The Highwire with Del Bigtree - Episode 325: BURDEN OF TRUTH

Episode Date: June 23, 2023

Joe Rogan Calls For “Hotez vs. Kennedy Jr.” Debate, Pot Grows to $2.6M; Jefferey Jaxen Reports – FDA Ignores Undeniable Evidence pilling up over COVID Jab and Myocarditis, and introducing Walens...ky’s Heir to CDC Director’s Chair, Mandy Cohen; Former Trump White House COVID Task Force Member gives incredible inside look into what was going on inside the administration’s embattled public health response. Guests: Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Dr. Scott AtlasBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-highwire-with-del-bigtree--3620606/support.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:05 Did you notice that this show doesn't have any commercials? I'm not selling you diapers or vitamins or smoothies or gasoline. That's because I don't want corporate sponsors telling us what to investigate and what to say. Instead, you're our sponsors. This is a production by our nonprofit, the Informed Consent Action Network. If you want more investigations, more hard-hitting news. If you want the truth, go to Ican Decide.org and donate now. Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, wherever you.
Starting point is 00:00:51 you are out there in the world, it's time to step out onto the high wire. You know, we talk about it a lot here on the high wire that at the center of all of science is really the scientific method. What does that mean? It means dialogue. It means discussion. It means debate. Any idea should be allowed to be challenged. In fact, anything in science should demand the challenge, should want the challenge, but that just hasn't been the case for the last several years when it comes to the COVID pandemic. And when it comes to the discussion of vaccines, it's non-existent. No one will have a debate. In fact, I was set up to be a part of a debate that was going to take place back in 2018 called One Conversation. All the doctors were
Starting point is 00:01:31 lined up to have the conversation and then they bailed out three days ahead of time. It looked like this. We staged it anyway and we tried to make the arguments that they would have made for them. We were told the AMA, the CDC got involved. They all took off. Well, then in 2019, Robert Kennedy Jr. was invited to Connecticut. They were going to be voting on a law to remove the religious exemption. And so some Yale doctors and scientists said that they would debate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Here's what that looked like when we reported on it. I got really excited last week when I found out that Representative Josh Elliott in Connecticut was going to host a debate. Now, I've talked about this over and over again how many times we've tried to have a debate. So Bobby called Josh
Starting point is 00:02:18 Elliot before he got on the plane and said, look, I'm a really busy guy. So I just want to make sure this thing's on, right? It's a go. It's a go, Bobby. Get out here tomorrow. You're going to be on a panel with four other Yale scientists. Well, guess what? Yale bailed. That's it. Yale bailed out. They couldn't handle the likes of Bobby Kennedy. We are going to embark on a potential elimination of a religious exemption without the ability of the public to come in and give their side of the story. So this morning there was a forum scheduled where we would have had both sides of the issue present their information. And unfortunately, the other side of the issue arrogantly did not show up. This is not a partisan issue. This is a health crisis. I grew up with
Starting point is 00:03:09 the just the axiom that you can't have a democracy if you don't have free debate. that free debate no matter how controversial the issue you got to have free debate well since then I've had a little bit more success if you've been watching the high wire of course I debated alan Dershowitz the incredibly famous and talented lawyer on the COVID vaccine and then just a few weeks ago I had the opportunity to debate Neil degrass Tyson on COVID the pandemic and some of the issues around the vaccine there but I would say say just last week, this whole vaccine debate conversation went to a stratospheric level. Millions of dollars now involved in the idea of a debate. What am I talking about? You must
Starting point is 00:03:57 have been under a rock if you missed what happened when Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appeared on the Joe Rogan show. Take a look at this. RFK Jr. was on the Joe Rogan podcast and the discussion turned to vaccines. They talked about COVID, controversial treatments, and called the vaccine into questions. Obviously, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a threat to the establishment and starts this incredible Twitter storm. I had a maddening conversation with Peter Hottes once. Well, he's, that guy is, is, I mean, it's hard just watching a guy sit there and tell things that he's got to know are not true. I don't know if he knows they're not true, but he's a strange, example because when I was talking to him, he's overweight and I asked him, does he eat well?
Starting point is 00:04:50 He doesn't. He's saying, you know, he likes junk food. He eats junk food too much. He doesn't exercise. Very, he walks a little, he was saying. It doesn't take vitamins. And I was like, this is a crazy conversation. So you're advocating for this experimental MRNA vaccine technology. and you don't even do anything else to improve your immune system. Do you take care of your immune system in other ways? Do you take probiotics? Are you cautious about your diet? I'm not as cautious about my diet as I should be.
Starting point is 00:05:27 I'm a junk foodaholic, actually. Well, that seems like a terrible thing for your health. It is a terrible thing for my health and something my wife is working on it. But that seems ridiculous for someone who works with health. Yeah. Yeah. What's going on with you, man? Sometimes, man.
Starting point is 00:05:40 I just don't get it right. How often? What? How often? How often do I steal a bag of chips or something like that? How often do you eat garbage? I don't know. No, no, hopefully not every day.
Starting point is 00:05:51 But, you know, maybe a couple of times a week. Oh. That's what with Rachel, my daughter with autism, that's like our thing is to go to the, it's called the burger joint or to shake shack to get a cheeseburger. We'll sneak some fries. So you live in large, we call it. Like that mouth pleasure so much, you're willing to sacrifice a little bit of health.
Starting point is 00:06:16 Yeah, you know, I have to concede that's the case. Well, there's, I mean, I don't have to tell you, but there's a large body of data that connects poor diet to a host of diseases. That seems like a crazy decision for a guy in your line of work. There you go. Sometimes the, uh, sometimes the, uh, sometimes the, it's. It's not all brain. It's something else. Viralologist Peter Hotez Torren DeRogan on Twitter for hosting Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Starting point is 00:06:46 on his podcast. Hotez shared a vice article accusing him of spreading misinformation for hosting vaccine critic RFK Jr. Nobody will debate me. For 18 years, nobody will debate me. In fact, I've scheduled many, many debates. And I've asked Hotes many, many times to debate me.
Starting point is 00:07:05 And I think you've asked him here, why don't you debate Robert Kennedy? And he said, because he's a cunning lawyer or something like that. But I've debated HOTUS on the telephone with, you know, with kind of a referee. And, you know, his science is just made up. He cannot stand by it. He can't cite studies. When Hotez publicly criticized, quote, the misinformation is when Rogan, in true Rogan form, hit back.
Starting point is 00:07:35 He invited him on to challenge RFCK. Jr. three-hour open debate, no holds barred. Rogan even promised to give Hotez 100,000 to the charity of his choice. The point is anti-vaccine disinformation, it's always done a lot of damage in harm, but now it's a lethal force in the United States. And that's why we, that's why we have to have that discussion.
Starting point is 00:07:56 And I offered to come and talk to go on Joe Rogan again. I've been on a couple of times and have that discussion with it, but not to turn it into the Jerry Springer show with having RFK Jr. on. Rogan's initial offer of $100,000 climbed to over $1.5 million. People who added hundreds of thousands of dollars to Rogan's initial offer include Pershing Square, CEO Bill Ackman, and philanthropist Steve Kirsch.
Starting point is 00:08:22 Elon Musk got involved, him saying, quote, he knows he's wrong, he's scared. Obviously, he's referring to HOTES. The pot continues to grow from influencers who are pledging funds. Now it's about 2.62 million. I'm going to give it a 0% chance. There is no way Potaz will debate. He cannot handle it. All right, well, that bet is now up to $2.62 million.
Starting point is 00:08:48 Tens of millions of people have been weighing in on this conversation. It's my honor and pleasure to be joined right now by Robert Kennedy Jr. Robert looks like we've got you stuck in some diners somewhere in America right now. I want to thank you for taking the time to join us. Thank you. Yeah, I'm in Littleton, New Hampshire. about a speech at a work fest here. I'm really happy to talk to you now.
Starting point is 00:09:15 It's good to have you here. So this is all you basically broke Twitter this week with this debate. First of all, you know, I think the Rogan podcast was one of the first times you've had almost three hours to really lay out your perspective on vaccinations, which, you know, is very nuanced and powerful. millions of people weighing in why is this such an important topic for you it's a topic you know that i've been that i stumbled into that i got you know i got drag kicking and screaming into this it's not something i wanted to do but i saw the just facts and science that were that were shocking to me and uh you know you as you know once you start because the same thing happened to you you torture your whole career because you saw things that you just could not ignore.
Starting point is 00:10:10 Right. You know, I think HOTAS does not want to debate me because my, the only way that I am discredited is if I can be silenced outright or what I've been saying has been mischaracterized, it's unreasonable, that's crazy or whatever. And that once people see me and they hear my arguments they understand these are just common sense arguments i'm not trying to stop people from getting vaccinated i've never been anti-fax any vaccine never i've always said i'm not any vaccine or any vaccine that is shown to be safe and effective but that we need actually to have robust science we need regulators who are not you know financially entangled with the with the pharmaceutical industry that they're supposed to be regulating and
Starting point is 00:11:05 And we don't have those things in this country right now. And so, Potez and others, he is the most visible leader of the pro-vaccine movement of the vaccine at any cost movement. And his premise is that industries from vaccines are so rare that nobody should pay attention to them. They're one in a million, which is his position. But the actual science, when CDC has paid for studies, the science shows the injury rates are 1 in 39. Many of these injuries are serious, and some of them even kill people. For each vaccine, 1 in 39. And, you know, this is CDC's own study.
Starting point is 00:11:51 The Lazarus study, for example, but many, many others. You look at the Garda's cello clinical trials, many others say 1 in 37, 1 in 39, 2.6. percent of people or 2.7 or 2.3, it's always around that area. The question then becomes, what do we do with the people who are injured? Do we just ignore them and say they don't exist and de-platform them and gaslight them, which is what HOTES policy has been? Let's instead talk about how we handle those injuries and whether those people should actually be compensated and whether there should be a good surveillance system that actually works. They all say, OTA says, well, the Faire system doesn't work.
