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The world population has grown significantly over the past few centuries, reaching 7.4 billion today. However, there is a belief that progress can be made by inventing new vaccines and ensuring their distribution to reduce sickness and population growth. A group of billionaires, including Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, have discussed using their wealth to address overpopulation. The negative impact of population growth on ecosystems is evident, and the United Nations should play a role in stabilizing world population. Overpopulation is seen as a cause of global warming due to increased resource consumption. Some suggest reducing the population by 90%, while others propose a target of 2 billion people. By focusing on vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, it is possible to lower the population by 10-15%. The term "final solution" is suggested to be replaced with "best solution" to avoid conspiracy theories.

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There is a global decline in birth rates, not just in the West. The speaker believes this is intentional to reduce the world's population, possibly through gene-altering vaccines. A German Thai clinician warned against these vaccines, calling it a crime against humanity. Despite this, billions have been vaccinated, leading to a massive human experiment with potentially deadly consequences. The speaker predicts a grim future with millions dead and unknown long-term effects.

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Bill Gates, in 2015, suggested that the world population should be reduced by 10% to 15% to combat global warming, using vaccines as a means to achieve this. In 2020, Gates emphasized the need to vaccinate the entire global population of 7 billion people. This raises a rhetorical question: why should one trust a vaccine for their health when it is funded and developed by someone who aims to decrease the world population?

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The speaker discusses the world's population and the potential to lower it through vaccines and healthcare. They mention the use of lipid nanoparticles to create factories for vaccine production. The importance of vaccines is emphasized, especially for diseases without a vaccine. The speaker acknowledges the issue of vaccine hesitancy, particularly in developing countries, and the misinformation surrounding vaccines. They mention the tragedy of millions of deaths and the need to move on. The conversation concludes with a mention of preparing for the future and rejecting the idea that vaccines cause harm.

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Population and reproductive health are urgent issues. Growing up with parents involved in volunteer work, including Planned Parenthood, shaped my perspective. Looking ahead 10-15 years, I aim for significant change in mortality rates in developing countries, which can help reduce population growth and improve education and nutrition. We have ambitious goals and use numeric dashboards to track progress. Currently, the world population is about 6.8 billion, projected to reach 9 billion. With effective vaccines and health services, we could potentially lower this growth by 10-15%. Over the next decade, we plan to invest $10 billion to advance vaccine development and distribution, aiming to reduce child mortality from 9 million to 4.5 million annually. This progress will enable societies to better care for themselves.

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Childhood vaccines save around 4 million lives globally each year, and I fully support them. The polio vaccine, in particular, is remarkable; it would take a strong argument to convince me to eliminate it. While I believe many vaccines are beneficial, it's important to evaluate the effectiveness of others. If certain vaccines aren't effective, we need to investigate further.

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We are using genetically modified organisms in vaccines to reduce the world's population by 10-15% through improved healthcare and reproductive services. The current global population is 6.8 billion, projected to reach 9 billion. The focus is on developing new vaccines to achieve this goal.

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The world's population is currently 6.8 billion and is projected to reach 9 billion. By improving vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, we have the potential to reduce this number by around 10 to 15%.

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Speaker 0 notes the world population is 6.8 billion and is headed up to about 9 billion. He says if we do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, and reproductive health services, we could lower that by perhaps 10 or 15%. Speaker 1 responds with the question: common sense would tell you that if a man standing in front of you says he's gonna reduce the world's population by 10–15% using vaccines, what does that mean to you? He explains that means somebody's going to die because you put a vaccine in them, and it doesn't mean you're going to save people. He says that’s common sense, but he saw him say it, and now he’s here; he says, "I’m now an anti vaxxer I wasn't before."

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The world's population is currently 6.8 billion and is projected to reach 9 billion. The speaker suggests that by improving vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, we could potentially reduce the population by 10-15%. However, another speaker questions this approach, stating that if vaccines are used to decrease the population, it implies that some people will die instead of being saved. This viewpoint has led the second speaker to become an anti-vaxxer.

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Vaccines have a place, but the population has been scared into accepting them. It's frustrating that vaccines are being promoted as gene therapy to children who are not at risk. It's ethically questionable to recommend something dangerous to a certain group to protect the elderly. Personally, as a 70-year-old, I don't want young people getting vaccinated for my sake. If something happened to them, I would feel guilty.

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In this video, the speaker discusses the global population and how it can be reduced. Currently, there are 6.8 billion people in the world, and this number is projected to reach 9 billion. The speaker suggests that by improving vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, it may be possible to decrease the population by around 10 or 15%.

