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The speakers discuss perceived effects of boosters on people, focusing on observable changes in the eyes. The first speaker contends that boosters “have really changed a lot of people,” and claims that the difference is evident in their eyes. They describe a stark contrast between people who have not received boosters, whose eyes they say are “bright as can be,” and people who have received boosters, whose eyes “look different” and appear “off” when looked at directly. The speaker adds that boosters would “turn off the brain.” They reference a claim from 2016 about an injection that could “turn off your spiritual sense,” said to have been tested in The Middle East, suggesting such testing relates to the regional invasions there, and implying that the aim was to suppress spiritual sensitivity in booster recipients. The second speaker identifies the project by name, naming it FunVax, described as “the vaccine for religious fundamentalism.” The stated effect of FunVax is to convert a fanatic into a normal person, with the implication that this would produce major effects in The Middle East. The dialogue links the booster concept to the project, portraying FunVax as a means to reduce religious fundamentalism by altering cognitive or spiritual tendencies, and frames the Middle East as the region where such a transformation could have significant impact.

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This video suggests that the increase in psychosis and schizophrenia in the United States and Europe may be linked to the rise of cats. The speaker believes that these mental disorders are caused by infectious agents, specifically toxoplasma gondii carried by cats. They express confidence in the overwhelming evidence supporting the idea that schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are biological diseases.

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In this video, the speaker discusses the absence of autism in Vietnam in the past. They mention that when Vietnam joined the World Health Organization and the International Monetary Fund, Bill Gates and the Gates Foundation introduced a vaccination program. As a result, Vietnam now has a high vaccination rate of over 300%.

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In this video, the speaker talks about being ridiculed for a statement made in their book, "Behold a Pale Horse." They mentioned that the New World Order considers violent tendencies as genetic and plans to collect genealogies of people with these tendencies to eliminate them in the future. The speaker believes that doctors will be mandated to collect tissue samples for a genetic database, supposedly to identify predispositions to contagious diseases. They warn that this is happening now and urge the audience to take it seriously. The speaker emphasizes their extensive knowledge of these matters and states that time is running out.

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The transcript describes a Yale University study conducted at the CI supercenter nine months before a COVID-19 vaccine was available. In July 2020, four months before any vaccine was announced and nine months before public rollout, Yale tested multiple messaging strategies to influence willingness to vaccinate once a vaccine existed. The study involved about 4,000 participants and used random assignment to different messages, including a control condition about bird feeding. The messages tested were: - Baseline control: a passage on the cost and benefits of bird feeding. - Vaccine safety baseline: three-fifths of the sample received a message about the effectiveness and safety of vaccines, using the words “Safe and effective, safe and effective, safe and effective.” - Personal freedom: one fifteenth of the sample received a message about how COVID-19 is limiting personal freedom and how vaccination would help preserve it. - Economic freedom: one fifteenth received a message about how COVID-19 is limiting economic freedom and how vaccination would help preserve it. - Self-interest: one fifteenth received a message that vaccination is the best way to prevent illness for oneself, stressing personal health. - Community interest: one fifteenth emphasized the dangers to loved ones and encouraged vaccination to protect them. - Economic benefit: one fifteenth described how COVID-19 is wreaking havoc on the economy and that vaccination would strengthen the economy. - Guilt: one fifteenth were shown a message about the danger COVID-19 presents to health of family and community, asking them to imagine the guilt if they don’t get vaccinated and spread the disease. - Embarrassment: a variation asking participants to imagine the embarrassment if they don’t get vaccinated and spread the disease. - Anger: a message aiming to stir anger about not getting vaccinated. - Trust in science: a message promoting vaccination as backed by science, even though no vaccine existed yet. - Brave/hero framing: one fifteenth described frontline workers as brave and implied those who choose not to vaccinate are not. The transcript notes this as part of testing how different emotional or value-based framings (interventions) might influence vaccine uptake, with strong negative language and profanity directed at the concept and institutions involved. It characterizes the effort as exploring which emotions—guilt, embarrassment, anger, trust in science, bravery—could best persuade compliance, even before a vaccine existed. The speaker also comments that this reflects a nexus between universities, behavioral modification, and psychological operations, and includes inflammatory asides about Yale’s connections and motives.

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Individuals with high levels of the BMAT 2 gene are religious fanatics, while those with low levels are not. Vaccinating against this gene could potentially eliminate extremist behavior. Brain scans show religious fanatics have increased activity in the theory of mind region, while non-religious individuals show disgust. The proposed project, Fund Vax, aims to develop a vaccine to combat religious fundamentalism using respiratory viruses like flu. The data supports the project's potential success.