Starting point is 00:12:37 The Faire system is the only system they got. They've known it doesn't work for 40 years. And they've actually developed another system in 210 that would work. When they implemented that system in one HMO of Harvard Pilgrim up in Austin, they found that the injury rates that were being reported were 1 in 30, or one in 39 kids. And so they said, we don't want this system. It's telling too much truth.
Starting point is 00:13:04 And it was a machine counting. The system now is voluntary. And their own data show from CDC's own study, 2010 study, Clazoros, shows that fewer than 1%, fewer than 1% of vaccine injuries are actually reported. So that means, you know, less than 1 in 100, For every vaccine injury, there's more than 100 that are out there for everyone reported. Of course, this is something that would be intolerable to anybody, and so they have to deny it.
Starting point is 00:13:41 And that's why he won't debate. So you don't think he'll ever show up for this debate, even though we're pushing $3 million to any nonprofit he wants to give it to? You don't think he'll show up? No, I do not think he will debate. I don't think that he can survive a debate. I don't think he can survive facts. And it's not Dell that I'm a good debater. It's just that I do know the facts and I can cite the sources
Starting point is 00:14:07 and I also know any sources that he's going to cite. I know, you know, I have domain knowledge of this because I've been studying and I'm litigating it for so long. And I think that, you know, he is the, you know, years ago, I had about a 10-hour discussion on telephone. by telephone, many, many phone calls over several months with O-Taz, with a referee. And it was supposed to be a prelude to a public debate. But in the end, he said, well, that he would like to debate,
Starting point is 00:14:44 but that NIH was ordering him not to debate. I don't know if that's true or not. The weird thing was he wasn't even working for NIH. I'm not by NIH. Maybe he meant Anthony Fauci or Francis Collins. I don't know. It's all speculation. I can only tell you what Peter Otis told me. He said he was not going to debate me because NIH had ordered him not to do so. Are you open to debating anyone else in the scientific community? If it's not Peter Hotes, maybe he's shackled, but a Paul Offit or a Stanley Plotkin is your, are you basically, I mean, what is your statement to the scientific community? community about a debate. Who are you open to debating on this? I'll debate anybody. Okay. I mean, I, you know, let me give you a proviso. If it's somebody totally unqualified to debate me, if it's somebody that, you know, the
Starting point is 00:15:38 entire, the other side is, and dismiss as a, you know, it's a polon, as a poluka, you know, as somebody who, right, but if it's somebody who's, you know, in the, in the, the arena where the other side puts credence in him so that if he loses that debate, you know, it actually is meaningful to everybody, then I'll debate them. Well, I just want to thank you. You have been obviously at the forefront of this. This, I think, is one of the biggest moments for this conversation. It's something that we've worked hard to make it public.
Starting point is 00:16:12 This needs to be a conversation. This explosion on Twitter is the biggest thing we've ever seen. Your, you know, conversation with Joe Rogan was spectacular. And for those that watch this show, the high wire, and really want someone that's not afraid to ask the hard questions, you were certainly persevering there. Where do we follow you on Twitter? I mean, is it, you know, what we're the best place to follow what you're doing and what happens with this debate in the future? You know, it's Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Twitter. I'm on Instagram. I'm on TikTok now. They put me back on TikTok. They put me back on Instagram. I have a steep platform for years on those.
Starting point is 00:16:51 probably can't find much on YouTube because somebody puts it up, they take, YouTube takes it down, it's a censorship machine. But anyway, I'm really, really happy for everything that you do, Del. Thank you. Well, we're in this together, and there's a lot of people behind you now in this work, so it's really important. I want to thank you for taking the time. I know you're on the run, so we're going to let you go, save travels,
Starting point is 00:17:16 and I'll see you somewhere out there real soon. Thank you to help. Excuse me, my friend. Take care. You know, it's really interesting when he says that Peter Hotez said that the NIH was stopping him from having that debate. I think one of the most important statements when we think about this conversation, why won't they have the conversation? Clearly, there's no one in science or medicine that can say that vaccines don't hurt anybody, don't kill anybody. That would fly in the face of all that we know to be true about any pharmaceutical product on the world.
Starting point is 00:17:51 I've even gone as far as to say if you had a stadium full of people, you would be hard pressed to find a piece of food that you could force everyone to take that stadium that someone wouldn't have an anaphylactic reaction and potentially die. That's just the way it is. And so I think Robert Kennedy's right. Their concern is that you're going to have to admit some people are being injured, some children being killed by this vaccine program, and no matter how small that is, are we not here to take care of them too?
Starting point is 00:18:17 Is there not some way to create alternatives for them? Is there not some way to test and see what those vulnerabilities are? Have a better sense of what's going on here so that everybody in America is safe? I think that that's, you know, the most important thing. And the former head of the NIH, when we speak about the NIH, Dr. Bernardine Healy, so one of the leading scientists in the world, she looked into vaccines. She was asked in a CBS interview, many years ago, but why is it that, you know, what she found when she was looking at the
Starting point is 00:18:49 vaccine program, I think this says it all. This is why they won't debate. Take a look at this. This is the time when we do have the opportunity to understand whether or not there are susceptible children, perhaps genetically, perhaps they have a metabolic issue, mitochondrial disorder, immunological issue that makes them more susceptible to that. vaccines plural or to one particular vaccine or to a component of vaccine like Mercury. The fact that there is concern that you don't want to know that susceptible group is a real disappointment to me. If you know that susceptible group, you can save those children. The reason why they didn't want to look for those susceptibility groups was because they're afraid that if they found them,
Starting point is 00:19:37 however big or small they were, that that would scare the public away. It sounds like you don't think the hypothesis of a link between vaccines and autism is completely irrational. So when I first heard about it, I thought, well, that doesn't make sense to me. The more you delve into it, if you look at the basic science, if you look at the research that's been done in animals, if you also look at some of these individual cases, and if you look at the evidence that there is no link, what I come away with is the question has not been answered. I think it's really important for everyone to wrap their head around what she said there because I think it's true. It's human nature and it makes some sense.
Starting point is 00:20:16 Our medical establishment refuses to do proper studies, demographic studies or even retrospective studies using databases like the VSD at the CDC that has over 10 million people in it. There have been studies of that database saying you absolutely can do a vaccinated versus unvaccinated study, a comparative study, to see if there's a. difference in health outcomes and maybe start triangulating the issues. But what she's telling you is the reason they refuse to do those studies that they are petrified, that if they ever do a study, even asking the question, and they find out that there's even a small group of people that are actually being injured and killed by vaccines, which is a no-brainer. You know that's the case. Penicillin is not good for everybody. We have alternatives for people who have allergic reaction to penicillin. That is true about every drug. Every cancer drug has an alternative that you can find
Starting point is 00:21:08 the one you're using is killing you. This is true about vaccines too, but the vaccine program is the only product forced upon you by a mandate, the only one being forced if you want to go to school. So they're terrified that if you find out there's a small group of people that are actually being injured and killed, like they've been saying across the world, then they're afraid the rest of you that are not having an issue with vaccines will freak out, that you'll somehow identify with that smaller group. And this is what has the entire medical establishment paralyzed and why proper science is not being done. We need to find a way through this juggernaut.
Starting point is 00:21:44 You know, this is what the issue is for anyone that might be new to the high wire. Anyway, I have a gigantic show. I just got done speaking with Robert Kennedy Jr., obviously, who is a big figure in this conversation. And coming up, maybe one of my biggest bucket list interviews of all times, waiting right now to come onto this stage is Dr. Scott Atlas, the doctor brought into try and bring some sense inside of the White House in the middle of the pandemic. We're going to find out what happened there.
Starting point is 00:22:14 But first, it's time for The Jackson Report. All right, Jeffrey Jackson, a little bit giddy. I'm going to try and stay focused here. Got Scott Atlas coming up, but first, what's happening in the news? All right, Del. Well, we know now that the FDA has denied a citizen's petition to update the COVID label with evidence of the adverse reactions that there is a basis, a scientific basis, to really put on there.
Starting point is 00:22:46 This idea, like Kennedy was saying, and like you were saying, of this see no evil, hear no evil posture by the U.S. health agencies, it has carried over into big techs censorship algorithms, into kind of this like 21st century digital algorithmic censorship complex that we're living in. And recently, Mark Zuckerberg, he's the leader of META, once Facebook. He had a candid moment on an interview recently where he talked about, you know, he was the hammer of censorship, his organization with Instagram as well. And he had his candid moment where he's starting to talk about, well, maybe we did the wrong thing.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Take a listen. All right. I do think that you get to a set of harms where there is more social debate around it. So misinformation, I think, has been a really tricky one because there are things that are kind of obviously false. right that are maybe factual um but may not be harmful um since like all right are you going to censor someone for just being wrong it's you know if there's no kind of harm implication of what they're doing i think that that's there's there's a bunch of real kind of issues and challenges there but then i think that there are other places where it is um you just take some of the stuff
Starting point is 00:24:08 around COVID earlier on in the pandemic where um there were you know real health implications But there hadn't been time to fully vet a bunch of the scientific assumptions. And, you know, unfortunately, I think a lot of the kind of establishment on that, you know, kind of waffled on a bunch of facts and, you know, asked for a bunch of things to be censored that in retrospect ended up being, you know, more debatable or true. And that stuff is really tough, right, and really undermines trust. So, yeah, there he says, waffled on facts. And, you know, he was kind of waffling as well, saying like, well, we kind of just censored it. and maybe it turned out to be true. But they were censoring people's actual stories
Starting point is 00:24:49 about adverse reactions after a vaccine. They were talking about, you know, the harms of lockdowns, masking. Remember, we couldn't even ask about the origins of the virus if it came from a lab or for as natural. If you ended up on one side of that equation, you were censored from the very beginning. Look, we lost our Facebook channel. That happened.
