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The FDA, NIH, and CDC recommended vaccinating pregnant women at any time, leading to a rise in maternal mortality. A recent paper showed a concerning increase in maternal deaths in the US, erasing decades of progress in obstetrics. Pregnant women are dying with no mention of COVID or vaccines in the report. This alarming trend should be a cause for concern for everyone.

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A doctor claims there were "perverse incentives" during the pandemic to administer COVID vaccines. As an outpatient physician, she states she could have made $1,500,000 if she had vaccinated the 6,000 COVID patients she treated. She suggests that both outpatient and inpatient settings had "financial incentives" to adhere to government protocols.

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Pediatricians are often incentivized by HMOs based on vaccination rates, with incentives ranging from $200 to $600 per fully vaccinated patient, provided a certain percentage of their practice is fully vaccinated. Some pediatricians can earn up to a million dollars or more annually through these incentives. HMOs buy and sell vaccines, making vaccines a significant business for them.

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The CDC in the US has found numerous issues related to vaccines. There are high rates of miscarriage, severe prematurity, and birth defects in children. The CDC comments on gynecological side effects, specifically blood clots in the placenta. Babies are being born with clots in their placenta, which may be linked to the vaccine's effects. Placenta analysis often reveals thrombosis, and healthcare professionals have reported finding small clots regularly. Further studies and analysis are needed to fully understand this issue.

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The speakers discuss financial incentives for abortion services and procedures. They mention removing body parts intact for organ harvesting. The conversation includes details on dismembering fetuses and ensuring intact organs for research purposes. The speakers also discuss the process of extracting body parts during abortions.

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Companies pay large sums for women's placentas, used in pharmaceuticals, beauty products, and medical procedures. Placentas from c-sections are more valuable due to less contamination, leading to higher prices. This may incentivize more c-sections, raising concerns about coercion.

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Scientists have isolated microplastics in the placenta for the first time. This is actually a huge deal as if they're in the placenta then that means they're also in the fetus and babies being developed with microplastics inside them could actually have negative impacts on their health. That includes things like growth restriction, hormonal abnormalities or even a weakened immune system. A recent study by Ragusa and colleagues found that microplastics were identified in ten out of ten placentas from different women. How do these microplastics even get into the woman in the first place so that they can lodge themselves in the placenta? The main ways are actually either by breathing them in or even absorbing them from the gut as these things are now making their way into our food because of environmental contamination. This plastic crisis has got to stop.

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I asked SHAT GBT about pharmaceutical profits from children transitioning. Estimates range from $195 million to $885 million annually. This suggests a financial motive for big pharma to promote early transitions in children.

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Israel has the largest skin bank in the world, much of it harvested from prisoners and victims. This shows how everything is commodified in our world.

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Blood donation is often seen as a noble act, but the reality is different. Plasma, the main component of blood, is more expensive than oil. The majority of donated blood is sold to pharmaceutical companies, a fact that the Red Cross doesn't advertise. These companies are interested in plasma because it contains valuable proteins used to make expensive drugs. The plasma industry is dominated by a few companies, such as Baxter, CSL bearing, Gyrfolds, and Octapharma. They collect, freeze, and mix thousands of liters of human plasma to create drugs. This industry is worth $17 billion and continues to grow.

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Doron from Israel plans to take embryos from a US clinic to India. A woman discusses her experience with egg donation, mentioning the control over her reproductive process. After having her baby, she notes the high costs of surrogacy, which can range from $10,000 to $60,000. The commercialization of surrogacy leads to competition among clinics, often resulting in multiple embryos being implanted to ensure success. This raises ethical concerns, as some fetuses may not go home with the intended parents. An agent claims she can provide a baby quickly, revealing that extra newborns are available for purchase, highlighting the dark side of commodified reproduction. This unregulated industry, projected to grow globally, raises fears of human trafficking and exploitation in the future.

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A published article claims that 50% of most pediatricians' revenue comes from vaccines. Insurance companies like Blue Cross allegedly pay pediatricians bonuses if 95% of their clients are fully vaccinated, potentially worth tens of thousands of dollars. This bonus structure is claimed to incentivize pediatricians to prioritize vaccination rates over individual patient needs. As a result, pediatricians may dismiss patients who want to alter the standard vaccine schedule because they risk losing the bonus. These incentives are described as preventing doctors from practicing medicine and caring for clients due to a focus on the bottom line.