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The world's population is currently 6.8 billion and projected to reach 9 billion. By improving vaccines and healthcare, we could potentially reduce the population by 10-15%. Lipid nanoparticles can be used to create factories for vaccine production. Genetically modified organisms are being injected into children's arms to combat diseases. The Gates Foundation supports the development of mRNA vaccines. Instead of shaping the vaccine, instructions are encoded in RNA and DNA. Vaccines are crucial, and governments need to be involved in their distribution. Vaccine hesitancy is a problem, especially in developing countries. The misinformation surrounding vaccines, including false associations with individuals like Fauci, is most prevalent in the United States. We must prepare for future outbreaks and not entertain baseless claims about vaccines causing harm.

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Bill Gates, in a 2015 speech, suggested that the world population should be reduced by 10% to 15% due to global warming, using vaccines as a means to achieve this. In 2020, Gates called for the vaccination of the entire population of 7 billion people. The question raised is why one should take a vaccine for their health when it is funded and created by someone who aims to decrease the world population.

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The speaker mentions that the world's population is currently around 6.8 billion and is projected to reach 9 billion. They suggest that by improving vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, it might be possible to reduce the population by 10-15%. Another speaker expresses concern, stating that if someone claims they can lower the population through vaccines, it implies that people will die as a result. This leads the second speaker to become an anti-vaxxer.

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The world's population is around 6.8 billion people, and it's expected to reach 9 billion. With advancements in vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, we might be able to lower that number by 10 to 15%. If someone says they're going to reduce the world's population by 10 to 15% using vaccines, it means vaccines will cause deaths, not save people. I saw someone say this, and it's made me become anti-vax, which I wasn't before.

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Population and reproductive health are urgent issues. Growing up with parents involved in volunteer work, particularly Planned Parenthood, shaped my perspective. Looking ahead 10 to 15 years, I aim for significant improvements in mortality rates in developing countries, which can help reduce population growth and enhance education and nutrition. We are committed to rigorous tracking of our progress, with an expectation of high impact from our investments. Currently, the world population is about 6.8 billion, projected to reach 9 billion. By improving vaccines and healthcare, we could potentially reduce this growth by 10-15%. Our goal is to cut child mortality from 9 million annually by half through new vaccines, allowing societies to better care for themselves.

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The speaker discusses the current global population of 6.8 billion, which is projected to reach 9 billion. They suggest that with advancements in vaccines and healthcare, it may be possible to reduce the population by 10-15%. Another speaker expresses concern about the idea of using vaccines to decrease the population, believing it could result in deaths rather than saving lives. This experience leads them to become an anti-vaxxer.

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Jane Goodall expressed a desire to reduce the global population, citing concerns over overpopulation. Bill Gates, associated with the World Economic Forum, suggested that improved healthcare and vaccines could potentially lower the population by 10 to 15%. There are implications that these influential figures aim to control or eliminate those they deem unnecessary. The argument is made that if they believe in the need for depopulation, they should demonstrate their commitment by starting with themselves.

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Speaker 0 repeats two major statements he attributes to someone else: vaccines are the greatest return on investment I’ve ever had, and my number one goal and the biggest issue of our time is overpopulation. He asserts that this is not accidental, claiming that there is a Ted Talk in which the heart of the message is that through modern medicine and vaccines, we can reduce the population of the world. Speaker 1 adds data to the discussion by noting that the world today has 6,800,000,000 people, and that number is headed up to about 9,000,000,000. He states that if we do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, reproductive health services, we could lower that population by perhaps 10–15%. Speaker 0 then references the claim as something that “came out of his mouth,” acknowledging he is paraphrasing and not reproducing it exactly, but notes that they tried to retract it. He continues by saying that in the next video, the person is doing a whole thing on how we need to reduce the population of the world, arguing that there are too many people and that this abundance is causing the world’s problems. He emphasizes that when anyone questions these ideas, it can be labeled a conspiracy theory to say that vaccines are involved, prompting him to ask whether such labeling is accurate. Throughout the exchange, the speakers juxtapose vaccine benefits with population control rhetoric. The first speaker stresses that vaccines constitute a major return on investment and connects vaccines to reducing global population growth, while the second speaker provides projected population figures and suggests that vaccines, health care, and reproductive health services could modestly lower future population totals. The conversation also highlights disagreement over how these claims are presented and whether discussing population reduction in relation to vaccines constitutes a conspiracy theory.

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In 02/2015, Bill Gates stated the world population needs to be reduced by 10 to 15% due to global warming, and this would be achieved through vaccines. In 02/2020, Gates said 7 billion people must be vaccinated. The speaker then poses the question of why they should take a vaccine for their health that is financed and produced by someone who wants to decrease the world population.

