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- The speaker discusses the book Death Object by Akio, claiming that nukes are fake and that all televised nuclear explosions are manufactured by Holly Weird. - They assert that nukes were not real because buildings remained standing and trees stayed intact during purported nuclear detonations. The speaker emphasizes that Japan was firebombed with napalm and mustard gas, not nuked. - The claim is made that nukes exist as a pretext to invade countries and impose a banking system, referencing “weapons of mass destruction” and a supposed invasion sequence tied to 9/11 and the idea of invading seven countries to bring a banking system into those nations. - The speaker explains a method for how the ruse would be carried out: staging TNT demonstrations to scare people into believing in nukes. They remark that photos of atoms are unavailable on Google, questioning how one could “split the atom” without a photo, and suggest that people are shown drawings of mushroom clouds to fear nukes. - The speaker asserts that Hollywood uses fear-inducing imagery to coerce compliance, describing the situation as a rabbit hole and labeling the world as filled with make-believe. - Throughout, the speaker emphasizes that there were no real nuclear weapons in the scenarios described and that the narrative around nukes is a constructed illusion used to justify invasions and control. - The overall message centers on distrust of official narratives about nuclear weapons, the use of firebombing versus nuclear detonation in historical events, and a conspiratorial view that cinema and media manufacture fear to influence public behavior and policy. - The speaker repeatedly references the book Death Object and the author Akio as a source for these assertions, encouraging readers to examine these ideas as part of a broader skepticism toward conventional explanations of nuclear weapons and geopolitical actions.

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Spike proteins are fake and were made up by John D. Rockefeller, just like germ theory and shedding. Anyone who advocates certain things is under the same system to repeat the same things. If they don't tell you viruses are fake and contagion is a myth, you're being led down the same path. Everyone in the MAHA movement believes in virus theory. Viruses, spike proteins, bio labs, and viruses jumping out of labs are all fake nonsense promoted to keep people in fear. The books "A Farewell to Virology," "Can You Catch a Cold?", and "The Contagion Myth" debunk all of that, but are not shown to people to keep them believing in nonsense. People need to be aware of this.

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In the 1940s, Rockefeller doctors were allegedly paid by tobacco companies to promote cigarettes. These companies then invested in nicotine gum, patches, inhalers, and CBD products. Pharmaceutical companies like Johnson & Johnson and GSK, purportedly run by the Rockefellers, are producing these nicotine products. The speaker claims nicotine gums contain polysorbate 80, a chemical also found in vaccines that breaks down the blood-brain barrier. They suggest this is not coincidental. The speaker distrusts doctors and believes the "virus thing" is a lie, asserting that radio wave sickness affected people in 2020 due to technology. They claim medical books attribute this to viruses controlled by the Rockefellers and Rothschilds. The speaker recommends books that discuss pandemics resulting from technology and injections, and another that debunks germs and viruses, tracing the Rockefeller narrative back to the Flexner Report of 1913.

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The speaker asserts that microwave sickness, not pathogens or contaminated water, was the root cause of the pandemic, specifically naming 5G rollout as the culprit. According to the speaker, people received upgrades to their phones and had a cell tower installed in front of their homes, and this, he claims, equated to the pandemic itself. He references “zapping of America” to describe neurological and systemic symptoms associated with microwave exposure, listing heaviness in the head, fatigue, irritability, anxiety, insomnia, partial memory loss, cardiovascular issues, slow heartbeat, reduced blood pressure, and heart pains. He links these symptoms to microwave sickness and cites that the Soviets observed similar dangers with wireless technology in the 1950s, while American doctors dismissed those concerns, calling them Soviet or not credible. This dismissal, he contends, allowed wireless frequencies to be intensified to extreme levels. The speaker argues that health issues in America have risen because electricity and wireless frequencies are at a “level 10,000,” whereas other countries regulate to a “level five,” implying that higher electromagnetic frequencies lead to illness across populations. He repeats the idea that increasing electromagnetic frequencies on Earth is directly linked to widespread sickness. He also references Laura and makes an analogy to the Spanish flu, specifically the Kansas flu, claiming there was a radio on a Kansas military base that made people sick, using it to support the claim that wireless transmission or exposure contributed to disease. Based on these assertions, the speaker states a personal stance that his house has no wireless technology, implying a preventive or precautionary measure against exposure. Overall, the speaker presents a narrative that attributes the pandemic to the rollout of 5G and associated wireless infrastructure, framing microwave sickness as the real illness experienced by the population, supported by cited historical observations, unnamed references, and a critique of conventional medical and scientific responses. The argument emphasizes a direct causal link between elevated electromagnetic frequencies and widespread health problems, arguing that higher exposure correlates with greater illness and that other nations’ more conservative frequency practices mitigate these issues.