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The data presented supports the proposed concept. The idea is not to perform CT scans or fMRIs on individuals in remote areas of Afghanistan. The plan involves immunizing against the VMAT2 gene, which can transform a fanatic into a normal person. This is expected to have significant effects in the Middle East. The current tests have used flu and rhinoviruses, which are believed to be a satisfactory method to expose a large portion of the population. The success of this approach is highly anticipated.

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YouTube censorship and the use of genetic vaccines are discussed in this video. The speaker, a researcher in biological and medical sciences, claims that genetic vaccines can lead to the emergence of recombinant viruses. They explain that recombinant viruses are a mix of genetic material from two parental viruses, but co-infection with two viruses is unlikely. The speaker also argues that mass vaccination with genetic vaccines can contribute to the selection of variant viruses. They personally choose not to get vaccinated against COVID-19, believing it is the responsibility of non-vulnerable individuals to refrain from vaccination. They suggest that convincing older individuals to get vaccinated is difficult due to a lack of persuasive arguments.

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I presented to the CIA back in 2005 about religious fundamentalists and a potential way to address their behavior. Our hypothesis is that fanatical people have an overexpression of the VMAT2 gene. We believe that by vaccinating against this gene, we could eliminate their behavior. The research showed a comparison between individuals with strong religious beliefs and those without, noting the VMAT2 gene expression difference.

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In this video, the speakers discuss the relationship between religious fanaticism and the expression of the VMAT2 gene. They present evidence that individuals who are religious fanatics have high levels of VMAT2 gene expression, while those who are not particularly religious have lower levels. The speakers suggest that by vaccinating fanatical individuals against this gene, it may eliminate their extreme behavior. They also show brain scans of two individuals with different levels of VMAT2 expression to support their hypothesis. Overall, the video explores the connection between religious fanaticism and gene expression.

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An old 1995 video by theology professor Pierre Gilbert warned of 'mandatory vaccines' that 'will make possible to control people.' He claimed vaccines would have 'liquid crystals' 'hosted in the brain cells,' becoming 'micro receivers of electromagnetic fields' that transmit 'waves of very low frequencies' to make people 'unable to think,' 'you'll be turned into a zombie.' 'This has been done.' 'Think of Rwanda.' The transcript cites: 'The Guardian published genetically engineered magnetoprotein remotely controls brain and behavior' and shows zebrafish larvae 'manipulated with magnetic fields.' It also notes 'hydrogel biosensors are ready to be injected into people's bodies, funded by DARPA and Bill Gates.' It mentions 'magnetic nanoparticles,' 'Livestock needs to be branded and tracked,' and that 'the enslavement of humanity is voluntary, which is why the so called vaccines are voluntary,' with 'millions of people eagerly lining up to be state property.'

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In this video, the speaker discusses a hypothesis about religious fanatics and the VMAT2 gene. They suggest that by vaccinating individuals with high levels of this gene, it could potentially eliminate fanatical behavior. The speaker presents brain scan data showing that religious fanatics have increased activity in the theory of mind region, while non-religious individuals show activity in the disgust region when reading religious texts. They propose using respiratory viruses to distribute the vaccine widely. The project is called FundVax, and the speaker believes it has great promise.

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An individual's brain activity was observed when reading religious texts. In one person, the right middle frontal gyrus associated with theory of mind lit up, while in another person, the anterior insula associated with disgust lit up. The VMAT two gene could potentially immunize against this brain activity and turn a fanatic into a normal person, which could have significant effects in the Middle East. The plan is to use respiratory viruses like flu to expose the majority of the population, as most people have already been exposed to these viruses. The project is called FUNVAX, which stands for the vaccine for religious fundamentalism.

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Rudolf Steiner predicted the elimination of conscience through vaccines. A leaked video discusses suppressing the "god gene" with vaccines to control religious behavior. The video's creator claims it's a hoax, but the technology exists. Deleting the VMAT 2 gene leads to health issues and diseases like schizophrenia and Parkinson's. Pharma and the government may be using this to reduce humanity. VMAT 2 deletion causes fear, psychiatric disorders, cancer, and accelerated aging. Though cutting off connection to God is unlikely, the consequences are severe.

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On the left, we have religious fundamentalists with high expression of the VMAT2 gene, while on the right, we have non-religious individuals with reduced expression of the gene. The hypothesis is that by vaccinating the fanatics against this gene, we can eliminate their extreme behavior. Brain scans show that when religious texts are read, the fanatics' brain lights up in the area associated with theory of mind, while the non-religious individuals' brain lights up in the area associated with disgust. This supports the idea that the VMAT2 gene plays a role in religious fanaticism.