Starting point is 00:25:06 And it's incredible to hear him say, you know, erring on the side of caution, we went with a shoot first, destroy the constant, you know, the First Amendment of the United States of America, and then ask questions later. And as it turns out, we made some mistakes. Sorry about that. Sorry about the destruction of your civil rights here in America. And one of the leading healthcare professionals leading that charge was outgoing director now of the CDC,
Starting point is 00:25:29 Rochelle Willinsky. She appeared and testified before the select committee on the coronavirus pandemic recently, where she was questioned by Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green. Take a look how that went. All right. We heard you say today that the COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective. But what I'd like to talk to you today about is the 1.5 million VAIRs reports that also reported 35,000 deaths associated with the COVID-19 vaccine. And this has been what many Americans feel like a largely ignored issue. They feel like the CDC has completely ignored the reports. They feel like you, as the CDC director, have completely ignored their report. And and I'd like to talk about that a little bit.
Starting point is 00:26:17 In 2020, it was late 2020 when Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine was approved, and there were, COVID-19 vaccines were the second highest reported. That was over 10,000. But in 2021, when vaccines were mandated, it was a federal mandate in September 9th of 2021. Federal employees and contractors were required. 90% of the 3.5 million people employed or contracted under the federal government got at least one dose of the vaccine. Vaccine cards were widely required in Democrat-run cities all over the country, basically to become a member of society.
Starting point is 00:26:59 And in 2021, COVID-19 reports skyrocketed to number one at 728,8,829 reports. second was the Zoster-Shingles vaccine at just over 14,000. That's a massive number. I do want to talk a minute about the vaccine adverse reporting. Vaccine-averse event reporting system. So that system is intended for any person who has gotten a vaccine if they have an untoward event after that vaccine, whether or not is related to the vaccine, they report. It is intended to have an over-reporting. All of the vaccine, not all, most of the vaccines that were being given. Remember, we gave 676 million doses of the vaccine. Any adverse event, if you got hit by a truck after you got your vaccine, that was reported to the vaccine adverse event reporting
Starting point is 00:27:52 system. I mean, it's incredible to watch this statement about car accidents. They bring this up, and I'd like to know what percentage actually somehow blamed the car accident. We've done a lot of investigation. This is it's really hard to fill out of theirs report. Most doctors, when they're ask, can't take the time. The screen closes out on you. You have to start all over. But mostly what Robert Kennedy Jr. said is true? Why, after 40 years, is this the only real capture system we have, especially when you release an experimental product knowing we're going to need a robust system if we're going to catch any problems of the vaccine? So it's absolutely deplorable that you just say, well, you can't even trust it. We'll build a better one then. And I also want to
Starting point is 00:28:33 put this out there. For anyone's like, yeah, it's ridiculous car accidents. Okay, what was one of the problems they have with the vaccine. Why did they start making people getting the COVID vaccine stay in the office for 45 minutes? Because they were passing out cold. What happens if you're leaving your doctor's office and you pass out cold while driving? Just going to put it out there so that you don't think it's just absolutely preposterous that someone put a car accident in here. I'm not sure how many there are, but I'm just saying there are reasons why a car accident could be in there. Think of pay being when you pass out, which is a side effect that could actually, you know, cause some problems if it happened while you're driving. And this very system has been a massive point of contention because like you said, it's the only system, but also its ability to report. So this is a very rare moment because we never get a person of the CDC talking about this system, let alone a director. So Wienniewski says it's intended to have overreporting, so have no fear. So let's really just fact check that claim really quick. So in 2000, there was a report by the Committee of Government Reform. And this looked at a vaccine injury compensation program, which very, very much very.
Starting point is 00:29:37 is under and it was it's called addressing the needs and improving practices. And it says this in that report. While the vaccine adverse events reporting system, Vares may be lauded as quote, the front line of the vaccine safety, the lack of enforcement provisions and effective monitoring of reporting practices preclude accurate assessments of the extent to which adverse events are actually reported. Former FDA Commissioner David A. Kessler has estimated that VERS reports currently represent only a fraction of the serious adverse events. And then we go on to what Kennedy was saying, the Harbor Pilgrim study. That ended in 2009.
Starting point is 00:30:12 And that's where CDC gave almost a million dollars to this large health care network and said, automate it. Take the human factor out of it and automate it for 30 days. Tell me what you find. 715,000 people in this study, I guess you want to call it. And this is what they found. They write this, quote, adverse events from drugs and vaccines are common but underreported. Fewer than 1% of vaccine adverse events are reported. And so people can say, well, that was decades ago.
Starting point is 00:30:39 The system's improved. We really had it online for COVID. Not so fast. What was one of the first besides the fainting and anaphylactic shocks of the COVID vaccine? One of the first major issues to pop up was myocarditis from MRI vaccines in young boys. And so what they find, the Journal of the American Medical Association looked at that from the vaccine rollout in December 2020 to August in 2021. They used the various system. The researchers use the various system to base.
Starting point is 00:31:07 this study on and what did they find? They said, well, as we're using this system, we found this. As a passive system, VERS data are subject to reporting biases in that both underreporting and overreporting are possible. Given the high verification rates of reports of myocarditis to VERS after MRNA-based COVID-19 vaccination, underreporting is more likely. Therefore, the actual rates of myocardis per million doses of vaccines are likely higher than estimated. So even the researchers are saying, look, we're using this thing. but it's under reporting. And since then, obviously, that was in 2022.
Starting point is 00:31:42 We're getting reports of myocarditis is a lot more than even found in that study. And for people that want to see where VERS is at right now when it comes to the COVID vaccine, here's their most recent numbers from Open Vairs, 35,398 deaths that are reported. Remember, we usually see about 400 deaths per year from the vaccine program, which I think is extremely high. I will also say that none of these have been fully verified. So these are just reports, not necessarily the numbers. But as we're saying, this could be somewhere between 1 to 10% of the actual amount of numbers,
Starting point is 00:32:14 203,000 hospitalizations, 151,000 urgent care, 236,000 doctor visits, bells, palsy, all the rest. And by the way, go to our website and check out the VSAFE data, which is very accurate because it monitored people. And you'll see, you know, serious adverse events at rates that are just, astronomical. This is one of the things that we focus a lot on and rightfully so. And so the pandemic has wound down and you see people that were once leading a charge, Fauci's out. Francis Collins is gone. And now Walensky is on her way out as well. And people are looking at the CDC because this is an agency that admitted mistakes that during the pandemic, admitted that they were going to do an internal review of the agency. They're going to
Starting point is 00:32:59 do a sweeping reorganization. And even the public is saying that they don't trust them. Look at this. This is just from two months ago. This is a survey. A quarter of Americans distrust CDC recommendation survey finds. If you go into that article, you read about the survey, a total of 63 percent total are questioning the trust of the agency in one way or another. So what are we going to do? Are we going to put in somebody that is a free thinking, really? Critical thinking. How about the word? Like critical thinking, you know, medical professional. Right. Someone who's not just going to take the football, the handout of a, uh, uh, uh, talking point, not question it and run out to the public with it over the media. So we have now a new CDC director that Biden has chosen. Her name is Mandy Cohen. Biden picks Mandy Cohen, the architect of North Carolina's COVID-19 response as CDC director. And you hear that. You hear architect, well, it must be something very important she did there in North Carolina. And so this is,
Starting point is 00:33:57 let's take a little background of her. So any public health official, especially someone going into that high position should be judged by how they handle themselves during the pandemic. This is one of the most defining moments in public health history of the century. And so what is their report card on this? So let's look at Mandy Cohen in June of 2021. So remember now, E-Mails, FOIA emails have just come out showing that Rochelle Wiennski was discussing vaccine breakthrough infections as early as January 30th, 2021. So fast forward to June of 2020.
Starting point is 00:34:33 21. We know there's breakthrough infections. We know you can transmit this virus if you get the vaccine. Let's listen to what Mandy Cohen does and says in the public. Okay. What we heard from the CDC last week was even better news than we had heard before, right? We had heard that vaccines protect you from getting COVID. I think the new piece of information for us was now we really have more definitive data to show that it also prevents you from giving COVID to us. And that's really when the masks come in, right? Is the mask we're about protecting you from giving COVID to others, even if you don't know you have it? And the fact that the CDC was so confident to say, now we know that these vaccines not only protect you as an individual,
Starting point is 00:35:17 it protects you from giving it to others. I think that's why we're able to move forward more quickly. I love that all these people are on camera saying this over and over again. And what a disastrous failure of judgment that has ended up, you know, being. And anybody, including us, which we did, can look at the trials, Pfizer trials. They weren't even tested to see if they stopped transmission. Right. And so there's the CDC data.
Starting point is 00:35:41 Now we know that she was wrong. Cleveland Clinic study recently has shown that. This is it. Over 51,000 employees looking at the effectiveness of the bi-valent vaccine, and they concluded this, the risk of COVID-19, increased with time since the most recent prior COVID-19 episode and with the number of vaccine doses previously received. So we're talking negative efficacy, essentially. More vaccines you get, the more at risk you are for being infected,
Starting point is 00:36:05 hardly what we think of when we think of the definition of the vaccine. And so let's talk about schools, school closures, masking. How does she do on those? Because those are obviously huge, huge points of contention again here during that COVID pandemic response. In September of 2021, the Union Country School Board, that's in North Carolina, voted 8 to 1 to immediately end staff. responsibility for contact tracing quarantine operations for asymptomatic students and staff.
