reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
- Speaker 0 announces a fact check giveaway for a big bag of pearl and invites viewers to comment “pearl” for a chance to win.
- The fact checkers told me that you can't rub off moles and they're not the build up of toxins.
- Cheryl says, “I've been using your pearl powder and coconut oil and they are slowly popping off.”
- A claim about peanut oil not being in the vaccines is raised, with a prompt: “Do you read that headline from 1964?”
- The speaker asks, “Do you know what caused the peanut allergies?”
- Two days ago, the speaker received medical misinformation on YouTube about prostate solutions, noting, “Look at how dangerous these solutions are.”
- Other items mentioned include apricots, bee pollen, shibbolshot, reishi, and not microwaving your kahonas and keeping your phone out of your pocket.
- The speaker references a video about not removing wisdom teeth because they affect your heart, calling it “unsupported information,” then instructs to Google meridian lines for wisdom teeth and to see “Heart.”
- They state that viruses are not real: “There are no viruses.”
- The statement “What you do to your body determines how you will get ill” is made, followed by the claim that “Those masks and those boosters weren't doing much of anything other than poisoning people,” and, “If it was real, we would be gone a long time ago.”
- The message ends with good luck on the fact check giveaway, noting that it “takes a simple Google search to find the truth.”
- Books suggested to look into include: The Contagion Myth, The Invisible Rainbow, Can You Catch a Cold? No, you can’t, and Murder by Injection; followed by “Keyword murder, farewell to virology, light as medicine,” and then The Peanut Allergy Epidemic by Heather Frazer as another recommended read.