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- The discussion opens with a critique of how public health authorities in the United States and much of the media discouraged experimentation with COVID-19 treatments, instead pushing vaccination and portraying other approaches as dangerous. The hosts ask why treatments were sidelined and treated as heretical to question. - Speaker 1 explains that the core idea was to stamp out “vaccine hesitation,” which he frames not as a purely scientific issue but as a form of heresy. He notes a broad literature on vaccine hesitancy and contrasts it with the perception of the vaccine as a liberating savior. He points to a Vatican €20 silver coin (2022) commemorating the COVID-19 vaccine, described by Vatican catalogs as “a boy prepares to receive the Eucharist,” which the speakers interpret as an overlay of religious iconography with vaccination imagery. They also reference Diego Rivera’s mural in Detroit, interpreted as depicting the vaccine as a Eucharist, and a South African church banner reading “even the blood of Christ cannot protect you, get vaccinated,” highlighting what they see as provocative uses of religious symbolism to promote vaccination. - They claim that the Biden administration’s COVID Vaccine Corps distributed billions of dollars to major sports leagues (NFL, MLB) and that many mainline churches reportedly received money to push vaccination, with many clergy not opposing the push. The implication is that monetary incentives influenced public figures and organizations to advocate for vaccines, contributing to a climate in which questioning orthodoxy was difficult. - The speakers discuss the social dynamics around vaccine “heresy,” using Aaron Rodgers’ experience with isolation and shaming in the NFL and Novak Djokovic’s experiences in Australia to illustrate how prominent individuals who questioned or fell outside the orthodoxy faced punitive pressure. They compare this to a Reformation-era conflict over doctrinal correctness and describe a psychology of stigmatizing dissent as a tool to enforce conformity. - They argue the imperative driving institutions was the belief that the vaccine was the central, non-negotiable public-health objective, seemingly above other medical considerations. The central question they raise is why vaccines became the sole priority, seemingly overriding a broader, more nuanced evaluation of medical options and individual risk. - The conversation shifts to epistemology and the nature of science. Speaker 1 suggests medicine often relies on orthodoxies and presuppositions, rather than purely empirical processes. He recounts a Kantian view that interpretation depends on preexisting categories, and he uses this to argue that medical decision-making can be constrained by established doctrines, which may obscure questions about optimization and safety. - They recount the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act and discuss Sara Sotomayor’s dissent, which argued that liability exposure is a key incentive for safety and improvement in vaccine development. They argue that the current system creates minimal liability for manufacturers, reducing the incentive to optimize safety, and they use this to question how the system encourages continuous safety improvements. - The hosts recount the early-treatment movement led by Peter McCullough and others, including a Senate hearing organized by Ron Johnson in November 2020 to discuss early-treatment options with FDA-approved drugs like hydroxychloroquine. They criticize what they describe as aggressive pushback against such approaches, noting that McCullough faced professional sanctions and lawsuits despite presenting peer-reviewed literature. - They return to the concept of orthodoxy and dogma, arguing that the medical establishment often suppresses dissent, citing YouTube removing a McCullough interview and the broader pattern of silencing challenge to the vaccine narrative. They stress that the social and institutional systems prize conformity and punish those who deviate, creating a climate of distrust toward official health bodies. - The discussion broadens into metaphysical and philosophical territory, with references to the Grand Inquisitor from Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. They propose that elites—whether religious, political, or scientific—tend to prefer “taking care” of people through control rather than preserving individual responsibility and free will. The Grand Inquisitor tale is used to illustrate a recurring human temptation: to replace personal liberty with a protected, paternalistic order. - They discuss messenger RNA (mRNA) technology as a central manifestation of Promethean or Luciferian intellect—humans attempting to “read and write in the language of God.” They describe the scientific arc from transcription and translation to mRNA vaccines, noting Francis Collins’s The Language of God and the idea of humans “coding life.” They caution that mRNA vaccines involve injecting genetic material and point to the symbolic and ritual power of vaccination as a form of modern sacrament. - The speakers emphasize that the mRNA approach represents both a profound scientific achievement and a source of deep concern. They discuss fertility signals and potential adverse effects, including myocarditis in young people, and cite the July 2021 NEJM case study as highlighting safety concerns for myocarditis in adolescent males. They reference the FDA deliberative-committee discussions, noting that some influential voices publicly questioned the risk-benefit calculus for young people, yet faced pressure or dismissal within the orthodox framework. - They describe post-hoc investigations and testimonies suggesting that adverse events (like myocarditis) might have been downplayed or obscured, and they assert that public trust in health institutions has eroded as a result. They mention ongoing debates about whether vaccine-induced changes might affect future generations, referencing studies about transcripts of mRNA in cancer cells and liver cells, and they stress the need for independent scrutiny by scientists not “entranced” by the vaccine program. - The dialogue returns to the broader human condition: a tension between curiosity and restraint, knowledge and humility. They return to Dostoevsky’s moral questions about free will, responsibility, and the limits of human knowledge, concluding that scientific hubris can lead to dangerous consequences when it overrides open inquiry and accountability. - In closing, while the guests reflect on past missteps and the need for integrity in medicine, they underscore the ongoing questions about how evidence is interpreted, how dissent is treated, and how society balances scientific progress with humility, transparency, and respect for individual judgment.

