Biden supporters. 41% consider Republicans extreme to the point of justifiable violence, while 42% perceive the Republican Party as a threat to the American way of life. These findings shed light on the deep divisions within our society. Source: https://www.westernjournal.com/americas-great-divide-poll-shows-many-voters-consider-alternative-democracy-view-political-violence-acceptable/

@JEM_Books - Jan Evelyn โœ๏ธ๐Ÿ“–๐ŸŒป๐Ÿคบ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ AmericaFirst Trump2024

Well, the propaganda machine has done a good job, hasn't it. Thanks #LegacyMedia #MAGA and #Trump want to save the American way of life - what is Biden supporters' definition of it that they view us as a threat? A poll by the University of Virginia Center for Politics surveyed more than 2,000 registered voters: Of the Biden supporters: 41 %: Republicans as extreme to the point at which violence against them is justifiable. 42 % : view the Republican Party as a threat to the American way of life. article: https://www.westernjournal.com/americas-great-divide-poll-shows-many-voters-consider-alternative-democracy-view-political-violence-acceptable/

America's Great Divide: Poll Shows Many Voters Would Consider โ€˜Alternativeโ€™ to Democracy, View Political Violence as Acceptable Many voters from both parties felt the country was so divided that they would be open to an alternative to a democratic system. westernjournal.com
Saved - August 3, 2023 at 8:20 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Pfizer Australia faced tough questions in Senate hearings. They admitted not understanding how the vaccine causes myocarditis pericarditis. They also failed to provide evidence that the vaccine prevents transmission. Despite gene technology being part of the vaccine process, they refused to acknowledge it as gene therapy. Critics likened their responses to bots. Full hearing available. Health authorities worldwide continue to deceive. Kudos to Senator Rennick for exposing the truth.

@SaiKate108 - Kat A ๐ŸŒธ

A tough day for Pfizer Australia in Senate hearings today. Senator Gerard Rennick on fire as he forced them to admit they didnโ€™t understand the mechanism by which the vaccine causes myocarditis/ pericarditis. So much for trusting the science. They have no idea!!

@SaiKate108 - Kat A ๐ŸŒธ

God forbid anyone mention the word transmission to Pfizer Australia because they refuse to acknowledge it. They were unable to provide Senator Matt Canavan with any evidence to support Albert Bourlaโ€™s claims that the vaccine would prevent transmission. The fundamental basis upon which all mandates were issued has no evidence to support it. Warning this clip is excruciating to watch.

@SaiKate108 - Kat A ๐ŸŒธ

Pfizer Australia refuses to acknowledge that MRNA technology is gene therapy. Despite the fact that Pfizer admits gene technology includes transfection which is part of the vaccine process. They refused to answer whether any potential claims would be indemnified by the Australian Government.

@SaiKate108 - Kat A ๐ŸŒธ

https://www.aph.gov.au/News_and_Events/LiveMediaPlayer?vID=%7BD159C121-C022-482C-B146-DF50BE8E82DC%7D&mibextid=Zxz2cZ Full hearing is worth a watch.

Maintenance Page โ€“ Parliament of Australia Maintenance Page aph.gov.au

@cryptopunkard - Crypto Punkard

@SaiKate108

@burnelll - Laurie Burnell

@SaiKate108 One out of 35 people is rare?

@dystopian_DU - Rebekah Barnett

@SaiKate108 Itโ€™s like watching bots trying to answer a question thatโ€™s not in their FAQ database.

@The_Chris_Bell - Chris Bell

@dystopian_DU @SaiKate108 Or an episode of Fawlty Towers where the first lie gets covered up but 50 more.