Starting point is 00:36:35 Wow. What did Mandy Cohen do? Here's the headline from that time. She sent them a legal action may be required to protect the public's health states pens letter to Union County Public Schools to follow COVID-19 toolkit. That was Mandy Cohen signing her name on that letter. She basically threatened legal action and what they did was they actually backed down the school, reversed that eight to one vote and said, sorry, we don't want a legal benefit. with our state health department. So we had to stop that. Now, let's look at...
Starting point is 00:37:04 So bullying schools that were just trying to get their kids in education. Unbelievable. It appears so. And so, you know, as we sit here, we're still waiting to hear about all of those benefits of masking kindergartners and kids during the pandemic for extended periods of time. We know the harms.
Starting point is 00:37:20 The harms are showing up with their development. But how did North Carolina handle this? Well, here's the headline from that time. North Carolina recommends districts, require masks for all students and teachers in K through eight schools, unvaccinated high school, students and teachers as well. And you start to go in this article and you read, the guidance cuts off at eighth grade because there's a mix of children who are eligible in middle school, Cohen says. She's hoping the incentive to take off masks will encourage high schoolers to get
Starting point is 00:37:49 vaccinated. So it's not science. It's an incentive. And it goes on to say this. Cohen says high schools may still require universal masking at the high school. For example, if they think their current vaccination rate is too low. So here's your health department head, given the hat tip to high school saying, you know what? If you're not happy with your vaccination rate, mask those kids up until they comply because that is what I'm telling you to do. And so we have some more video of Cohen. She was recently at kind of a Q&A session in North Carolina on a college campus. And she was really candid about some of the ways that the COVID restrictions were being thought about, were being talked about behind closed doors. Kind of gives you a window more of who she is. Take a look. Probably the person
Starting point is 00:38:34 I called most was the Secretary of Health and Human Services in Massachusetts. She worked for a Republican governor just to, but, you know, when she was like, are you, are you going to let them have professional football? And I was like, nope. And she's like, okay, neither are we, near we, So, you know, it was like conversations like that. So or I'd be like, so when are you going to think about lightening up a mess? They're like, you're like next Monday. I'm like, okay, next Monday. Because it's science.
Starting point is 00:39:06 Wow. Amazing. And so, you know, looking at all this, I think the public, you know, the public has watched the flip-flop of Fauci, of Walensky, all of these years and we're hoping all right at least we're not going to have somebody that is in it cut from the same cloth as fouchy you know this double-talking bureaucrat that's been in office forever and unfortunately then i start looking on the internet and i see a picture that looks like this and this is man going with a fouchy face map and so there you have it um i guess we're going to be reporting though at every step of the way because she has some big shoes to fill,
Starting point is 00:39:51 and there's a lot of people watching how the CDC is going to gain back the trust of Americans. And we've had media like never before looking at this agency. So we'll see how they baked cookies in public this time. Well, maybe if she just sticks to calling friends and rolling dice to make decisions for the CDC, you know, we'll sort of bring that trust right back to where it used to be. Jeffrey, great reporting, amazing stuff. Just such an honor to be working with you, so I'll see you next week. Thank you, Del.
Starting point is 00:40:21 All right, if you like what Jeffrey's doing, you should definitely check him out on the Jackson Report, which is a part of the constant newspaper that we're putting out. We also have the informant, which is a gift to all of you that are donating to make this show possible, to make our legal work possibly. The informant is our gift to you brand new. I want to say episode, a new informant has just come out, so you should definitely check the volume. That's the word, check that out. And I want to thank all of you that make this show possible.
Starting point is 00:40:52 Through your donations, we are able to not be controlled by our sponsors so we can ask any question we want. We can have whatever debate we want, and there's nothing anyone can do about it. You make that possible. As you watch this show, I want you to ask yourself, especially those of you have been here from the beginning. Wow, how did the high wire get so much? of it right. Well, it's because we have an international body of scientists that have been weighing
Starting point is 00:41:16 in from the beginning and giving us actual science and evidence. We don't call friends and roll dice to figure out what's going on. We actually look to the sources we read our science to make that possible. We'll keep this team together. We need your help. So please become a recurring donor. Just go to the highwire.com up there on the top of the screen. Hit donate to ICANN. We're asking for recurring donation so whether it's a dollar or five dollars or twenty three dollars a month for twenty twenty three you make it possible for us to be free to report whatever we damn well please and we try to report what we think you care about speaking of caring about so many of us watch this incredible experience happen
Starting point is 00:41:58 before our eyes we lost our jobs where our children were kept home many of them getting depressed we saw our economy destroyed all by a White House and a set of decisions by a task force that seemed, especially if you're watching the high wire, to be going against the science of what we actually saw happening around the world. At the center of it, there was a moment where there was a bright, shining light, at least from our perspective that stepped in there. His name was Dr. Scott Atlas. He has been called a hero.
Starting point is 00:42:30 He has been called a villain. And when you watch him in the news, this is what that has looked like. Dr. Scott Atlas, President Trump's special advisor on the pandemic. Scott is a very famous man who's also very highly respected. Chief President at Northwestern Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania, expert in neuroradiology. We have a man with us who's a great expert from Stanford. He's working with us. He's consulting with us. Dr. Scott Atlas.
Starting point is 00:42:59 Thank you, Mr. President. It's a great honor to be asked to help out in any way I can. I'm a health care policy person and I have a background in medical science. My role really is to translate medical science into public policy. Herd immunity or population immunity exists when enough people in a population, you know, get an infection, have their own established immunity and break the chains of connectivity of contagiousness to people, particularly the vulnerable. That's just a known fact. That's an immunological.
Starting point is 00:43:34 concept. We know that the risk of the disease is extremely low for children, even less than that of seasonal flu. We know that the harms of locking out the children from school are enormous. And we also know that educating America's children is right at the top of the list for our nation's priorities. In the cities, in the states, in the countries that had a mass mandate, the cases exploded. And when you compare, which I think is really striking, what happens? in this fall surge, fall winter between Florida and California, because they're distinctly opposite in how the governors handled things. Florida did better than California. This kind of isolation is one of the unspoken tragedies of the elderly who are now being told, don't see your
Starting point is 00:44:21 family at Thanksgiving. For many people, this is their final Thanksgiving, believe it or not, what are we doing here? Dr. Atlas, okay, a guy with no pandemic experience. Scott Atlas, whose public stance on the pandemic echoes Trump's unscientific claims. If you don't believe that herd immunity exists as a pathway to block, as a way to block the pathways to the vulnerable in an infection, then you would never really advocate or believe in giving widespread vaccination. That's the whole point of it. A man who has no background in infectious disease. He's a radiologist. All righty.
Starting point is 00:45:00 It's like getting a podiatrist to work on your... spine. Dr. Atlas repeatedly questioned the efficacy of face masks. He talked about the potential benefits of herd immunity. He also wondered whether all children essentially should go back to school without changing guidelines. It is incontrovertible that there is extremely low risk to children from this illness, not only low risk, but lower risk in seasonal influenza for both hospitalization and death. Americans hear one thing from the CDC director and another thing for from you, who are we to believe? You're supposed to believe the science,
Starting point is 00:45:38 and I'm telling you the science. Not telling a science. I'm telling you the science, and that's the answer. And if you want to look up all the data, you're free to. This is the most irrational public policy, probably in modern history. You don't lock down the children because you are personally afraid.
Starting point is 00:45:54 It's totally outrageous. Dr. Scott Atlas, President Trump's special advisor on the pandemic, has resigned his post. I don't just blindly accept. CDC data. They've been erratic in what they've said. He was serving a 130 day detail, which was set to expire this week. That's why he submitted his resignation yesterday in a letter to the president. He defended his views.
Starting point is 00:46:19 I actually thought that, you know, truth mattered, that facts mattered. And my role was to provide the best possible advice in a big crisis. If you don't know this stuff, you shouldn't be in the CDC. If you don't know this stuff, you should not be advising the President of the United States. And if you don't know this stuff, you certainly should not be on TV talking to the American public. It is absolutely my honor and pleasure to be joined by Dr. Scott Atlas. Thank you so much. Thank you for having me.
Starting point is 00:46:50 So your book, A Plague Upon Our House. It's obviously worn out. I've read it several times. I have like a million things I would love to talk to you about. We will never get to all of it. But all I can say is this truly is a bucketless moment for me. We have, I've been so curious about what happened, you know, inside the White House. We were watching it from the outside.
Starting point is 00:47:14 But to begin with, when the pandemic hit, what first inspired you to sort of start investigating it and, you know, starting to write articles about it? Sure. So I was working, as I have been doing for over a decade in helping. health care policy, which basically combines my medical science background of 25 years with how we should have our health care system to increase access and quality. And I was working on a book that, because I thought, frankly, that the 20-20-year would be an issue of importance, health care system reform. So I was writing this book and the data, the numbers, the numbers.
Starting point is 00:48:01 the studies about the Princess Diamond Ship of Japan and the Fear and the World Health Organization information on this infection fatality rate that was stratospheric came out. And so I was saying, well, what's going on here because it's obvious who's at risk and the infection fatality rate was being calculated incorrectly because they weren't considering in the denominator of that fraction everyone who would be infected because most people, a large percentage anyway with the respiratory infection are asymptomatic. Right. So this number was calculated on the base of who was really sick enough to go see a doctor. So I'm home, and I start explaining this to my own son.
