Friday, January 10, 2025

ZUCK FUCK DID THIS

POLLY ST GEORGE: "Gentiles Only" job ads were common until after WW2

Ivermectin, a broad spectrum antiparasitic agent, has demonstrated antiviral properties against various viruses including Simeon Virus 40 SV40.

THE POLIO PARADOX WITH DR. SUZANNE HUMPHRIES

THE POLIO PARADOX WITH DR. SUZANNE HUMPHRIES WITH DEL BIGTREE @ THE HIGHWIRE.  

"Salk Vaccine: Safe, Effective!"

Along Comes the first widespread vaccination campaign with the Salk vaccine.

"They were not going to let this vaccine fail all the fanfare that was going into it."  Dr. Suzanne Humphries

"They weren't careful about their manufacturing standards.  They weren't careful about the testing."  Dr. Meryl Nass

"The Cutter Incident was pretty much a disaster."  Dr. Suzanne Humphries

"The fact that they were making vaccines with monkey kidney cells they discover the presents of sv40, which is a mutation that can cause cancers in animals and humans."  Dr. Pierre Kory

"When scientists located the SV40 and we're trying to talk about it, they were threatened and harassed." Dr. Suzanne Humphries

"In the early 50s, the Salk vaccine, and the late 50s, the Sabine vaccine, and everybody got it because you know why wouldn't you?  Nobody ever heard of vaccine injuries in those things."  Dr. Meryl Nass

"Polio is caused by both the injected and the oral polio vaccine.  you could have an injection of a polio vaccine and still be a carrier and spread polio."  Dr. Suzanne Humphries

"So when it comes to the definition of polio, anything that limped or had a cough or anything before the vaccines came out in the 1950s was pretty much polio.  Afterwards, the criteria changed."

"Before the vaccine, there was something called non-paralytic polio.  After the vaccine, they termed that aseptic meningitis.  No laboratory testing was required before the vaccine.  After the vaccine was released in order to make a diagnosis of polio, a lab test was required.  

For anyone who says 'My aunt had polio,' some of us have got to be willing to face the ugly truth.  Polio is one of the ugliest."

"There has been scandal.  There has been propaganda.  There has been failure, and there has been injury.  And it's been covered up."  Dr. Suzanne Humphries

03:50.  I was seeing vaccine injury in my own patients when I was 100% consultative nephrologist in the state of Maine, Maine Hospital.  What happened was I started to do a little bit of research because I was very naive at that point.  I knew there was a polio vaccine in the past, and it was wonderful and all these little crippled children their parents no longer had to fear the crippling effects of polio because of the vaccine and what a miracle it was.  Because as a doctor, I'd never seen a case of polio that I knew about.  Turns out, I'd seen plenty of polio, and more importantly I later realized that I'd seen plenty of kidney disease related to the sv40 virus.  But getting back to the question that you asked me is that every time I would make a claim to somebody who challenged me, because I was discontinuing the vaccines on patients that I was consulting on who already had acute kidney injury, and I would say, "Please don't give this vaccine," or I would research the fact that one of my patients or then two of my patients and then 10 of my patients ended up coming in and saying "You know, I was fine until I had that shot," and I thought "Well, can vaccines affect kidneys or not?"  And so I looked into it, and sure enough vaccines can profoundly affect kidneys.  Kidneys are incredibly sensitive to inflammation, probably one of the most sensitive organs to inflammation next to the brain.  And a lot of what we see is drug-induced nephropathies, and so why not a vaccine-induced nephropathy and sure enough I found plenty of medical literature after I was encountered my first patient with who claimed to have a vaccine injury.  So, instead of telling him to shut up and denying it, and acting like Paul Offit, I decided to be like a doctor and look in a few books and see if it's possible and found that it was.  So I didn't have kids.  I didn't have any history of vaccine injury that I knew of, so I was just kind of trying to find where the truth lied.  And if the truth lied in the fact that vaccines are the greatest thing ever created and that they were preventing disease, that's what I would be telling the world.  But that is absolutely not what happened with any vaccine that I researched.  

06:03.  So after I finished my research into influenza vaccines in that particular year, the H5N1 vaccine, the swine flu vaccine I'm getting all the animals confused these days so anyway they were giving two vaccines out of those days for the flu and it seemed to have more of an impact than just a previous one and so I would be talking to the chief of Medicine or I'd be talking to other doctors or even to a parent somewhere and everyone would say the same thing to me what about polio and still to this day when I have a conversation about a vaccine the first question is probably the same to you Dell well what about polio and back then I would just say what about polio and I would have a look at polio so after I finished influenza the kidney issue I delved into polio and I'll tell you I never imagined doing this in a million years I spent two years of my life after I quit my job just looking into polio and what I found it was morbidly fast was it was morbidly fascinating and at the time I couldn't get enough of it I got all the polio surveillance units documents all the scandalous medical information that was available back then I found what other doctors were saying about the testing procedure back then about the Francis trials and the propaganda about the wonderful vaccine and it was anything but what we hear over and over and over again and it very much mirrors what happened with covid and I have been screaming from the mountain tops all around the world that this is nothing new what we're seeing with covid this is an old story that pretty much mirrors what we saw back in the smallpox era as well anyway that's the long answer to your question.