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The speaker argues that microwaves from wireless devices are causing widespread cancer and other illnesses. Key points include: - Women often keep their cell phones in front pockets, and men keep them in pant pockets; the speaker claims these placements cause cancers—prostate cancer for men and colon cancer for women—because of microwaving of the organs. - The cell phone is described as created by Raytheon (the Department of Defense), and studies allegedly showed that exposure to microwaves led to cancer and various illnesses. - The claim is made that if phones are not on airplane mode and WiFi/Bluetooth are not off, the phone constantly updates and pings the microwave frequency to that area, leading to tumors and lumps. - The speaker links wireless technology to the pandemic, claiming that the rollout of 5G in 2020, with phones upgraded and towers installed in front of homes, was the root cause of the pandemic; Laura is cited as saying it also causes infertility. - The speaker references the book Zapping of America, stating that when men were exposed to microwaves (and females as well), there was a higher chance of delivering female babies. The claim continues that men are vanishing and females are ballooning as microwave exposure increases with more cell phones and towers, i.e., more wireless technology. - The Invisible Rainbow is cited as discussing wireless exposure as the root cause of these health issues, implying that this topic is not commonly discussed. - The overall narrative connects personal device usage and wireless infrastructure to a broad pattern of cancers (prostate, colon), infertility, skewed sex ratios, and population changes, framing these as direct outcomes of microwave exposure from modern wireless technology.

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The talk traces a throughline from mid-20th century to today around nicotine products and the medical establishment, tying financial and political power to how health is marketed and regulated. - In the 1940s, Rockefeller doctors are described as being paid by tobacco companies to promote cigarette smoking. The argument then extends that tobacco companies realized they wouldn’t endure indefinitely, so they sought to keep influence by steering doctors to promote nicotine replacements—nicotine gum and nicotine patches—and they expanded into other nicotine deliveries, including inhalers and CBD products. - The narrative continues by asserting that, by 2025, pharmaceutical companies Johnson & Johnson and GSK are producing all of these nicotine products. It labels these same brands as wanting global vaccination and depopulation and claims they are run by the Rockefellers. It further asserts that another Rockefeller is involved in controlling the medical system and its connections to tobacco. - A chemical claim is raised: polysorbate eighty is found in nicotine gums, and this is described as the same chemical used in vaccines to break down the blood–brain barrier. The claim is made that polysorbate 80 is a modified neurotoxin nanoparticle used in nicotine products and ivermectin, suggesting a link between these products and broader vaccine technologies. - The speaker questions trust in doctors, noting a contrast between ongoing virus narratives and supposed alternative explanations. A claim is made that radio wave sickness has affected people since 2020 and that medical books describe viruses as being manipulated by the Rockefellers and Rothschilds. - The discussion references a recommended reading list: a book about pandemics resulting from new forms of technology and the rollout of injections, and Tom Conlin’s The Contagion Myth, which is said to debunk germs and viruses and the Rockefeller narrative. It notes this discourse traces back to the Flexner Report of 1913. - The closing sentiment frames a choice for the audience: decide whether to believe the stated lies or to move forward, with the implication that the path chosen will determine one’s understanding of health, medicine, and the role of powerful families in shaping medical narratives. In sum, the speaker weaves together claims of Rockefeller influence over doctors, tobacco and nicotine products, pharmaceutical dominance in nicotine delivery by 2025, chemical links to vaccines, alleged misinformation about viruses and “radio wave sickness,” and recommended literature that challenges mainstream germ theory and historic medical authority.