Starting point is 00:48:43 And my kids are, you know, I have two sons, and they're both smarter than I am, and that's good. That'd be amazing. Doesn't mean they know more, but they're smarter. I'm one of those. So I'm explaining this to my sons, and they don't understand what I'm talking about. And I'm saying to myself, wait a second, this is obvious stuff. This is not complicated. You don't lock down low-risk people and not protect the high-risk people
Starting point is 00:49:11 and watch the high-risk people, the elderly in the nursing homes, particularly, die. This was a failed strategy. And yet people were frantic because of the media, because of the WHO, because of a lot of reasons. And so I said, okay, if you don't understand this, then I need to get working on, researching it and explaining it. And so I dropped everything about my book and I started working on specifically researching the pandemic and, you know, going through all the data, going through the articles, speaking to epidemiologists every day, every other day, and became visible in the news because it became very obvious in March of 2020 when I wrote a piece saying,
Starting point is 00:49:55 and the lockdowns, this is the wrong strategy and increased the protection. of the people who are high risk, meaning the elderly, and I called it targeted protection. Here is the article in the Hill. The data is in, stop the panic, and end the total isolation. In fact, you had several articles out in the Hill. The COVID-19 shutdown will cost American millions of years of life. Science has opened the schools. I mean, fear first, education, last. All of these things we were reporting on, actually, and you popped up. In fact, one point, we were doing a show and celebrating that there were several voices that were not being heard, just to give you a sense of sort of how we've been tracking you, take a look at this.
Starting point is 00:50:37 The global data showed at the very beginning and appeared to show to this day that 98 to 99% of all cases are mild. While lockdowns were justified initially, their perpetuation may risk many lives. Treating gut COVID-19 at all costs is severely restricting other medical care and insufficiency. stilling fear in the public, creating a massive health disaster in addition to the severe economic harms that would generate a world poverty crisis with incalculable consequences. Does anyone else out there wish you could vote on who's going to run this country? Since clearly presidents aren't and prime ministers aren't around the world, now it's doctors, then we should be allowed to vote, right?
Starting point is 00:51:21 I want to vote out Fauci and Birx, maybe vote in, Atlas, Katz, Ionidis, and Mr. Roy, all of these people brilliant scientists that have established medical schools in this country. I'd like them making the decision in this country, wouldn't you? That was May. We were talking about what you were writing. And I want to give you this opportunity because I think it's one of the issues. The media, and we'll talk about this, really defined who you are. But what is your background?
Starting point is 00:51:49 I mean, someone will say, oh, he's a di-oh, he's a radiologist. What does he have to do in this space? When you say, you know, you're a health, you know, specialist in sort of populations in health, what do you mean by that? Sure. What's your background? My background is I'm an MD. I was educated at University of Chicago School of Medicine.
Starting point is 00:52:11 I did a, I was all academic medicine for the first 25 years of my career, which means that I did my training at Northwestern and then at University of Pennsylvania. I was an assistant professor at University of Pennsylvania. I ended up working for most of my career there and then I came to Stanford. And for those 25 years, I worked as a professor and a researcher and teaching other doctors and a clinician doing medical procedures, etc. in neurologic disorders of the brain and spine. I wrote the main book, most people would say, in magnetic resonance imaging MRI of the brain and spine. So when we're getting MRIs, our doctors that are doing that are well aware of the work
Starting point is 00:52:56 that you've done because that's a huge part of your back. Yes, I mean, the book is considered one of the books in MRI, if not the main book. And then over the course of my academic career, I have over 100 scientific publications in peer-reviewed journals. I've been funded over 30 different grants. I've been given visiting professor. lectures over 600 times at every major medical school in the country. And when I came to Stanford in 1998, I started to work also on health policy. And so I had sort of two positions. I was the professor and chief of neuro-aology in the Stanford University Medical School,
Starting point is 00:53:44 and I worked simultaneously on health policy, which was integrating information and knowledge about medical science with economics and access and quality of health care, medical care delivery, because most people that are in health policy don't really understand medicine. They understand economics of health care, but that's it. And so then in 2012, which is maybe more information than you asked for, but I was offered an endowed chair at Hoover Institution, which is a public policy institute as part of Stanford University. Okay.
Starting point is 00:54:18 And I resigned from the medical school in 2012 because I don't like to dabble in things. I don't think it's, I think it's hard enough to do one thing very, very well, expert level. And so I quit the medical school and went over to work on health policy in 2012. So for over a decade, I'm working on health policy. And what this crisis of COVID, the pandemic, required was health policy. Right. That's my lane. It's not a surprise that most of the Stanford University medical school professors don't know the data,
Starting point is 00:54:53 didn't understand what to do with this pandemic. Because the job of a health policy person is to integrate all the information and figure out how to address all public health, not just focus on stopping a single infection. So the breadth of knowledge of a health policy person is far broader than someone who, say, a virologist or an epidemiologist. Those are parts of the puzzle, but the puzzle is very complicated. I'll just give you a very crude example. You could line up everybody on a wall and shoot them and you'll stop COVID. You're not going to do that because you're going to kill them.
Starting point is 00:55:31 And, you know, this kind of unifocal, really irrational focus on stopping all cases of COVID at all costs was known from the beginning to be completely harmful and wrong. And one of the articles you noted there that I wrote in May of 2020 was with some economists because it's one of the known parts of the whole health area that if you have a severe economic downturn, you kill people. Right. Particularly by the way, the low income in poor families. Right.
Starting point is 00:56:05 And so what's amazing, too, is though you were sort of dragged through the media on these issues, you're even a unicorn inside of health policies. As you said, you're not just an economist, you're not just a bureaucrat, you've been practicing, doctor diagnosis is the center of your specialty, your first 20-something years, and so you brought all that together.
Starting point is 00:56:27 To me, you were like the most perfectly qualified person to be stepping into this space. So how did that happen? How did the White House, did you, did you reach out to that? How did you make contact? Sure, so I started to become visible, because I wrote from March that we should use targeted protection with Johnny
Starting point is 00:56:51 Anidis also wrote it and David Katz formerly at Yale. We all sort of almost at the same time but independently wrote in March of 2020 that we need to end the lockdowns and use targeted protection. And then over the summer I started to do more of the work and was on TV somewhat. and it's sort of a funny story. It turned out my mother-in-law was watching the press conferences of the White House over the spring and summer of 2020. And she's in her 90s and she called me up once and said, well, Scott, Kaylee McAnney, the press secretary, is quoting your data and your statements. And I didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:57:34 And she said, yeah, you're going to the White House, my mother-in-law said. And so I said, well, I'm not going to the White House. I don't want to go to the White House, no. And then I get a call, actually, a couple weeks later in July from the White House Office of Personnel saying, would I come speak to President Trump? And, of course, okay, people are dying. This is the President of the United States. It's obvious the answer is yes.
Starting point is 00:58:00 Right. It has nothing to do with politics either way. I mean, there'd be something wrong with you, frankly, if you wouldn't go. and speak to the president of your country. And so I did, and I say it that way because there are people who don't, believe it or not. And so I go in and spend a day at the White House having meetings, individual meetings with everybody from, you know, Vice President Pence, Kaylee McAnney, the president, Jared Kushner, et cetera, and went through a series of meetings and they were asking about
Starting point is 00:58:35 the pandemic and what I thought about this and what I thought about that. Many of them were taking notes. And at the end of the day, Jared Kushner said to me, well, we'd like you to help advise the president. And I said, okay, but this is what you're going to get. Because, you know, frankly, I've always been very direct and outspoken. And so I wanted to make sure they understood what this was. I'm not a political person. And so I said, this is what you're going to get. I'm going to say the truth of what I see, no matter who tells me not to. I'm not going to agree with someone just because somebody else tells me to, including the president of the United States.
Starting point is 00:59:16 I'm not signing on to a group statement that I don't agree with. And Jared Kushner said, well, that's exactly why we want you. And I remember being struck and very happy to hear that. But the problem was the next sentence, he said, he goes, I'm concerned, though, they're going to destroy you once it becomes public. And, you know, that shocked me because, first of all, I didn't think Jared Kushner would care about that. But it shocked me more because I'm not really interested in being destroyed. I'm not insane. And so I said, well, why don't I go back to California and try it from there?
Starting point is 00:59:54 And so he said, okay, let's do that. And so I went back to California for a few days. It became obvious. This was not going to work because it was a very sort of chaotic situation. people were feeding the President of the United States the wrong, grossly wrong information. And the public was extremely fearful, and so I went back to Washington.
Starting point is 01:00:15 I remember the moment you did, we actually celebrated on the show, just to one last time show you how much we were following you. We actually changed the opening of our show. This is a flashback to the moment that you were invited into the White House. Take a look at this, everybody. It's kind of fun. Out there in the world, it's time to step out onto
Starting point is 01:00:50 the high wire. Well, what does all this have to do with Atlas? Well, you know, when I watch the comments in the show, a lot of times I'll see it written in the comments, oh, from your lips to God's ears, Del. Well, this week, perhaps the next best thing. It went from our lips to President Trump's ears. As you know, here on the high wire,
Starting point is 01:01:16 we have been showing you that really the majority of scientists biologists, doctors around the world disagree with the draconian measures of lockdowns, masks. They disagree that waiting for a vaccine is the way to go. Many of them talking about herd immunity. Well, finally, finally, it's now in the middle of August. We are seeing some moves in the White House, and one of those guys that I was talking about,
Starting point is 01:01:42 that's right, you got it. Dr. Scott Atlas was announced by Donald Trump as a part of the new task force. We were pretty excited, obviously, about that announcement. And we had been following the work that you were doing. We were very much looking at the science. At that point, by August, it was clear. It was so crystal clear, even starting in China,
Starting point is 01:02:07 then watching Italy. Of course, he had the cruise ship, and Johnny Anidis was doing these great breakdowns. I think at that point, he was guessing that the overall death rate was somewhere in the point 025. to 0.035% for everybody. Clearly a much higher risk rate amongst the elderly. Kids, 0.000 something.