@GRUFOR2 - Grufor ๐Ÿ‚ ๐ŸŸ 

@SaiKate108 FUCK PFIZER DOGS < FRAUD FRAUD FRAUD > ITS NOT EVEN A VACCINE!!!!!!! FRAUD FRAUD FRAUD FRAUD FRAUD FRAUD

@finaxe - Mario Frรฉchette

@SaiKate108 ๐Ÿ€๐Ÿ€ โ™จ๏ธโ™จ๏ธ ๐Ÿ‘Œ

@Crash_the_Flash - Crash_the_Flash ๐Ÿญ

@SaiKate108 Health authorities around the world CONTINUE TO LIEโ€ฆ God bless you, Senator! They knew exactly what you were asking.

@CHDC2983 - Charles Charles

@SaiKate108 Pfizer witness would be held in contempt of court for obfuscation, evasion and refusal to answer direct and reasonable questions and would be eviscerated by a top advocate, barrister or trial lawyer regardless of the jurisdiction. Class actions the way forward everywhere.

@ablindeye007 - JohnHagan

@SaiKate108 It is all coming apart. The jab affects the bodies immune system permanently and any illness or infection in the future. Such was and still is the advice by those scientists and medical professionals who were silenced in the first instance.

@angelovalidiya - Lidiya Angelova, microbiologist, PhD

@SaiKate108 Medical doctors don't study molecular biology, they study how to sell drugs. The list I made is enough to cancel any use of so called COVID-19 vaccines and any mRNA or other gene products but instead being stopped these products are promoted. Why? https://genuineprospect.com/2023/07/25/covid-19-vaccines-adverse-reactions-science-evidence/

COVID-19 Vaccines Adverse Reactions Science Evidence Scientific studies show that COVID-19 vaccines cause adverse reactions and death. COVID-19 vaccines were pushed into widespread use without adequate long-term clinical trials. genuineprospect.com

@JaniceW78256134 - JusticeWillPrevail

@angelovalidiya @SaiKate108 Quite correct and in week 1 at med school the pharma reps are there, providing free cheese and wine to the 18 yr old naive students. Gotta get them onside young.

@Shak00r96 - Akbar Shakoor

@SaiKate108 It seems to affect the brainstem too which could be why ppl are dropping dead from their hearts stopping. The brainstem controls things like unconscious breathing and heartrate etc

@GeraldAdamsIWV - Gerald Adams

@SaiKate108 it is getting harder and harder for them to explain how they got richer, and everyone is dropping like flies, so they grasp for logic that really is not real...

@LindaJo46384842 - livinginthematrix

@SaiKate108 So these are the so called experts we were supposed to listen to???

@amrice62 - ann marie rice

@SaiKate108 Slime

@HeartBeatsCare - HeartBeats Care

@SaiKate108 @reSeeIt save thread

@john_bumblebee - Jan B. Hommel

@SaiKate108 They didn't. We still don't.

@Warcrimereport - METATRON LEVENDI๐Ÿญ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฟ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ง

@SaiKate108 He used the word therapy

@ImSooooOverIt - I'm So Over This! ๐Ÿ‘ธ๐Ÿ’˜

@Warcrimereport @SaiKate108 ๐Ÿ‘

@MoodAngelATX - MoodAngel.eth ๐ŸŸช

@SaiKate108 ๐Ÿฆ„ ๐Ÿ’ฉ โ˜‘๏ธ

@LetConst - Paul Vardy

@SaiKate108 One more thing, we know, very roughly, the mechanism of how the vaccine can induce myocarditis. The idea that "Dr. Threw(?)" does not understand this is highly unlikely. I explained, very roughly in another X post:

Paul Vardy on Twitter โ€œ@mark3415 @gillx83 @TexasLindsay_ I can absolutely sympathise with that point of view. The trouble is I've been looking into the mRNA tech since the beginning of all this, and it's just not ready. Knowing what I know, personally I would be afraid of vaccinating that little girl. When you get covid, your immuneโ€ฆโ€ twitter.com

@julesserkin - jules serkin

@SaiKate108 - @MRobertsQLD

@Rikkoroo - XRPfaithful

@SaiKate108 @GetVideoBot

@GetVideoBot - GetVideoBot

@Rikkoroo @SaiKate108 Video? Here we go: https://getvideobot.com/video/1687020049734017024 Ad: Follow @CrazyVideoClips for crazy and viral videos.