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This video discusses the belief that schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are biological diseases caused by infectious agents. The speaker specifically focuses on toxoplasma gondii, a parasite carried by cats, and its potential link to the increase in psychosis and schizophrenia cases in the United States and Europe. They emphasize that the evidence strongly supports the idea that these mental disorders have a biological basis.

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The speaker discusses a hypothesis that religious fanatics have an overexpression of the BMAT2 gene, which can be eliminated through vaccination. They present brain scan data showing different brain activity in religious and non-religious individuals when reading religious texts. The proposed project, called FUNVACS, aims to develop a vaccine for religious fundamentalism. The speaker suggests using respiratory viruses like the flu to disperse the vaccine. The video then transitions to a different speaker who makes various claims about Bill Gates, vaccines, and conspiracy theories involving child pedophilia. They urge viewers to wake up and unite against big pharma, big tech, big censorship, and big government.

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In this video, the speaker talks about embedding a virus in the flu to create panic and get people to line up for their creation. They believe that what they are doing is bigger than death and that everything they do is a cure for the current situation. They have realized that they don't need to kill to achieve their goal, which is to stop human reproduction for three generations. They plan to sterilize people, and in about 45 years, they expect to see a decline in birth rates as teenagers delay childbearing. Their intention is to save humanity from itself.

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Speaker 0: They were trying to turn off the spiritual sense from the people with boosters. So think about that. What’s the name of this proposal? Speaker 1: The name of this project is FunVax, which is the vaccine for religious fundamentalism. And that would have the effect that you see here, which is it's essentially to turn a fanatic into a normal person. We think that will have major effects in the middle

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The speaker discusses a theory that COVID-19 vaccines are being administered through nasal swab tests, targeting the brain. They explain how the swabs can potentially deposit nanoparticles into the brain through the cribriform plate, leading to vaccination and implantation. The speaker expresses disbelief and labels the concept as disturbing and only conceivable by psychopaths.

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Various organs and tissues were harvested from fetuses, including the pituitary gland, lung, skin, kidney, spleen, heart, and possibly the tongue. The speaker acknowledges objections to the use of aborted fetal tissue in vaccines, but cites a document from the Catholic Church stating that individuals should still receive vaccines regardless. When asked about valid religious objections to vaccines, the speaker denies their existence and expresses disdain for religious beliefs, claiming that vaccination is always under attack by religious zealots. The speaker confirms being an atheist and acknowledges that some religious beliefs are inherently unprovable.

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In this video, the speakers discuss the concept of self-spreading vaccines, which are genetically engineered to move through populations like communicable diseases. They highlight the potential risks and ethical concerns associated with this technology. The speakers also mention the government's involvement in funding and promoting these vaccines. They emphasize the importance of informed consent and express concerns about the potential consequences of releasing self-spreading vaccines on a global scale. The discussion raises questions about the safety and long-term effects of this technology. The speakers argue that the widespread use of self-spreading vaccines could infringe upon individual rights and lead to the suppression of dissenting voices.

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There are still people who believe in things like a flat Earth and reject vaccinations. The speaker suggests that there may be a gene for superstition, hearsay, and magical thinking, which may have been beneficial in the past. However, there is no gene for science, which is based on reproducible and testable evidence. The speaker believes that even in 1000 years, there will still be flat earthers and vaccine skeptics. Dealing with these beliefs is a constant struggle because they may be part of our genetic makeup.

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In this video, two brain scans are shown. The top scan is of a religious fanatic with high levels of the EMAT2 gene, while the bottom scan is of a non-religious individual with low levels of the gene. When both individuals read a religious text, different parts of their brains light up. The fanatic's brain shows activity in the right middle frontal gyrus, associated with theory of mind, while the non-religious individual's brain shows activity in the anterior insula, associated with disgust or displeasure. The speaker discusses a proposed project called "fun vax," which aims to immunize against the VMAT2 gene and potentially have major effects in the Middle East. The project has submitted a proposal.
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