Starting point is 01:02:29 And so you were making a lot of sense. What is going on here? What is with the terror? This looks to be really, for most people, a flu, a very bad flu for a very small group of people. So going to the White House, what was it you imagined you could do? Well, you know, this was sort of a tricky situation, obviously, because I'm not, I was sort
Starting point is 01:02:57 of naive about the political welcome that I would get, and I say that in quotes, but I was not naive that there would be complete resistance to what I was saying. And so I was asked to be an advisor to the president. Okay. But then at the same time, I was told, but it's important I'm part of the task force, too. frankly said, I don't want to be part of the task force. There's no point. These people are dug in. Birx had been running the task force since end of February. Fauci and Burks were the most important parts of the task force. And they were there for five, six months already. There was no point
Starting point is 01:03:34 in me saying, oh, I'm going to try to change their minds. But it was, of course, important that I hear what they were saying and do my best. So I went into the task force meetings. The first one was in the second week of August, really. I had been advising the president, frankly, about a couple things before that, which was during, when I got there, July 30th, 2020, which was number one, it's very important that he resumes his press conferences and talks to the people and says the data. Okay, even that alone. The public, if you remember, was in a tremendous amount of fear. Yeah. Fear is debilitating. Fear means. makes people think irrationally.
Starting point is 01:04:20 If you're a leader, your most important thing is to say the facts and allay any unnecessary fear. Right. Don't stream fire in a crowded room. Absolutely. Let's try to put some fires out and get some peace and sanity going on here. And I thought that the most important way to eliminate fear is to eliminate the unknown as much as possible, which was to say the data.
Starting point is 01:04:43 So I was trying to help give some data to the president in his president. prepared remarks. And then I was sitting in on the task force. And the task force, it was as bad, really worse than I imagined. And in a way worse because the amount of, you know, there's two parts of the task force, basically, the logistical side, which was very good, actually. But the medical side of the task force was run by Dr. Deborah Birx. Deborah Birx was the task force. She wrote all of the White House official policy to every governor. She visited every state with or without Vice President Pence. She was the head of the medical advice.
Starting point is 01:05:29 Fauci, Dr. Fauci, was not in charge of anything, but he was the most visible voice. Yeah, he was the one we were following thinking was driving policy because you heard a lot more from him. You always just sort of saw her in the background with a new scarf, but didn't get this sense. He was driving anything. Right. She was literally the person who was writing the policies.
Starting point is 01:05:52 And the White House Task Force was the federal policy. So Fauci was on TV and the media influencing the public. And then the third doctor of importance was Dr. Redfield, the head of the CDC. And so among the people of the, when I went to a task force meeting, there were about eight of us at this table with Vice President Pence, who was the official head of the task force. But President Trump had nothing to do with the task force. President Trump did not visit the task force meetings.
Starting point is 01:06:21 President Trump, in fact, was saying something very different from the message of the task force. And this was part of the problematic leadership under that administration because they had two separate messages going to the public. President Trump was saying before I got there that the schools should be open, that businesses should be open, that were killing people with the lockdowns. But the task force, and that is the official policy, was telling the public, but also all the governors, all the local health officials, lockdown, closed schools, mask up, et cetera, et cetera. Let's talk about some of the personalities inside of the White House.
Starting point is 01:07:00 One of them that you mentioned, Deborah Birx, like that she's in charge. In the book, you talk about that at first it sounds like they're trying to shuffle you around and not really get around her, as though everyone's like, I don't know how this is going to work out. seemed to be a paranoia. And then the moment you meet her, I think we had the excerpt from the book. Let me just read this. After an initial and quick meeting with Dr. Berks,
Starting point is 01:07:23 I saw that Kushner's concerns were fully warranted. She seemed threatened right away by my presence. She was noticeably uneasy, even though I told her, I'm just here to help in any way I can. She instantly asked with slight hesitancy in her voice, how long will you be there? I said it wasn't clear, which was certainly true. My White House badge, a sign of some permanence,
Starting point is 01:07:43 was tucked inside my laptop cage. she wasn't happy to see you. Well, my impression was she was nervous, and that is a personality, by the way, it's very consistent with someone who doesn't know that much. People are intimidated. You know, I was an outsider. Okay, so I'm an academic medical science and health policy expert.
Starting point is 01:08:09 I didn't care about my position in the White House. I didn't need that job. I was there because people were dying. and it's my country. Right. So, you know, I wasn't there to wield power or to make sure that I had a position intact. So when I was meeting and I was told I had to meet with Dr. Berks, and that's fine, she was agitated a little bit and asking, and I literally did not know how long I'd be there.
Starting point is 01:08:37 In fact, in the beginning, it wasn't clear. It wasn't necessarily known because we were going to see how it goes. But, you know, when I got into the task force meetings, it became very obvious that it was very threatening to Dr. Birx and others, partly because they had wield, this is my own opinion, but they were busy with their entourages walking into a room full of non-medical people, the task force and the other COVID meetings that were being held. And so, in my opinion, most people are sort of intimidated and somewhat deferential to people that are doctors or PhDs or scientists. And so they don't feel comfortable speaking out. And so when she would speak, okay, there was a natural deference to her or Dr. Fauci. I wasn't there to be deferential. I was there to say the truth.
Starting point is 01:09:33 I was sort of, frankly, a little bit. I was frantic by this point because the data was known for months. And the lockdowns were literally killing people and destroying our children on top of it. And so I wasn't really, I didn't care about making friends. I wanted to do whatever I could to change the dialogue and inform people. And so I would walk into a task force meeting. And in the first one, Vice President Pence, her and I says, well, Scott, what do you think about one of the first couple, about the risk to children? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:07 And I said, well, and I had about 15, 20 manuscripts of the current data in my briefcase. I had all the, I already discussed everything with all the epidemiologists who I knew. And so I gave a 10-minute presentation on the data. And basically the bottom line is it's extraordinarily low risk for healthy children. And schools should open, and the data was known all over Europe, all over Western European peer nations, they were opening their schools from the Netherlands, Italy, France, Sweden. Even in the face of lockdowns, they knew that the risk of children was low and they were opening the schools and the harms of children were extremely high if not opening schools.
Starting point is 01:10:53 Pence then turns to Dr. Birx and Fauci and says, well, what do you think? There was silence. They had no data. In fact, there was never a single task force meeting, not one, where any of the other doctors brought in a scientific paper, zero. And Dr. Burks' only comment at that meeting and in the future was, you're an outlier. That's not a scientific rebuttal. There's no data there.
Starting point is 01:11:22 And then at that same meeting, I remember this vividly because it was so really tragically depressing the level of incompetence and lack of knowledge in these doctors on the task force. he turned to Dr. Redfield and said, what do you think, Bob, about the wrist of children in opening schools? And Redfield leaned back, and this is after massive day of the known published all over the world, he leaned back and he said, well, let's just say the jury's still out. And so, you know, I was sort of, I didn't know what to say, and then we just went on as if my presentation didn't exist.
Starting point is 01:12:02 And this was a repeated pattern. I mean, these people, I have never worked with such low-level people. And I always used to say none of these people could be an assistant professor in the departments that I worked in. Wow, that's an incredible statement. And I'm watching it from the outside because our show has been very diligent in following all the science. We were reporting on Israel, as you're saying, Sweden, Denmark, all of these studies were coming out. We were so clear what was going on. And that was my question.
Starting point is 01:12:33 What are they looking at in there? What are they looking at? How are they, you know, all of these just random, let's flatten the curve. We're going to flatten the curve. And then that goes whipping by, and that just seemed to be a way to just start taking away all of our rights. And I think it was supposed to be 14 days or something like that. It goes on forever. What was your opinion to flatten the curve?
Starting point is 01:12:53 Is that the right move at the moment? Okay. So flattened the curve was the statement of Dr. Burke's back in the spring early on. Right. 15 days to slow the spread. or flatten the curve. And I think that if we want to be completely fair, which we do, it is rational to try a very short-term measure to flatten the curve. Now, the key here is, what does flatten the curve mean? Flatten the curve means slow, bring down the peak of cases
Starting point is 01:13:25 and prolong that. Why? So that we can function as hospitals. So we can treat people. with other illnesses, not just with COVID. Rather than overwhelm hospitals. And this was a reaction to what was seen in Italy where they did have hospitals overrun. And a lot of that, frankly, is that their hospital system is a disaster. It's a disaster.
Starting point is 01:13:50 Much older population in Lombardia and these places where they're having serious issues. That's right. And there were reasons why they were overrun. But it's rational. It's reasonable to say, okay, let's try two weeks of flattening the curve. But you'll notice something here that's very important.
Starting point is 01:14:06 There was never a goal or even a possibility of reducing the number of deaths or cases with flattening the curve. If you want to be a math person, you would say the area under the curve doesn't change with flattening the curve. The total number of cases, the total number of deaths, that was not even the goal.
Starting point is 01:14:25 It was just simply slowing things down. Of course, that didn't really work. And what happened, though, is what the problem was. What happened was it became stop-all cases of COVID. Right. And so you ask what data were they using. There were these sophomoric tabulations of cases, cases per day, cases per week, based upon a non-surveillance level of testing, so it was erratic.
Starting point is 01:14:55 The numbers were irrelevant because every state, every place was testing for different criteria. I want to drill into this because you talk about in the book and it's kind of a funny part where you talk about how Berks keeps flying into the room with these arbitrary colored charts, you know, of, you know, infection cases that they're seeing in different states, comparing one state to another. You're weighing in saying, well, hold on a second. They're using totally different criteria. They're testing at different levels. One's wearing masks. Clearly, this one is doing better than this. But like the masks have nothing to do.
Starting point is 01:15:29 We don't have any basis for, where's the baseline on your information, right? Yes. Tell me about this. I mean, how this arbitrary nature that you reference a lot of times when talked about Dr. Berg's. So here's the issue is that there was no critical thinking being done. And actually the stuff isn't that complicated. But what we saw from Dr. Birx, for example, is there were charts made up.