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A woman claims to have reversed her age by 13 years using exosomes. These exosomes, 180 billion in total, are derived from ethically sourced C-section births in the USA, specifically from umbilical cords. The speaker expresses doubt that mothers are informed that their baby's cord blood and placenta are sold for profit to medical and skincare industries. She explains that during labor, a baby's blood is squeezed into the placenta, and after birth, the placenta pumps the blood back to the baby, emphasizing the importance of delayed cord clamping to ensure the baby receives these nutrients. She argues the medical system should operate on informed consent, and questions whether mothers are aware or consent to hospitals profiting from their baby's blood.

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Melanin, the pigment that gives color to our skin, is said to be worth more than gold by the pound. This raises questions about why Planned Parenthood clinics are predominantly located in black communities. The speaker suggests that organs containing melanin are more valuable than those of non-melanated individuals. They state that this is not a conspiracy, but rather a fact. Additionally, the speaker mentions that black babies in New York are born larger and older, which could potentially make the abortion industry profitable.

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Big money is being made from the sale of fetal body parts, which even disturbs pro-choice advocates. The medical director for the national office discusses the demand for specific body parts, such as livers and lower extremities, and the pricing range for these specimens. Techniques are discussed to ensure intact organs are obtained, and the importance of communication between the person performing the procedures and the end goal is emphasized. The possibility of partnering with EPFA to streamline the process is mentioned, although it is currently deemed too sensitive. The conversation concludes with gratitude for the helpfulness of a certain individual in fetal tissue collection.

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COVID-19 has led to an increase in premature births, preeclampsia, low amniotic fluid, and postpartum hemorrhages. Preeclampsia is related to the health of the placenta, but its exact cause is unknown. The rise in preeclampsia and low amniotic fluid has resulted in more induced premature deliveries. Postpartum hemorrhages have also increased, with some women requiring immediate hysterectomies due to uncontrollable bleeding. Even patients without risk factors have experienced hemorrhages after elective C-sections. Traditional methods to stop bleeding have been less effective, and the bleeding seems to occur lower down in the uterus. These complications are concerning and require further investigation.

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We could pay up to $1500 for a liver due to high demand. Financial incentives would make people happy to get approval. The process involves discussing volume, gestational age, and intact specimens. The New York City site handles high volume cases, including first and second trimester procedures. Providers encourage intact specimens for higher payments. The financial incentive helps keep everyone happy. Staff availability depends on volume, and arrangements can be made for pick-up or storage. Communication will be key to ensure a smooth process.

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The transcript centers on a documentary-like investigation into child trafficking, including the sale of babies for organs and for prostitution, and the operational mechanics of trafficking rings in Europe. - The conversation opens with a debate about the worst fate for a child, with pedophilia deemed the “worst option,” but there is a tension about judging a parent who might sell their child. The speakers acknowledge they want to remove a problem and question the significance of the child’s fate. - A narrator explains encountering a girl willing to sell her child to a brothel or as an organ donor, and aims to save her while documenting the process. The girl was relocated from a criminal environment to a different town, but remained controlled by an agent who wanted to sell her child. The sale is described as foiled by the COVID-19 pandemic and border restrictions. - When the pregnancy is discovered, the pregnant young woman seeks a solution and believes she cannot keep the child, framing it as the best possible decision under the circumstances. The trafficking network involves a well-known criminal underworld contact who is told there is a child for sale and who can help. - The interview reveals that in Germany, small children are sometimes held with a family until age three or four and then sent to a brothel. The sale of a newborn can be arranged so the mother signs the child trafficker in as the father, who then takes the baby abroad, making it hard for authorities to trace the child as “officially somewhere in Europe with its father.” - Emotional attachment to the baby is discussed; one participant reports no emotional attachment, focusing on practicality. The fear of life being over with a child is framed as slavery, constant care, and sleepless nights, highlighting the practical burdens rather than affection. - On profitability, the mother emphasizes selling a child for organs yields high returns, whereas selling for a brothel is considered in terms of possible cash, with initial offers around 50,000 to 150,000, sometimes 80,000 euros, though later deemed possibly a scam using Polish zloty. - The liver is cited as a high-demand organ, valued around 70,000 euros, with the heart valued similarly, and other organs like the retina also in demand. The ads and market dynamics are discussed, including portals like “Sperm donors, let's make babies,” where ads from women wanting to give away or sell their children appear; a mother posts an ad for money, receiving responses from families and recognizing banners that target young girls. - The interview reveals a chilling willingness to commodify the child; the mother states she cares about her own child above the others and expresses disbelief in divine punishment for such acts. She gives the baby the name Marcelina, while another participant has not named the unborn child. - The trafficking network’s operation is described in detail: a broker coordinates with a German or Dutch ring, with multiple brothels and a system of drugs to control child victims. A child is described as moving through stages—from adoption into a family, to a brothel around age four, to a larger network, with frequent sexual abuse but regulated intervals of activity to avoid overdose. The children are kept largely indoors within brothels, sometimes allowed limited outdoor access under supervision, and often suffer severe social and psychological consequences. - A separate account details the recruitment and identification of pregnant victims, the length of stay in brothels, and the eventual fate of children who do not adapt to mainstream life, highlighting how the organized rings operate with surgical precision and a global scope.