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Speaker 0: It is a report that concludes that The United States official foreign policy signed into law in 1975 by president Ford, and when I say signed into law, it's called a presidential directive, is the reduction of population in 12 foreign twelve twelve specific foreign countries. Not the control of population, the reduction of population. And so it explains the ways we're gonna do this is through medicalizing birth control, never was before. You didn't need a doctor to get a condom, and to go around and talk to villages everywhere and say, you want a reproductive health freedom, don't you? You know what most women want on the planet Earth? Babies. They're they're not looking for reproductive health freedom was a term for have fewer babies. Right? There is a very potent move in official US foreign policy to reduce population in other countries. Now why? Philippines or or Indonesia. Why? They state it directly in the Kissinger report because it's classified. They wanted to reduce those countries' development so that they wouldn't need their own raw materials because we want them, the metals, etcetera. It is dark as shit, the Kissinger reports. It's not and it's not classified anymore. You can, you know, ask chat GPT about it to give you quotes from it. And so this whole business of population reduction is now another third rail I'm stepping on. Right? Nobody wants it. What are you you're nuts. No. A lot of people want it. A lot of people believe, obviously, Bill Gates, that 8,000,000,000 people was the number where we must turn it around, which is where we are supposedly now. And the Kissinger report, I was a kid. I didn't write it. I didn't make it up. You can find it on Wikipedia. It's a real thing. And all the presidential directives that came from it. Would these countries like the idea that we show up and we say, hey. We've got a new tetanus vaccine for you, but it happens to also have in it secretly something that will reduce fertility in your women as we did in India, as we did in Peru. In both India and Peru, we also did forced sterilization surgeries. US paid for them. True story. Speaker 1: So the the one vaccine was the DTP vaccine. Is that what it was? Speaker 0: The the one I'm talking about. The the Speaker 1: the The one that had h c g in it? It was just tetanus. But there was a vaccine that was in Bobby Kennedy's book Yeah. Where they were talking about women in Africa, where they were unknowingly given Yeah. This vaccine against That's that's diphtheria, tetanus, and Speaker 0: Well, it was the tetanus part Right. That that they were that they were pitching. And by the way, tetanus is a challenge in those countries more than it is in The United States. But, yeah, they were call they were naming them wellness drugs. Speaker 1: And they had h c g Speaker 0: in it. That's correct. Speaker 1: And that h c g, and they were more administered to women than they were to men. Speaker 0: Oh, of course. And they were five. They would administer administer five of the injections. Speaker 1: And they did it under this the guys were the the the narrative was that women were more vulnerable. So you have to give the vaccination to women. Yeah. And it was preventing them from getting pregnant. Speaker 0: It was preventing them from getting pregnant, and they had World Health Organization, which basically has this as a mission. Man, I wish they would sue me for saying this, but they they have this as a mission, which is population reduction from the beginning. They had worked on that HCG. Speaker 1: There's Gates famously, Speaker 0: of course, Speaker 1: in the speech saying Speaker 0: We can do that with vaccines. Speaker 0: Yeah. By the way, in the Kissinger report, for those of you not seeing this and only hearing it, that was me drinking my pause was me drinking water. I did not have a stroke. In the Kissinger report, they list the strategies and how much funding they'll give to each strategy. One of the strategies is to medicalize birth control, meaning have trusted people in the villages, etcetera. Another one is to pay young men to have a vasectomy. Just outright pay you know, write a check-in villages so they get $60 and they get a nice weekend of buying beer, but they never have kids. But another one of them is injections that reduce that temporarily reduce male fertility. Now here's an interesting thing about that one. It's in the Kissinger report. Injections that temporarily reduce male fertility. The COVID vaccine reduces sperm count in men for three months admitted by Fauci. It's not a secret. But the CDC's response was, yeah, but it's only for three months. And But they were asking us to take one every fucking three months. Well, also the miscarriages. Miscarriages and stillbirths. My point is that it's no it's no surprise that these persistent thoughts that I think good people believe meaning, I think there are good people who believe that population reduction is important. The fact is, of course, that now we are barely at replacement, you know, at replacement value right now in terms of many populations.

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The world population is currently around 6.8 billion and is projected to reach 9 billion. By improving vaccines, healthcare, and reproductive health services, we could potentially reduce the population by 10 to 15%. However, this raises concerns. If someone claims they will reduce the population through vaccines, it implies that people may die as a result. This perspective has led to a shift in beliefs, and now I find myself identifying as an anti-vaxxer, a stance I didn't hold before.

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In 2022, over 14 million children did not receive any vaccines. The goal is to reduce that number by 2030, working with partners like Gavi and UNICEF. Anti-vaxxers pose a serious challenge, requiring a strategy to push back, because vaccines work for both children and adults, and there is evidence to support this. It's time to be more aggressive in countering anti-vaxxers, who used COVID as an opportunity to create havoc.

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The world population has been rapidly increasing, raising concerns about feeding everyone and preserving the environment. However, providing new medicines and keeping children alive may exacerbate the population problem. Some environmentalists even see a mega emergency as a solution to reduce the human race. The Gates Foundation is working on developing a vaccine to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, but the expedited timeline may compromise safety measures. Reports of blood clots and myocarditis following vaccination have raised concerns, with cases of young athletes collapsing and dying from heart conditions. Despite these risks, vaccines are still considered crucial for reducing sickness and population growth. The need for humans and the role of vaccines in history are topics of debate.
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