@LetConst - Paul Vardy

@SaiKate108 "I was referring to the benefit risk ratio, and Health authorities around the globe continue to recommend the benefits..." oh wow. No money == "no longer recommend", right? Covid is no longer a threat to human kind. We no longer need this vaccine. Just give it up already.

@Vomit911 - Michigan Chemtrails

@SaiKate108 BS...They knew...Murders..!

@HuonHoogie - Huon H

@SaiKate108 Who is the chair??? Also a flog

@JoChristianse13 - Jo Christiansen

@SaiKate108 Tried to hide their Study Documents for 75 years.......

@paulbentleymelb - Paul Bentley ๐Ÿ˜ท

@SaiKate108 @GetVideoBot

@GetVideoBot - GetVideoBot

@paulbentleymelb @SaiKate108 Yes! video is ready: https://getvideobot.com/video/1687020049734017024 Ad: Follow @CrazyVideoClips for crazy and viral videos.

@KobieOne01 - KobieOne aka HEXLOCKER

@SaiKate108 @threadreaderapp unroll

@threadreaderapp - Thread Reader App

@KobieOne01 @SaiKate108 @KobieOne01 Hello, please find the unroll here: https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1687020049734017024.html Talk to you soon. ๐Ÿค–

Thread by @SaiKate108 on Thread Reader App @SaiKate108: A tough day for Pfizer Australia in Senate hearings today. Senator Gerard Rennick on fire as he forced them to admit they didnโ€™t understand the mechanism by which the vaccine causes myocarditis/ pericar...โ€ฆ threadreaderapp.com

@LetConst - Paul Vardy

@SaiKate108 "Pfizer is aware of very rare reports of myocarditis..." Really? Apparently 1 in 35 vaccinated get myocarditis. Not so rare. "...being temporarily associated.." again, myocarditis is not like having a cold. It has long term implications.

Inversionism on Twitter โ€œThis is the highest quality paper ever produced on myocarditis risk post vaccination. https://t.co/yOmDTEyVM0 The debate is unironically over. With this paper, on top of the numerous others and the mountain of anecdotes and examples with the never ending stories of athletesโ€ฆโ€ twitter.com

@ablindeye007 - JohnHagan

@SaiKate108 I want to know how much money he gets paid for introducing a experimental jab into a large percentage of the Aussie population without being (or being) aware of the consequences. Rather like some people wanting to introduce sex education to young children without consequences.

@PJBottoms4 - PJB โ€œWe fight for our freedom, for our childrenโ€

I also suspect they donโ€™t understand the mechanism because they simply donโ€™t have the desire to investigate it preferring to be willfully blind and just obscure the relationship or downplay it. Thereโ€™s a cynical old pharma saying I heard years agoโ€ฆ what do you do when you find your drug causes liver enzyme elevations (substitute any bad adverse event for this). Stop testing (or looking) for itโ€ฆ ๐Ÿ™„๐Ÿ˜”๐Ÿ˜ข