Starting point is 01:15:55 First, it started with three colors. These were arbitrarily assigned colors. Red for danger, yellow for, well, we're a little bit worried, green for, okay, we feel good. Okay, I mean, you might think that that's a reasonable thing to do if you had a scientifically valid reason for putting those numbers in. There's no valid reason for just simply saying, okay, if we have zero to four percent versus four to ten versus greater than ten, we're just going to assign these green, yellow, and red. what was done. And so this was very arbitrary and really, I mean, I was shocked. This is not science at all. And then what it evolved into were to make it more scientific. There were five colors. We divided this. We, Dr. Brooks, divide this into, oh, we're going to say five colors. We're going to go from red to green, but we're going to have five gradations. As if dividing it further.
Starting point is 01:16:50 A little rainbow in there, some nuance. Yeah. I mean, you know, there's no validity to the numbers. was one of the many times where I was looking around the room saying, am I the only one was hearing this? I mean, this was really sort of a combination of discussions that you read about in the book Catch-22 and at Mad Hatter's Tea Party and Allison Wonderland, just totally illogical, circular discussion going on. And you bring up the mask issue. Okay, this is you have to realize now. We're talking six months after everyone was insisting that masks were proven, even though they had been disproven months and months before, even by the CDC. The one thing he had right was when he first answered about masks.
Starting point is 01:17:32 When he first answered in his emails that were uncovered, masks couldn't work because the size of the virus is smaller than the hole in a surgical mask, not alone a cloth mask. But the CDC had published all this date in May 2020. Masks didn't work to either stop the spread or to protect the wearer. That's fact. Anyone who says otherwise is really flat earther. But separate from that, there were places, there were times in the task force meetings. By this point, you know, it took me only a couple meetings to get really frustrated with it to the point of being,
Starting point is 01:18:04 knowing these people are refractory to fact. And so at one point in, say, September, Fauci holds up a chart and Redfield did the same at a different meeting saying, oh, I have proof that mass work. And the first thing I said was, well, I thought you knew mass work for the last seven months. Why is there a need to say you have proof that mass work? But Redfield holds up a chart and says, well, this, we put the mass on and after the mass came on, the cases came down. So I'm sitting there thinking, you know, frankly, oh my God, I mean, this is not, this is so low level. That's like saying the sun came up and therefore, you know, the cases came down that day.
Starting point is 01:18:46 I mean, I don't know what he's correlating. And I didn't say anything because it was just, frankly, it was just, It was, I didn't even, I was speechless. And someone who was non-medical, purely non-medical staff person said, well, Dr. Redfield, why couldn't it be that the cases just came down at the same time? And he didn't have an answer for this. This is like insane. And another time Fauci did the same thing comparing two states.
Starting point is 01:19:11 He said, well, you know, I have proof that mass work. This was arbitrarily announced in the room. And so he says in one state with mass mandates, the cases came down in another state, the cases went up without a mass mandate. And so one of the other non-medical people, Seema Verma, the head of Medicare and Medicaid, says, well, Tony, you know that's not true. There's a bunch of differences
Starting point is 01:19:37 between these two states and everything. Why would you assign that as a cause and effect? Right. Again, no answer. I mean, it was so low level. It's almost embarrassing to be affiliated with a group like that. It's shocking, I think, for viewers. Because you have so many confounding issues.
Starting point is 01:19:51 to be there. And the one that you argued the most throughout this book, and we watched you when you were being heard, was what about herd immunity? How about the fact that when the infections went up, now all those people that were infected suddenly have herd immunity were dry? So, you know, is it possible that we've sort of hit the maximum, you know, load with this virus? And that's why things are coming down. But Burks kept trying to claim, no, it's the lockdowns that are doing it. Yeah. Well, I mean, the fact is that, you know, and this is, I think, very important to understand is it was known since 2006 the classic articles on on pandemics that lockdowns didn't work and they harm people they were destructive so this isn't new territory
Starting point is 01:20:35 but you have to wonder why did somebody think that lockdowns would work and why did the public believe it and i think there were it's really because there were two lies told okay uh number one lie was that if you said the lockdowns should be removed, you were somehow choosing the economy over lives. Right. Okay, and that was a frank lie because for decades in the economics literature, we knew that severe economic downturns killed people.
Starting point is 01:21:02 And the second lie that was told to the public was that if you choose to say you shouldn't be locking down, you're calling for let it rip. Right. So called herd immunity strategy. And that was a lot of, lie. I never called for letting it rip. I called for increasing protection of older people and people who were more vulnerable. I called for increasing testing. And I can get into that. But the
Starting point is 01:21:27 point was that that was somehow distorted as let it rip. When I talked about herd immunity, I was describing the biologically known fact that that is how virus infections that are raging through a population come down. No one was calling for letting it rip. The point was that, that that's why people wanted to give widespread vaccination. That is simply a biological phenomenon. As my friend Martin Koldor, if the Harvard epidemiologist says, to say that you're against herd immunity is sort of like saying you're against gravity. This is a biological phenomenon. You don't have an opinion on herd immunity. No one in the White House ever asked or even discussed letting it rip. It was never discussed with the president. And that was all.
Starting point is 01:22:17 media creation to demonize people who said no lockdowns as being dangerous. And that's called propaganda and that kind of propaganda to vilify people like they did with the unvaccinated. It's the same stuff. It's reminiscent to me of the most heinous regimes in modern history that use propaganda to sway the public and to make people think that this other group is dangerous. There's a part in the book where you sort of lightly touch on your relationship with Fauci. At one point, he really asked you very pointedly about your perspective on herd immunity. And then, you know, do you remember that moment? You know, what was happening there?
Starting point is 01:23:03 Okay, so you're probably referring to Fauci called me up and early on and proposed to have a meeting. He said, let's have a meeting with all the doctors. And let's see if we have some kind of common ground and hear your perspective. And he meant Dr. Birx, Dr. Fauci, Dr. Redfield, and me. And I said, okay, that's great. I'd like to bring in some epidemiologists and others who are doing research on the pandemic. And I'd like to have a discussion. And I had already been talking to people like Johnny Anidis at Stanford and Jay Batachari
Starting point is 01:23:42 at Stanford and Martin Koldorf had written me and said he's happy I was there and expressed interest in coming. I said I'd like to have the discussion. Okay, so Fauci immediately, that was the end of the conversation. They didn't want to have a discussion with people who were actually doing the research and knew the data. This was a group of government bureaucrats. You have to realize that Fauci was in his position for 38 years, Berks was a government
Starting point is 01:24:09 bureaucrat for decades, Redfield was a government-appointed bureaucrat who had to be a government-appointed bureaucrat who had a position of authority. And their idea of this was to protect their own position, to go to the media. They had friends in the media. They would refer to Sanjay Gupta of CNN by his first name. And I didn't even know what was going on here. I had no friends in the media. That became obvious.
Starting point is 01:24:32 And they were working. And in fact, Berks admitted early in 2021 that she, Fauci and Redfield had a pact with each other. that if Trump had fired one of them, they would all resign. And so this is not the way a scientist works, especially someone who wants to help his country. This is the way people who are bureaucrats work who want to protect their power. Did you feel like because you would get shredded
Starting point is 01:24:57 once in a while in the media? Were you, it seems like you're a little bit suspicious that Fauci is going to the media and reporting on you. So this was something I did write about in the book was that after the first meeting at the task force that I was in they asked me, Vice President Pence was talking about what's happening and this was in New York. And I had all the data on what percent of people had antibodies in New York and what neighborhoods by Zipcode had antibodies. It was clear that the low-income neighborhoods were really hit with the virus and they had a lot of hospitalizations,
Starting point is 01:25:32 but they also had a lot of antibody protection. Because as we know, anyone who knows anything about biology, and this is not medical school, not PhD science, not virology, not epidemiology, it's high school AP biology. A lot of what we reported on here. Yes, and it's not complicated that if you recover from a viral infection, almost always, you have very significant protection, durable protection against a significant serious illness. And so I was pointing this out at the first task force meeting, quoting the numbers in New York and Birx and others were saying, oh no, the cases started to come down.
Starting point is 01:26:10 started to come down because they had masks on. And I said, well, the curve of the cases going up and coming down was the same all over the world with this over time. And it comes down because of a lot of reasons, but particularly including that people start getting antibodies and this is how virus spread happens. It's a curve we've seen in almost every every country in the world. And even over time we've watched, studied them. And so after the end of that meeting, there was an article written in the Washington Post, I think, saying that Scott Atlas is pushing herd immunity.
Starting point is 01:26:52 I was explaining herd immunity as a phenomenon in the meeting. I mean, these people had very little knowledge, frankly. And so at the end of that, this article was written. And then of course that stuff gets picked up in international media. And it was an overt lie that I was saying we should try for herd immunity or something like this by letting the infection spread. And it was in the newspaper. And there was a tremendous amount of heat from that. And I was new to this.
Starting point is 01:27:26 And so I was outraged. I'm not outraged anymore because it's the way it is. The media's poison and harmful to the public good. Let's get into that a minute because there's a moment. you call this the three, the Redfield, Fauci and Berks, the Troika, and that they sort of, like, as you said, they sort of had this pact. If one of us gets fired, we all quit, as though they were sort of, you know, had a sense that they were obviously diametrically opposed to the president. But there's a moment where you seem, there's like one moment where you're really pushing
Starting point is 01:27:57 to sort of change the narrative and change the approach. Let's stop testing all of the asymptomatic, healthy people and creating this fear. Let's try to start moving towards an opening up policy. And you're able to talk them all into working together. It's a moment. Tell me about what you achieved there. And it sounded like you were there. They didn't get taken away.
Starting point is 01:28:18 But you really worked to get everybody to follow some science in the moment. And probably, in many ways, might have been the pinnacle of anything you've achieved, at least in that task force, it seems. Well, so I thought they were very happy, Vice President Pence, and Brett Girouar, who's a doctor who was the so-called testings are, about how their testing capacity had ramped up from essentially nothing to a million tests a day or something. I mean, it was very, very powerful.