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- The speaker presents a checklist for healthy cats and dogs and raises controversial claims about vaccines, diet, and technology used on pets. - Vaccination critique: Vaccines are pushed because “there’s money in the side effects,” and a claim is cited from the book Poison Needle by Eleanor McBean that “Rabies doesn’t even exist, but they poison the animals anyways.” - Diet recommendations: Advocates raw diets for dogs and cats, specifically “Raw meat, raw milk. Not kibble, processed garbage.” Cites Doctor Pottinger (Dr. Pottinger) who fed 900 cats raw meat and raw milk, reporting no parasites, no dewormers, and silky skin and fur. - Personal anecdote: A friend reportedly gave raw meat and “superfoods” to their dog; the dog supposedly showed no teary eyes, no skin allergies, and no deworming. - Parasites and metals claim: The speaker asserts that parasites are caused by heavy metal pollution; kibble is “loaded with metals,” leading animals to develop worms to counter the metals. - Vaccines and implants claim: Vaccines and RFID/chip implants are described as treating animals like lab experiments, allegedly causing tumors in the region where they are placed. - Alternative remedies: Mentions a case where Pearl Powder Shiloh Shot in Dragon’s Blood with a raw diet was given to a puppy, and the puppy was described as happy and healthy with complimenting observations. - Wireless/chemistry claim: Ends with the idea of an “invisible rainbow” (WiFi) that harms animals, suggesting microwave frequencies cook them. List of perceived hazards includes vaccines, kibble, WiFi, RFID chips, and dewormers, all said to contribute to health issues in dogs and cats.

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- The International by Henry Ford: “Henry Ford talks about how these people own all the school systems. That's why you haven't read this one. This one goes into how we have unlimited oil.” - This one: “goes into how radiation is actually beneficial, like radium.” - These go into raw diets: “raw diets and why you should eat raw, also why animals should eat raw and not cooked garbage.” - World Without Cancer by G. Edward Griffin: (no additional description provided beyond the title in the transcript, included here as the referenced work). - Story of B-17 and apricot seeds: “Story of b 17 and apricot seeds. Obviously, chemo is what they normally give people instead of giving them apricots.” - Invisible Rainbow: “Invisible rainbow, how Wi Fi and wireless technology is the main culprit of all the pandemics. Obviously, they're not gonna tell you that. They make up fake viruses.” - Can You Catch a Cold? by Daniel Roitos: “Can you catch a cold? Daniel Roitos. Great one.” - Dirty Electricity: (listed as part of the same set, with the implication that it is a book relevant to the discussion). - The peanut allergy epidemic: (listed as a book/topic in the discussion). - All the allergies coming from the vaccines: “All the allergies coming from the vaccines. That's one they'll never tell anybody.” - The deliberate dumbing down of America: “And the deliberate dumbing down of America. All ties back to now.”

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Great one to start with so you can understand that germs aren't jumping all over. you can understand that every time that there was a new form of technology rolling out, there was a new pandemic, that whole situation. you can understand that you can't catch a cold. that's another great one too, so they can understand that the whole virus nonsense, all a bunch of hodgepodge. so you can understand what the injections do. Murder. so you can understand that both parties are the same bird. That's what it is. The same bird, the Federal Reserve. so you can understand how you can heal yourself with light. that's another great one too. a deep one. That goes into all the free energy that we used to have in the nineteen hundreds and nineteen twenties, and then that all kinda went away.

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The speaker claims nicotine and snake venom deter people from noticing the 500,000 to 1,000,000 cell phone towers erected in 2020, causing radio wave sickness. They cite "The Invisible Rainbow" by Arthur Fistenberg, alleging that new technology causes pandemics. Vaccines are described as poison used to paralyze and depopulate people. COVID-19 is attributed to radio wave sickness, a topic allegedly censored. The speaker asserts that mainstream media provides misleading information, avoiding the root cause of cell phone towers and 5G. They claim cell phone towers are ubiquitous and that plans exist for a SARS pandemic from 2026-2028 to facilitate the rollout of 6G.