07:52.  And what's amazing about your book I mean I still remember I read it several times now probably need to read it 10 more times to fully integrate all of the information in there but we act as though sort of this anti-vaccine movement if you will or even with covid we saw I think it was like I remember at one point some CDC and FDA had heads were asked during the covid epidemic how much of your staff has gotten the covid vaccine and I think one of the answers was less than half we were shocked to find a doctors weren't taking the vaccine


 

OWEN BENJAMIN: mega cities in America are all Democrat. Why? Because they have to be because of population density. When you get to that size, the idea of a human being is bad. That's why they're all pro-abortion

remember when Usher, last Super Bowl, Usher sang "Let It Burn"? you know.  And here's the thing, I don't know if that was intentional, but it happened, and I look for those things . . .  --Owen Benjamin

When you see everything burn to the ground it is very quick that you see what matters.  And I had that happen existentially in Los Angeles when I was on the road.  One of my wife and [mine's] friends was assaulted, and I saw the lack of response from the police.  I saw how absolutely fragile that place is and how no one really cares.  And then I start looking around at how quickly . . . you know, they say 9 meals is the difference between revolution and civilization, nine meals.  If people miss nine meals, it's flames.  And there'd be times where in West Hollywood, and we just had a baby and we were moving out and we were renting this place and it lost power for 6 hours.  And you felt the animals all around you, like you felt like you were in the most dangerous place you could be.  Like it was worse than the Serengeti.  It was worse than the deep wilderness of Idaho.  It was haunting to realize how many strangers were around, like right now there are people setting fires in Los Angeles, and you think "Oh, deep State."  No, just random psychos.  One of the hardest things to admit is how fucked-up people can be.  There is just random dudes on the street that are mad at humanity and now is a time when [they] think, "Oh, let's start fires," and they're just starting fires.  

It's actually a collapse of morality, and that's why I've dedicated my life to building up Beartaria and being an example of how you can leave a place and still have a great life and you're not running away from something, you're running to something.

01:45.  Was Hollywood always bad or did it sneak up slowly?  

It's scale.  Scale is what makes things crazy.  So Hollywood . . . the amount of people in that area and the size of those media companies got so big, that it became completely inverted, where their main market is trying to appeal to China, and this and that, and how they keep consolidating all of the companies into bigger and bigger companies.  That is what really makes it psychotic, and there's no way around it because you look at all the red in the country, where it's like sane.  But I would argue that it's about population density, it has nothing to do with Democrats or Republicans.   They're like, "Oh, look at all these Democrat-run cities and how effed up they are."

I'm like, "Do you mean cities?"  Like what's a Republican-run city?  Like oh, Coeur d'Alene. I'm like yeah, it's 80,000 people.  Show me a mega city in America that isn't Democrat.  They're all Democrat.  Why?  Because they have to be because of population density.  When you get to that size, the idea of a human being is bad.  That's why they're all pro-abortion.  Racism is the scariest thing to them because everywhere they look is a thousand tribes staring at each other.  So the idea that there is tribal identity on any level is horrifying.  Guns are horrifying.  It's like putting a shank in a prison.  You know, you're like if someone has a gun there, it feels scary.  If someone has a gun where I live, it feels necessary, you know.  You see a human being where I live, and you think, "Oh, what are they up to?"  You hear gunshots, and you're like nice.  In a city, it's all bad, and it's because of density.  It's because of difference.  Like it's because of non-homogeny. It's not homogeneous.  So it's like you have all of these tribes squished together without a common interest, and that's why they're such a desperate attempt to break down culture and break down masculinity, because what else is terrifying in a city?  Testosterone, right?  People that don't care about money because money is how you control behavior in a city.

04:00.  It's all diffusion of responsibility too, so everyone is ready to blame someone or something else whenever a consequence occurs.  

Yeah, you're always like, "It was them, haha!" you know my, the lube and the chirping is humor.  Obviously, I'm being funny about acceptance of lies, but it's you know I'm being funny about it.  To immediately blame who you voted for, I think, is very lame.  I think it's very, very lame, where it's like, "Oh everyone who pressed the Gavin Newsome button, this is on you."  It's like what are you talking about?  This is so beyond politics.  This is biblical.  Like I'm talking to Kevin, my buddy Kevin, the other Kevin who has a beautiful home in Los Angeles, and he's like, "Bro, it's biblical here right now.  It's biblical.  Just fires," and I'm like, yeah, remember when Usher, last Super Bowl, Usher sang "Let It Burn"? you know.  And here's the thing, I don't know if that was intentional, but it happened, and I look for those things . . .