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Myocarditis, a condition that causes inflammation of the heart, can lead to permanent heart damage in about half of young males, according to a recent study. This study, which received little attention, raises concerns about the risks associated with the COVID-19 vaccine. The speaker suggests that universities mandating the vaccine may face legal consequences if students experience long-term health issues. They also advise individuals to obtain fake vaccination cards if faced with vaccine mandates. The speaker emphasizes the availability of a treatment called Paxlovid and encourages people to question the necessity of vaccine requirements. They view these rules as mere theater and suggest pretending to comply while finding ways around them.

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The discussion revolves around the efficacy and safety of COVID-19 vaccines, particularly in relation to transmission, myocarditis rates, and the influence of pharmaceutical companies. The speakers debate whether vaccines reduce transmission and the risks associated with myocarditis. They also question the motives of pharmaceutical companies and their impact on public health. Ultimately, they express differing views on the role of vaccines in preventing illness and the influence of pharmaceutical companies. Translation: The conversation focuses on COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness, safety, transmission, and myocarditis risks, as well as the pharmaceutical industry's influence on public health. Speakers debate vaccine impact on transmission and myocarditis rates, and discuss pharmaceutical companies' motives and health outcomes. They share conflicting opinions on vaccines' ability to prevent illness and the pharmaceutical industry's role.

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The discussion revolves around the safety and efficacy of COVID vaccines. Speaker 0 believes vaccines have done more good than harm, citing personal experiences. Speaker 1 argues that vaccines did not reduce severity, hospitalization, or death, as the virus became milder and early treatment improved outcomes. They claim misclassification bias in reporting vaccine-related deaths and point to high post-vaccine mortality rates. Calls are made to remove vaccines due to safety concerns.

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Speaker 0 questions understanding of vaccine causing myocarditis, mentioning Pfizer's awareness. Speaker 1 doubts if vaccine was tested for stopping transmission before market release. Speaker 0 believes vaccination was optional, not forced.

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The speaker states that a certain vaccine type has been administered to one billion people and is safe. They acknowledge a very low risk of myocarditis with mRNA vaccines, particularly in young men. However, they claim the risk of myocarditis from COVID-19 itself is greater than the risk from the vaccine.

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The speaker questions the effectiveness and safety of COVID vaccines, citing data on high death rates and adverse effects like myocarditis. They criticize the small sample size of Pfizer's clinical trials and argue that the benefits may not outweigh the risks, especially for young people. The speaker emphasizes the need for transparent data and larger studies to make informed decisions about vaccination.

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The speaker asks if there is a higher incidence of myocarditis among adolescent males aged 16 to 24 after taking the vaccine. The other speaker responds by saying that the data from the CDC shows that there is actually less myocarditis in people who get the vaccine compared to those who get COVID. The first speaker disagrees and presents six peer-reviewed papers that contradict this claim. They also mention speaking with the president who privately acknowledged the increased risk of myocarditis. The conversation then shifts to discussing the rationality of mandating three vaccines for adolescent boys and the timing of myocarditis after the second dose. The first speaker criticizes the CDC's recommendation to vaccinate individuals who have recovered from COVID and experienced myocarditis. They argue that many countries do not offer the vaccine to children unless they are at risk for severe disease. The first speaker concludes by stating that the risk and benefits of vaccination need to be weighed, and that parents are unlikely to comply with mandatory vaccination for their children.

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The speaker asks if there is a higher incidence of myocarditis among boys aged 16 to 24 after taking the vaccine. The other speaker responds that the data from the CDC actually show that there is less risk of myocarditis for those who get the vaccine compared to those who get COVID infection. The first speaker clarifies if they are saying that males in the 16 to 24 age group who take the vaccine have a lower risk of myocarditis than those who contract the disease. The second speaker confirms this.

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Speaker 0 confronts a pharmacist about their son's hospitalization due to myocarditis after receiving a COVID jab. Speaker 0 is upset that his wife was not informed about this potential side effect. Speaker 1 explains that they may not disclose the side effect to avoid scaring parents away from vaccinating their children. Speaker 0 expresses disbelief and insists that parents should be given accurate information to make informed decisions.

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Speaker 0 acknowledges reports of myocarditis and pericarditis associated with the Pfizer vaccine but seems unsure about the mechanism behind it. Speaker 1 asks if the vaccine was tested for its ability to stop virus transmission before being released. Speaker 2 questions if people were forced to get vaccinated to keep their jobs and asks Speaker 0 to retract their statement. Speaker 0 clarifies that everyone had the choice to get vaccinated or not, and they don't believe anyone was forced.