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Speaker 0 discusses a set of books on radium and cold electricity, focusing on unconventional and controversial claims. The first book covers radium therapy and how radium was used to heal people, mentioning radium springs as an example to steer away from. The next title is about the free energy secrets of cold electricity, described as phenomenal for explaining why people weren’t told about cold electricity and that engines can run on cold electricity without requiring anything. The discussion then moves to the energy machine of T Henry Moray, described as a phenomenal one where Moray presented everything in front of the government and reportedly pulled 50 kilowatts out of the air, with a note that the government didn’t want to hear about it and that this particular work never came to light. The list also includes material on radium and quartz, specifically doping quartz with radium. Another recommended work is attributed to Pierre Curry, described as another great one, with the speaker emphasizing it as really great. The mention of Marie Curie appears as “Mary Curry or Mercury found radium,” presented as part of the same discussion of radium discovery and related findings. The final book highlighted is Vital Magnetic Healing, described as very cool, with a note that people often say it is fake; it is described as a great one to look into. The speaker mentions that this book, from 1938, discusses the etheric body. Across the list, the speaker frames these books as “books that they hide from you,” attributing the concealment to a claim that the Rockefellers own the public education system. The emphasis throughout is on alternative histories and overlooked or suppressed information about radium, cold electricity, and related esoteric or fringe energy topics, as presented in these specific works.

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- Speaker 0 highlights “the most popular trends on social media sponsored by Big Pharma” and claims “it's all made by Big Pharma.” - It cites “Ivermectin drug induced liver injury causing liver failure, blindness, and infertility.” - It mentions “the nicotine push,” allegedly “backed by big pharma,” and references “peptides, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, same ones who make vaccines.” - It references “Bill Gates” and “Rockefeller,” including “Muppets turning their tongues blue, methylene blue, John D. Rockefeller, product of chemotherapy and synthetic dyes.” - It asserts “Rockefeller's and the vitamins the pharmaceutical industry and the government pushing the pharmaceutical vitamins.” - It mentions “global vaccination programs,” by “the same people who make all the products I just mentioned” who “also wanna globally vaccinate and depopulate the world.” - It ends urging reading “Murder by Injection, keyword murder, by Eustace Mullins” as “the most important book you're ever gonna read so you can understand what we're living in of the monopoly of the medical system and how it controls all these other systems and then sells it back to the people without them knowing.”

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Today, we'll discuss the root causes of illnesses. Herpes is linked to lack of collagen and open wounds. The flu is due to an electrical salt imbalance. The 2020 pandemic symptoms are similar to radio wave sickness from 5G exposure. Rabies and HIV root causes are questioned, while polio was linked to DDT exposure. The existence of these viruses is debated in "The Contagion Myth" by Dr. Tom Cowan and "Dissolving Illusions" by Alec Zec.

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Speaker 0 outlines a sequence of political and corporate protections related to litigation and public health. He states that a Trump executive order will federally protect pesticide companies, such as Bayer, from lawsuits related to $7,200,000,000 in cancer. He contrasts this with Clinton’s protection of cell phone tower companies from lawsuits and Reagan’s protection of vaccine companies, implying a pattern across administrations. He then deepens the claim by alleging that all three presidents supported “the tiny hats, the Rothschilds,” and cites Murder by Injection to assert that Bayer was owned by the Rothschilds. Based on this, he advises against spraying pesticides on land and suggests boycotting as a strategy, noting that some farmers practice organic methods without pesticides. He names Amos Millers, Polyface, and White Oak Pastures as examples of farms that can operate without chemicals. The speaker contends that chemicals are used because if people aren’t poisoned, big pharma doesn’t make money, and the medical system is “ran by the Rawls Childs.” He mentions having delivered hundreds of talks on electroculture, which he says demonstrates that it’s possible to avoid using any pesticides, and asserts that those talks were deleted by YouTube for the topic. When asked what electroculture does, he promises it would bring “abundance”—“lots and lots and lots and abundance, all without chemicals.” Throughout, he repeatedly urges listeners to question everything and connects pesticide use to broader conspiratorial claims about corporate and financial control, as well as the influence of the Rothschilds on health and agriculture.