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A whistleblower from Stem Express revealed that a liver from a 5-month-old aborted baby was sold for $17,000 to a taxpayer-funded lab. Planned Parenthood claims that 75% of abortions are due to financial issues, suggesting that this amount could have covered someone's rent for a year. This situation highlights a troubling reality where the financial transactions surrounding abortion may prioritize profit over the value of life.

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Doctors receive year-end bonuses from insurance companies for fully vaccinated patients, sometimes $250-$400 per patient. For a pediatrician with a thousand patients, this could mean a bonus of $250,000 to $500,000. For an office with 10 pediatricians, bonuses could reach millions of dollars. It is wondered if insurance companies are incentivized by the pharmaceutical industry to promote vaccines and bonus doctors for administering them.

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Doctors have incentives related to vaccines, with one article claiming that 50% of pediatricians' revenue comes from them. Insurance companies like Blue Cross allegedly pay bonuses to pediatricians who maintain high vaccination rates among their clients, potentially tens of thousands of dollars. This bonus structure is claimed to be the reason pediatricians might dismiss patients who want alternative vaccine schedules. These incentives are characterized as perverse, hindering doctors from prioritizing patient care over financial gain. It is claimed that twenty years ago, 20% of doctors worked for corporations, but now 80% do, with corporations prioritizing revenue over patient well-being.

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A woman claims to have reversed her age by 13 years using exosomes. These exosomes, 180 billion in number, are derived from ethically sourced C-section births in the USA, specifically from umbilical cords. The speaker expresses doubt that mothers are informed that their baby's cord blood and placenta are sold for profit to medical and skincare industries. She explains that during labor, up to 30% of a baby's blood can be pushed back into the placenta, and after birth, the placenta pumps that blood back to the baby. Blood left in the cord contains life-sustaining nutrients for the baby. She argues that the medical system should operate on informed consent, meaning mothers should be told what will be done with their baby's blood and cells and give their consent. She questions whether mothers are aware that hospitals profit from their baby's blood.

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In the past, obstetrics has seen a series of interventions with harmful consequences. X-rays were used in the 1930s to measure pelvises, but they were later found to cause cancer in babies. In the 1950s and 1960s, a drug called Thalidomide resulted in babies being born without limbs. In the 1990s, the use of Cytotek to induce labor in women with previous caesareans led to numerous ruptured uteruses and deaths of babies. Unfortunately, there hasn't been enough careful study of the long-term effects of these interventions in obstetric practice. To ensure a more humanized birth experience, it may be best to explore alternative options.

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Big money is being made from the sale of fetal body parts. Even pro-choice advocates are disturbed. People want liver and lower extremities. The price is $30 to $100 per specimen. Providers try to change the presentation so it's not vertex. If starting from a breech presentation, dilation happens as the case goes out. There are steps to change the COVID presentation. If enough dilation is maintained, the person doing the procedures understands what is needed. Knowing what is needed makes a huge difference. One person had 8 cases and knew which were more likely to yield what was needed, making decisions accordingly. Conversations are happening behind closed doors with affiliates.

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Pharmaceutical companies are profiting immensely from vaccines and the subsequent treatments for vaccine-related injuries. They make $60 billion annually from vaccine sales and a staggering $500 billion from remedies for vaccine-induced conditions. This includes medications for diabetes, ADHD, asthma, seizures, and more. It's a lucrative business model: create illness and then sell lifelong treatments.
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