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The speaker expresses skepticism about the number of COVID patients in hospitals and claims that most patients are vaccinated. They urge the media to tell the truth and ask for support. Another speaker, identified as a nurse, asks if they are seeing the same people in the hospital. The first speaker responds by mentioning serious adverse effects, specifically myocarditis in 20-year-olds, which can lead to cardiac transplants. They highlight the low organ donor rate in Australia. The conversation ends with a request for clarification.

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Myocarditis, a condition that causes inflammation of the heart, is a serious problem with long-term consequences. A recent study revealed that approximately half of young males who develop myocarditis due to the COVID-19 vaccine experience permanent heart damage. This study is concerning, yet it hasn't received much attention. It's important to question why there is such a push for vaccination when the risks are significant. Universities mandating the vaccine may face legal trouble as individuals who experience adverse effects should have the right to sue. If anyone tries to force vaccination, obtaining a fake vaccination card is suggested. Overall, there are alternative treatments available, such as Paxlovid, and it's crucial to question the necessity of vaccination mandates.

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People discuss vaccine misinformation on social media. Some believe in vaccine mandates, while others question their effectiveness. Personal experiences with vaccines vary, with some reporting adverse reactions. The importance of vaccination for public health is emphasized, despite differing opinions on mandates and vaccine safety. Concerns are raised about potential cover-ups and the need for further research on vaccine adverse events. Overall, the debate centers on the efficacy, safety, and societal impact of COVID-19 vaccines.

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The speaker discusses the potential harm caused by the COVID-19 vaccine, specifically focusing on myocarditis. They state that for every 1 million people vaccinated, there could be 50,000 to 90,000 cases of heart damage. They claim that if someone develops myocarditis, there is a high chance of death within 10 years, with 75% of affected individuals succumbing to the condition. The speaker expresses sympathy towards those affected and highlights the importance of acknowledging the truth and the consequences of vaccine-induced harm.

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A person confronts a pharmacist about their child developing myocarditis after receiving a COVID vaccine. The person is upset that the pharmacist did not inform them about the potential side effects. The pharmacist explains that they don't want to scare parents and that the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks. The person argues that no healthy children have died from COVID and accuses the pharmacist of not warning people about the dangers. The conversation becomes heated and the person threatens legal action. The pharmacist maintains that they cannot make decisions about what information to provide. The conversation ends with the person expressing anger and frustration towards the pharmacist.

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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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Speaker 0 asks Speaker 1 to explain why the vaccine causes myocarditis and pericarditis. Speaker 1 mentions rare reports of myocarditis and pericarditis associated with vaccination but does not provide a clear explanation. Speaker 0 insists on understanding the mechanism and questions why the vaccine is considered safe without addressing the risks. Speaker 2 intervenes, suggesting that Speaker 1 will address the question later. Speaker 1 talks about the benefit-risk ratio and the global recommendation of health authorities. Speaker 0 reiterates the question, to which Speaker 1 agrees to provide a response later. Speaker 2 confirms this agreement.

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Speaker 0 questions whether it is a conflict of interest for government employees who profit from the vaccine to dictate vaccine policies. Speaker 1 responds that the government should decide. Speaker 0 asks about the higher incidence of myocarditis among adolescent males after vaccination. Speaker 1 claims that the data shows less risk with the vaccine compared to getting COVID. Speaker 0 disagrees and presents peer-reviewed papers contradicting Speaker 1's claim. Speaker 0 questions the scientific soundness of mandating three vaccines for adolescent boys and suggests having a rational discussion about one vaccine. Speaker 1 defers to public health leaders. Speaker 0 criticizes the CDC's recommendation to vaccinate children multiple times and compares it to other countries' approaches. Speaker 1 admits to vaccinating their own children multiple times. Speaker 0 argues that the risk of myocarditis after vaccination should be weighed against the risk of the disease. Speaker 0 also expresses concern about conflicts of interest in government decision-making.

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The speaker discusses concerns about the origins of COVID-19 and the risks of childhood vaccination. They highlight a study showing increased heart inflammation in vaccinated individuals, urging for vaccine mandates to be dropped and vaccines to be reviewed. The study from Tokyo, New York, and Houston reveals that vaccinated individuals have 46% higher heart glucose uptake, indicating increased heart strain. The speaker emphasizes the need to address these findings and stop the potential harm caused by vaccines.