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The speaker discusses the book The MD Emperor Has No Clothes by Peter Glidden, describing it as a phenomenal resource. They assert that when patients receive a cancer diagnosis and undergo a PCR test, they are then told they must undergo chemotherapy or radiation. According to the speaker, in the book Peter Glidden explains that the professional receives a 6% commission for recommending chemotherapy. They claim this leads to about $100,000 being charged to the patient’s insurance, which the speaker views as a significant incentive for doctors to push chemo and radiation. The speaker contends that professionals tell patients to pursue chemo and radiation largely because of the commission from Big Pharma, rather than offering alternatives or focusing on overall health. They allege that doctors do not inform patients about natural or alternative options, listing items such as soursop, sun exposure, reishi, apricot seeds, and dietary corrections as potential aids that could address the body’s signals for help. The implication is that the medical system prioritizes medication and procedures over nutritional or lifestyle approaches. A central claim echoed in the talk is that the medical system in the United States is financially driven: 20% of the country’s GDP is spent on healthcare. The speaker emphasizes “20% of the GDP of America” to illustrate how the system operates financially, suggesting that this economic framework contributes to the continued use of vaccines, chemotherapy, radiation, “poisonous pills,” and misdiagnoses. They argue that these financial incentives are why certain treatments persist, and why systemic changes are unlikely within the current framework. Overall, the speaker asserts that the U.S. medical system is a money-driven enterprise, with substantial financial incentives tied to specific treatments like chemotherapy, which are presented as standard responses to cancer diagnoses. The discussion centers on challenging the mainstream approach by highlighting alleged commissions, insurance costs, and the availability of alternative health information and practices that they claim are typically overlooked.

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- 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.

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Speaker 0 presents a series of claims linking COVID-19 to radio waves and 5G, and denying conventional ideas about viruses and contagion. The key points include: - COVID is described as radio wave sickness caused by cell phone towers and the rollout of 5G. The speaker asserts that “the COVID situation” was triggered by 5G, not a virus. - It is claimed that the loss of senses and other symptoms (loss of smell and taste, diminished ability to think, hair loss) are ("radio wave sickness"), and that this condition was diagnosed in 1919 as the Kansas flu when radio was rolled out. The speaker says, “one hundred years later, guess what they pulled? Same exact playbook.” - The so-called playbook is outlined as follows: wear your mask, get your booster, take this, inject this, stay indoors. The speaker notes a comparison to the past: “If you have a Bell radio or a Bell telephone, you could stay at home and chat with friends.” The implication is that the same approach was reused in covid times. - The speaker denies that viruses or contagion exist. They claim that coughing or sneezing does not cause illness; illness results from what a person puts into their body. Factors listed as causing illness include microwaving with radio wave signals, poisons and pesticides, negative thoughts, stress, and lack of sun. - Several book references are provided to support these views: The Invisible Rainbow; Farewell to Virology; Can You Catch a Cold?; and The Contagion Myth by Tom Cowan. The speaker also notes “10,000 studies on how viruses are fake,” suggesting a body of literature opposing mainstream virology. - Throughout, the narrative contrasts traditional germ theory with a belief that illness is driven by environmental exposure to radio frequencies, toxins, mindset, and lifestyle factors, rather than contagion from pathogens. In summary, the speaker contends that COVID-19 is a product of 5G and radio wave exposure, that the 1919 Kansas flu was similarly linked to radio rollout, and that conventional germ-based explanations are invalid. Illness is attributed to body inputs such as radiation, poisons, stress, and lack of sun, while promoting alternative literature that disputes contagion and viruses.

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Speaker promotes two books arguing nukes are fake. Hiroshima Revisited by Michael Palmer is highlighted. The evidence is said to show that Nate Palm and Mostert Gas helped fake the atomic bombings. The material repeatedly emphasizes that this is fake, a hoax. The phrases “Death object exploding the nuclear weapons,” “Hoax,” “Akio,” and “Nacatini” appear as part of the claims. It is stated: “Yes. You've been lied to. In order to attack countries and put in banking systems.”

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- "We have our own government." - "The US National Toxicology Program completed a $30,000,000 study that concluded cell phones cause cancer and DNA damage." - "Italy's Ramazzini Institute completed another study that shows from cell towers cancers, DNA damage, and more." - "So it doesn't matter where these signals are emanating from." - "The World Health Organization in 2011 said it doesn't matter where it comes from." - "All of this man made radiofrequency back in 2011 was classified as a group two b possible human carcinogen." - "What was missing back in 2011 were these animal studies that the National Toxicology Program and the Ramazzini Institute and others have completed that show clear evidence of cancer." - "Now clear evidence is the top of five categories that can be assigned." - "That should have triggered public policy to inform all the parents and to protect us, but it didn't."