@twocentsoz - Ari

@SaiKate108 Slippery drg dealers

@Blue22Dave - Dave W. Palmer, CD

LET'S NOT MINCE WORDS! WAS THE COVID EVENT A PLANDEMIC? 1. Was it planned by Wealthy Elites? 2. Was the intent of the vaccine to exterminate humans? 3. While yes this probably man-made disease did kill people, was the disease and the vaccine designed for that purpose? CONTINUES ---> 4. Do the people deserve the TRUTH? 5. If this is actually true, Who deserves to be held accountable? 6. Was the Nuremberg Code violated by any government in the forcing or mandatory need to be vaccinated? 7. Will we, the Citizens of the world protect honourable Whistle Blowers? 8. Truthfully, if that's a possibility anymore; Were the Elitists of the WEF, the UN and the WHO involved in trying to ensure all humanity was vaccinated with these vaccines ? If so, WHY? 9. Is there unreported evidence that the vaccine has severe and detrimental side effects, including but not limited to: Sudden Death, Heart Issues, Strokes, Bells-Palsy, Blood Clots and other associated health issues! 10. If there was a Conspiracy by any Person, Persons or Organization, or group that were found responsible; "Would The World Court initiate appropriate action to deal with this matter?" CITIZENS OF THE WORLD, ALL OF US WOULD LIKE TO FIND OUT WHAT THIS COVID EVENT WAS REALLY ABOUT! They made their beds, now it's time to face the music!

@JEM_Books - STELLLLLLLAAAAAAA! โœ๏ธ๐Ÿ“–๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿคบ

@SaiKate108 But they did understand the mechanism and did it anyways. This letโ€™s them off easy.

@gu_ru_bi - Jing Gu

@SaiKate108 Is it fair to say financial fraud uncovered by the royal commission a few years ago is a lot less egregious then these health services professionals

@menschmodus - menschmodus ๐Ÿšœ

@SaiKate108

@lekiend - Dimitri Lekien ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท

@SaiKate108 @ezdubs_bot English French

@ezdubs_bot - EzDubs

@lekiend @SaiKate108 @SaiKate108 @lekiend Done! Here is your French dub: https://ezdubs-vod-api.com/result/1687020049734017024_en_fr ๐Ÿ“บ๐Ÿ”ด ๐™”๐™ค๐™ช๐™๐™ช๐™—๐™š: bit.ly/3WUC0iq ๐Ÿ’ฌ๐ŸŸข ๐™’๐™๐™–๐™ฉ๐™จ๐˜ผ๐™ฅ๐™ฅ: https://bit.ly/3NbkOne ๐Ÿ“ฑ๐Ÿ”ต ๐™๐™š๐™ก๐™š๐™œ๐™ง๐™–๐™ข: https://t.me/ezdubs_bot

EzDubs Business Account api.whatsapp.com
ezdubs_bot You can contact @ezdubs_bot right away. t.me

@Vettecrazed - Karen

@SaiKate108 How disgusting ๐Ÿคข

@kbit2323 - Lizzy

@SaiKate108 Temporary???? Youโ€™re effing kidding me? My son still has it 2 years on. This is an effing joke

@PrimalDaoist - The Primal Daoist's Renaissance Salon

@SaiKate108 Of course they donโ€™t understand what causes myocarditis They think viruses and other germs cause disease!

@Bgkaster - BGKaster (Brenda)

@SaiKate108 Lies.

@tenennessy - Tenennessy

@SaiKate108 @ezdubs_bot english spanish

@ezdubs_bot - EzDubs

@tenennessy @SaiKate108 @SaiKate108 @tenennessy Done! Here is your Spanish dub: https://ezdubs-vod-api.com/result/1687020049734017024_en_es ๐Ÿ“บ๐Ÿ”ด ๐™”๐™ค๐™ช๐™๐™ช๐™—๐™š: bit.ly/3WUC0iq ๐Ÿ’ฌ๐ŸŸข ๐™’๐™๐™–๐™ฉ๐™จ๐˜ผ๐™ฅ๐™ฅ: https://bit.ly/3NbkOne ๐Ÿ“ฑ๐Ÿ”ต ๐™๐™š๐™ก๐™š๐™œ๐™ง๐™–๐™ข: https://t.me/ezdubs_bot

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@Thomas_Binder - Dr. Thomas Binder, MD

@SaiKate108 Autoimmune attack against the foreign antigen expressing cells can induce inflammation of any organ. Myocarditis is diagnosed more often than other inflammation as there's a sensitive/specific marker, inexistent for other organs & sudden death is striking.