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The speaker asks Pfizer and Moderna to explain how the COVID-19 vaccine causes myocarditis. The response from the doctors is that the exact mechanism is still being studied, but myocarditis is generally an autoimmune response that can occur after COVID-19 or other infections. The speaker questions if other organs could also be affected by the vaccine, but the doctors explain that ongoing surveillance is in place to monitor potential risks. The speaker expresses concern about the lack of initial disclosure of these risks. The doctors emphasize the importance of preventing COVID-19 and state that the reported rate of myocarditis is around 2-3 per 100,000 doses. The speaker argues that if it can happen to the heart, it could happen to other organs. The conversation ends due to time constraints.

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The speaker discusses the increasing awareness and concern surrounding myocarditis as a result of COVID-19 vaccines. They mention that there are now 800 peer-reviewed papers on COVID vaccine-induced myocarditis, with a rate of heart damage at 2.5% in two studies. They explain the pathogenesis of vaccine-induced cardiac arrest and highlight the fatality of this condition. The speaker also mentions cases of athletes and public figures who have experienced myocarditis after vaccination. They express concern about the lingering effects of myocarditis and the recurrence of symptoms. The speaker concludes by discussing the case of a European athlete who experienced a cardiac arrest two years after vaccination, emphasizing the ongoing risk associated with myocarditis.

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The former health and human services cabinet secretary faced questioning on Capitol Hill regarding the COVID vaccine. Representative Mary Miller raised concerns about the CDC's data showing an increase in myocarditis among young men and teenage boys who received the vaccine. She questioned why the Biden administration continues to promote the vaccine for this demographic, as they are at higher risk for myocarditis. The speaker supports Miller's stance and urges others not to give in on mask mandates, social distancing, closures, or new mandates. The speaker concludes by emphasizing the importance of non-compliance.

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Speaker 0 asks Speaker 1 to explain the process of how the vaccine causes myocarditis and pericarditis. Speaker 1 mentions rare reports of myocarditis and pericarditis associated with vaccination. Speaker 0 insists on an explanation of the mechanism, but Speaker 1 does not provide a direct answer. Speaker 1 emphasizes that all medicines have benefits and side effects and refers to the benefit-risk ratio. Speaker 0 continues to press for an explanation of the biochemical pathway, but Speaker 1 agrees to provide a response later. The transcript ends with Speaker 2 confirming Speaker 1's agreement to give a further response.

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The video features individuals sharing their personal experiences and concerns regarding COVID-19 vaccines. Some emphasize the importance of vaccination, highlighting its safety and benefits, while others express negative experiences and adverse reactions they believe are linked to the vaccines. They express frustration with the medical system and lack of support. Examples include pain in legs and difficulty walking, severe side effects like shaking and chest pain, and diagnoses of pericarditis. Adverse reactions mentioned include blood clots, Bell's palsy, and neurological deficits. Overall, the video presents a range of perspectives on COVID-19 vaccines, with some advocating for vaccination and others expressing concerns and negative experiences.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Trump Makes it Official, and Defeating the Tech Censors, with Alex Berenson, Jason Miller, and MBD
Guests: Alex Berenson, Jason Miller
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Megyn Kelly welcomes guests Alex Berenson and Jason Miller to discuss various topics, including Donald Trump's presidential announcement and the media's reaction. Berenson highlights a new study advocating for masking children to combat racism, while also noting that vaccine companies are now studying myocarditis risks associated with their products. He claims that the unraveling of FTX and its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, is worse than Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme. The conversation shifts to Trump's announcement, with Miller explaining that Trump aimed to make a strong first impression, despite some feeling his speech lacked energy. Doherty points out that Trump's accomplishments were highlighted, but his performance was less dynamic than usual. The media's reaction to Trump's announcement varied, with left-leaning outlets focusing on his controversial past. Miller reflects on Trump's ability to thrive under media scrutiny, suggesting that attacks from the establishment may bolster his support. Kelly notes that some media outlets, like the Wall Street Journal, provided fair coverage, while others, like the New York Post, seemed to downplay Trump's announcement. The discussion also touches on the challenges facing Ron DeSantis as he navigates the Republican landscape, emphasizing that he must avoid being seen as an establishment candidate. Berenson later discusses his legal battle against Twitter, revealing that the Biden administration and Scott Gottlieb pressured the platform to silence him. He plans to sue for breach of contract and First Amendment violations. The conversation concludes with Berenson addressing the COVID vaccine's efficacy and the potential risks of myocarditis, arguing that the benefits of vaccination for healthy individuals under 50 are questionable. He cites a medical examiner's findings that many reported COVID deaths may have been overstated, emphasizing the need for transparency in public health discussions.
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