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The speaker traces a chain of purported corporate ownership and endorsements around nicotine products to suggest a broader conspiracy. They claim Rugby nicotine patches are owned by the Harvard Drug Group and a Major Pharmaceutical Company, which in turn is owned by Cardinal Health. They further allege that Cardinal Health is owned by investors Vanguard and BlackRock, implying doctors promoting Vanguard and BlackRock connections. They quote a Big Tobacco assertion: nicotine gum prescribed by doctors and endorsed by pharmacies led some people to conclude that nicotine must not all be bad for them. The speaker questions the source of nicotine receptor studies, showing a dot on an electric eel and asking whether it relates to eels, tomatoes, or eggplants, suggesting the presented science is dubious or misused. The speaker asserts multiple companies produce nicotine gums, naming Johnson & Johnson, Philip Morris, and GSK, and notes vaccine-related companies (“Vaxx companies”) in the context of the discussion. They claim that Big Pharma and Big Tobacco products were used to suppress radio-wave sickness, which they attribute to a pandemic and to initiatives like Operation Warp Speed. The speaker presents images or statements as evidence of a pre-pandemic vs. post-pandemic difference, claiming: before the pandemic there was no cell phone tone, after there was one; no spike proteins, no snake venom, no viruses, and then “new technology upgraded throughout the country and throughout the world, poisoning the people.” They reference books such as The Invisible Rainbow, Zapping of America, Getting Rid of five g, Getting Rid of WiFi, Wireless Technology, LEDs, and Smart Meters as sources for the claim that wireless technology causes illness, and they advocate “eating some raw eggs” as part of the solution.

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Speaker 0 says: Today’s discussion covers the Lyme situation and claims about vaccines. The claim is that you were injected with gelatin as a child through vaccines, which made you allergic to ticks. Ticks are said to not cause disease, just to be aware. A PubMed article is cited about the association between tick bites, allergic reactions, and gelatin-containing vaccines causing the allergic reaction. Some people insist they didn’t get vaccines with gelatin, but Speaker 0 argues childhood vaccines actually contain it. Speaker 0 claims that the vaccine intended to save you is new, yet there was a past version that resulted in many lawsuits, implying a repeated pattern. The discussion then shifts to Lyme disease: if someone has Lyme, they allegedly had a PCR test that amplified the results to tell them they had an illness to sell a treatment and induce fear of ticks. Speaker 0 lists symptoms claimed to be Lyme disease: fevers, chills, headaches, fatigue, muscle aches, swollen lymph nodes, and facial palsy. These are described as side effects of vaccines as well. Even someone who says they didn’t take any vaccines is asked about exposure to wireless technology at home (microwaving), and pesticide exposure, which are claimed to cause the same symptoms. Speaker 0 references books on related topics: Peanut Allergy Epidemic, Contagion Myth, and The Poison Needle. The overarching claim is that “almost all illnesses result from vaccines, wireless, and pesticides.” Speaker 0 offers a supposed remedy: for any bug bite, use dragon’s blood and coconut oil, saying it heals ticks bites, wasps, spiders, bees quickly. The statement is presented as an example of why people were allergic to peanuts, tying vaccine use to broader allergy development. Speaker 0 concludes by reiterating the pattern: you get vaccinated, you become allergic to ticks; you get vaccinated, you become allergic to peanuts; the same mechanism is claimed to be at play.

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- The speaker discusses a potential connection between electromagnetic radiation (EMR) and diabetes, noting that there has been a slight increase in diabetes rates associated with the rapid expansion of cellular towers, such as after Bill Clinton’s policy changes. - They acknowledge that EMR is not claimed to be the sole cause of diabetes, but suggest that historical data and curves make it tempting to believe EMR could be a significant factor. - The speaker points out that the topic has been present in scientific literature since at least 1931, and asserts that conventional medicine would push back against this viewpoint, with medical education focused on sugar and other factors. - They emphasize that they are not naive and do not claim EMR is the only cause; rather, the implication is that EMR could contribute to diabetes risk. - The argument culminates in a warning: if power systems and telecommunications infrastructure are not designed more carefully, there will be health and national budget costs, implying broader consequences for public health and economic burden.