Dr. Thomas Binder, MD on Twitter โ€œ#modRNAgenocide Why the whole mRNA "vaccine" platform must be prohibited immediately (The two fundamental flaws of the m[od]RNA "vaccine" platform - even if the LNPs and the foreign antigen are not toxic, and there is no relevant contamination with functional DNA or with whateverโ€ฆโ€ twitter.com

@rn_lilydale - RNLilydale ๐Ÿญ

Well no wonder the risk/benefit ratio is โ€œconvenientlyโ€ in their favour when Australian doctors are STILL refusing to link known & documented side effects with their ๐Ÿ’‰๐Ÿ’‰๐Ÿ’‰I know ppl that have died and are permanently disabled by the ๐Ÿ’‰๐Ÿ’‰and they CANNOT get a doctor to admit or consider that their condition or death is associated with their ๐Ÿ’‰๐Ÿ’‰uptake. Itโ€™s criminal!!

@ImSooooOverIt - I'm So Over This! ๐Ÿ‘ธ๐Ÿ’˜

@SaiKate108 This is just ridiculous. This is science today ๐Ÿคฆ๐Ÿผโ€โ™€๏ธ Inventing climate change and the ridiculous theory invented behind it means all of 'science' has to be equally for spastics. I imagine this is fine for the lefties - probably even a little too wordy for them ๐Ÿคฆ๐Ÿผโ€โ™€๏ธ

@amrice62 - ann marie rice

@SaiKate108 I think there should be an inquiry/database on HOW MANY PFIZER KIDS, PREGNANT WOMEN and adult males took this vaccine.

@CptnSafemoon - Capt Grove

@SaiKate108

@miros2424 - Miroslaw Sowa

@SaiKate108 The same way the cigarette companies did not undestand how cigarettes cause cancer.

@LetConst - Paul Vardy

@SaiKate108 They "retain confidence, strong confidence in the safety profile of the vaccine..." their data handed to the CDC in the USA indicated more people died in the control group than the placebo in 2020; in Dec 2020 the CDC lied and said "there were no deaths from the vaccine". Liars.

@MoonMilk64 - โญ๏ธ๐Ÿ’œ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐ŸŽƒMoonMilk64๐ŸŽƒ๐Ÿ’œ๐ŸŒ™๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฒ

@SaiKate108 It's almost like they're not aware of how science works. You question and test, not worship like a god that poisons the masses

@PrydePoet - Pryde

@SaiKate108 Generally don' get onboard with the Nuremberg 2.0 chant but for this guys and those like him still recommending these shots after the mountain of scientific evidence showing unequivocally the shots are neither safe nor effective ... these folks do indeed deserve prison.

@Blue22Dave - Dave W. Palmer, CD

LET'S NOT MINCE WORDS! WAS THE COVID EVENT A PLANDEMIC? 1. Was it planned by Wealthy Elites? 2. Was the intent of the vaccine to exterminate humans? 3. While yes this probably man-made disease did kill people, was the disease and the vaccine designed for that purpose? CONTINUES ---> 4. Do the people deserve the TRUTH? 5. If this is actually true, Who deserves to be held accountable? 6. Was the Nuremberg Code violated by any government in the forcing or mandatory need to be vaccinated? 7. Will we, the Citizens of the world protect honourable Whistle Blowers? 8. Truthfully, if that's a possibility anymore; Were the Elitists of the WEF, the UN and the WHO involved in trying to ensure all humanity was vaccinated with these vaccines ? If so, WHY? 9. Is there unreported evidence that the vaccine has severe and detrimental side effects, including but not limited to: Sudden Death, Heart Issues, Strokes, Bells-Palsy, Blood Clots and other associated health issues! 10. If there was a Conspiracy by any Person, Persons or Organization, or group that were found responsible; "Would The World Court initiate appropriate action to deal with this matter?" CITIZENS OF THE WORLD, ALL OF US WOULD LIKE TO FIND OUT WHAT THIS COVID EVENT WAS REALLY ABOUT! They made their beds, now it's time to face the music!

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