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Speaker 0 presents a claim about how the ether is portrayed in common discourse. He says, "they always tell you about the ether is fake," attributing this stance to "the Rockefellers because they own the school system." He directs attention to a specific source, stating, "Check this book, 1935. Magnetic Healing. Right there," implying that the book contains information that supports his assertion about the ether. He then proceeds to demonstrate by turning to the book, indicating his action with, "Okay. Let me go to table of contents. Right there." In his reading or pointing out of the text, Speaker 0 notes headings that he attributes to the book's content: "Human etheric body" and "Disturbances in the etheric body." These phrases are highlighted as evidence or focal topics within Magnetic Healing (1935). He says, "Everything about the" in reference to a portion of the material, suggesting that the book purports to cover comprehensive information about the etheric body and related disturbances. Overall, the excerpt captures Speaker 0 arguing that the notion of the ether being fake is a narrative tied to a specific elite interest, namely the Rockefellers and their influence over education. He then points to Magnetic Healing (1935) as a corroborating source, and he identifies particular sections—"Human etheric body" and "Disturbances in the etheric body"—as representing the book’s thorough treatment of the topic. The sequence emphasizes a linkage between a perceived suppression of ether-related knowledge in mainstream discourse and a cited historical text that explicitly addresses the etheric body and its disturbances.

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"Nanobots, smart dust, will infuse all matter around us with information." "these chemtrails, not contrails, chemtrails that come out the back of planes, they started appearing in the late nineteen nineties, now they're freaking everywhere." "Radiation in the atmosphere generated by technology has absolutely soared beyond words since I was a kid, and increases by the day." "cell towers are pouring out frequencies that disrupt human minds." "Exposure to cell phone and wireless WiFi radiation can reduce impulse control and cause violence." "AI is also meant to take people's jobs away on an absolutely vast scale." "One of the longer term goals of this agenda is to replace the biological human body with a synthetic version." "This is a psychological trick called preemptive programming." "We have allowed ourselves to build our own technological prison without realizing that's what it is." "the coming synthetic human."

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The transcript presents a provocative framing of cancer treatment decisions and the influence of alternative medicine advocates. It opens with a claim that chemotherapy is widely recommended for cancer patients because oncologists receive a four to six percent commission for each treatment, implying a financial incentive behind standard cancer care. The speaker then contrasts this with the stance of a prominent monarch, referred to as the king of the United Kingdom, who is not going to undergo chemotherapy. This contrast is used to question why others would pursue chemotherapy when a high-profile leader would refuse it. Following this, the dialogue introduces a figure described as a “great fan” and loyal promoter of alternative medicine, who is depicted as consistently opposed to chemotherapy. This individual is characterized as someone who believes strongly in natural remedies, herbs, potions, and related approaches rather than conventional medical treatments. The speaker suggests that this person’s position aligns with a broader skepticism toward chemotherapy as a conventional option. The conversation then pivots to encourage readers or listeners to explore a specific book: A World Without Cancer, The Story of B 17 by G. Edward Griffin. The transcript explicitly mentions the book as a recommended source of information, signaling that it presents an alternative view on cancer and treatment. Within the discussion of alternatives, seeds containing “B 17” are highlighted as potential natural solutions. The seeds named include apricot seeds, cherry seeds, and plum seeds, with the claim that all contain B17, which is framed as a natural remedy in place of radiation and in opposition to what the speaker characterizes as an industry’s commission-based approach. Throughout, the speakers emphasize a preference for natural or non-traditional remedies over the conventional chemotherapy route. The language conveys skepticism about chemotherapy, suggesting a conflict of interest in the standard medical system, and promotes B17-containing seeds as a viable alternative, linking them to both the non-use of chemotherapy by the king and the endorsement of a book that supports these views. The overall message presented is that chemotherapy is driven by financial incentives, while there are natural, seed-based alternatives advocated by proponents of natural medicine, with a notable emphasis on the book by G. Edward Griffin as a source of justification.
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