Starting point is 01:28:47 And I said, okay, now the people are still dying. You're just testing, testing, testing, which is actually a mantra of many politicians. Test tests, they're saying, right. And I said, why don't you use the testing to stop people from dying? Again, this is not a brilliant thing to say, but it's obvious you should use this powerful tool strategically because the goal is to stop people from dying, not just to test. And so Brett Jurwar said, yeah, this makes sense. Let's have a call. And Zirwar set up a call with me and Redfield to be talking about testing. And so Jirwar ended up devising a document. And the way documents circulate in the West Wing and in the White House is that there's a draft of a document that goes around and dozens of people have input into it. And so there was a revision of the testing strategy to use the testing tool powerfully to stop or limit the dying.
Starting point is 01:29:50 And I was pushing for something that was in the testing document, which was to get more frequent testing of the nursing homeworkers, for instance, because most cases, people, were dying at this point, 50 to 80% of deaths per state were in nursing homes. The controlled environment. I mean, you ought to be able to limit that. And I said to Burke's, when she got enraged at me once because I said we should use targeted increased strategies to stop people from dying, she said, we're already doing everything to stop people from dying who are elderly. And I said, okay, how often are you testing the nursing home workers?
Starting point is 01:30:25 She said once a week. They're going in and out. Yeah, they're going in and out. The nursing home residents are inside. And she said, well, once a week. And I said, well, once a week, I mean, these are people who have exposure every single day in the community. I said, you should be testing three days a week, five days a week, seven days a week, the nursing home personnel. And so I said we should send testing, increased testing, to senior centers non-residential, where seniors frequent and go hang out with their friends.
Starting point is 01:30:56 There was no testing going on in these places. I said we should send more testing to historically black colleges and universities. Faculty members are there, have higher risk profiles. So I pointed out we should use the testing for the point of it, which is to stop people from dying. So this document was written by Girouin and circulated around Fauci, Redfield, Berks. Everybody saw it. Everybody agreed. We had a meeting about it at one of the task force meetings after the draft document was written. And this was on the agenda.
Starting point is 01:31:27 Everyone agreed to, instead of just testing, you know, wasting things, and by the way, tests were taking days to get the results back. It didn't even make sense what they were doing. So basically, instead of paralyzing low-risk people and closing schools for people who had very low-risk, let's use it for the high-risk people. That was the gist of it. The document was changed and agreed upon. and all the doctors, Fauci, Redfield, Berks, and Juerre and myself were in on the agreement at the meeting. The next meeting, at the end of that meeting, there was a point of we need to basically put a separate section about nursing homes. Girard, I mean, the Redfield brought this up, which was smart.
Starting point is 01:32:17 And to get to the gist of the bottom line, we all agreed the document was brought back to re-agree on because he wanted to. separate out the section. I look at the document at the end of that subsequent meeting, it was totally changed back to the original document. And so I said, well, something's going on here, what's going on? And Redfield said, well, we just wanted to change the order. I said, but the entire document that we agreed upon isn't there anymore. So they had posted the, ultimately, the revised testing agreement, the revised testing guidelines on the CDC page. Yeah. And And there was a hellfire of backlash by the media. All of a sudden, they didn't agree.
Starting point is 01:33:03 It was a CDC document. Redfield wrote and finalized the document. The media got a hold of it, said, no, we don't agree with it. All right, well, we actually have this. Let me show everyone what that looked like in the media. When everyone had finally agreed, let's change the guidelines. This is how the media treated that moment. There is new guidance this morning from the CDC.
Starting point is 01:33:25 I have to ask you about this reversal from the CDC. It's a bit of a head scratcher. Some shocking new details about the Trump administration's pressure campaign on the CDC from the New York Times. Who reports this, quote, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was instructed by higher-ups within the Trump administration to modify its coronavirus testing guidelines this week to exclude people who do not have symptoms of COVID-19, even if they have been recently exposed to the virus. That's according to two federal health effects. officials. Public health experts and epidemiologists, everyone agrees that we need more testing, not less. We have to catch every case in order to contain outbreaks.
Starting point is 01:34:05 And the second thing that concerns me is the way that it was rolled out, which is that was basically the website just changed overnight with no announcement, no explanation, there's no backup. This is very unusual for the CDC, which has always been based in science and data. crafting and alternate reality where COVID isn't ravaging this country. The agency also did an about face on the issue of quarantining. Previous CDC guidance prompted states like New York to implement a mandatory 14-day quarantine for anyone who traveled to a COVID hotspot. On Friday, the agency quietly
Starting point is 01:34:41 dropped the quarantine recommendation. The only explanation that makes any, that makes any sense to me is that it is, it is a very politically motivated change. We're not going to follow the CDC guidance. I consider it political propaganda. I mean, did Trump actually, that media basically said Donald Trump was pushing his agenda and that's what had happened here. That was a complete lie, what they said.
Starting point is 01:35:09 The reality was, and the immediate interviews after that, immediate short-term interviews, Redfield said, everyone agreed on this guideline, we're not going to quarantine people just because they may have been exposed to some. somebody with COVID. Roy's society. What the new, and what the new guidance said was, see your doctor and ask what you should do.
Starting point is 01:35:31 He wanted to insert, Redfield specifically, a physician into the equation about a decision. It was not about forbidding testing. And in fact, you know, everyone agreed, including Girard, the head of testing, Redfield, Fauci, Berks. And so because of that backlash, first of all, those statements made by, in the media, were just completely irrational. There were millions and millions of cases that one of the people there said that was interviewed,
Starting point is 01:36:00 well, we have to stop every case. I mean, that's ludicrous. It was impossible. That was already proven to be impossible. That isn't the point of testing. The point of testing is to stop or limit the deaths. And so, and the exposure of high risk people. And so the immediate reaction was,
Starting point is 01:36:20 Jouroir, talking to the media, insisting, insisting that everyone agreed that it was his document with Redfields. Redfield was ahead of the CDC. He wrote, his CDC posted the document. It was not about pressure. Didn't matter, though. Media didn't seem to care. I mean, this is like the tail wagging the dog in so many ways.
Starting point is 01:36:40 Watching media assault, you know, a perfectly scientific and reasonable approach, assaulting you. When you think about the media and what was happening, there, how much of it do you think was just because they just saw you, by you stepping in, going against the narrative that they've been hearing, that they just thought you are Trump, you're just Trump's mouse piece. Did that hurt you? Well, that is what happened, that they did take that tack. I think in the beginning, what was the big barrage of hate? The big barrage of hate was political, in my view.
Starting point is 01:37:20 You know, people that are looking at things through a political lens, they think everyone else is political. I mean, it had nothing to do with it for me. But what eventually happened was I think it became far more than political. It was worldwide. It wasn't all about Trump. It was a hysteria. It was an obsession. And it was a huge display of not only ignorance and incompetence, but complete a lack of morality and ethics.
Starting point is 01:37:48 But I think we have to look at. look at it and say this was a complete failure of critical thinking of people. And, you know, fear to be reasonable here, fear makes people think irrationally, do irrational things. But a lot of it was political. In fact, one of the first things I said to President Trump on my first visit to the Oval Office when he was asking me questions and we hadn't met before, and he asked me about hydroxychloroquine. And I said, you know, trying to be sort of funny, but it was really true, you should have said that hydroxychloroquine does not work because then the NIH and the FDA would have done the study right away trying to show that it worked. There's a moment you speak about fear because it's a huge part of this in the book.
Starting point is 01:38:37 When it's a meeting and Fauci starts spouting off, I think I have this excerpt from the book where you're really concerned. Here it is. As often happened, Fauci spoke up to support Dr. Berks' concerns saying people need to be warned even more strongly about the dangers of the virus spreading. He claimed Americans didn't think the virus was serious and that was the reason cases spread. I was honestly surprised. I challenged him to clarify his point because I couldn't believe my ears. So you think people aren't frightened enough?
Starting point is 01:39:06 He said, yes, they need to be more afraid. I replied, I totally disagree. People are paralyzed with fear. Fear is one of the main problems at this point. point. I think this last paragraph, let's bring it up just to the last statement here, really seems to be the heart of this book. Instilling fear in the public is absolutely countered to what a leader in public health should do. To me, it is frankly immoral, although I kept that to myself. They were pressing fear upon us. Yes, I think that this is an unethical use of
Starting point is 01:39:38 public health guidance, and it's been rampant and repeatedly used here. And that is that instead of persuading the public with facts and data, you know, we're a free society, you're supposed to be. We have thinking people, I do not underestimate the intelligence of the average person. It's not that complicated anyway. Yet the way that this was done throughout the pandemic before the vaccine and after the vaccine was instead of using data, in fact, It was using filtration of information, fear, partial information. Don't want to say that masks don't work because we want people to be cautious. Don't want to say that vaccines don't stop the spread because we want them to get vaccinated.
Starting point is 01:40:34 You know, don't want to talk about side effects because we want them to get vaccinated. And I think this is not just wrong. I don't even know how to say it. It is literally unethical as a public health leader to impose fear on people. I mean, that is, I don't know how to say that in any way better than what I have said, but I was shocked to hear Fauci explicitly say that. I mean, that was stunning to me. Let's just sort of wrap this up.
Starting point is 01:41:10 Obviously, all of this happens underneath. arguably probably the most controversial president we've had, even though I say that saying. It just feels like each new president, we just get more and more divided and outraged. And now if you take that office, you are most certainly going to be indicted and tried to be arrested. And I'm not even sure if it matters what part you're in, just the other side is going to hate it. But you got to meet a man who is an enigma, I don't know, a very unique individual who, some would think just shoots from the hip doesn't seem to have a deep logic base.
Starting point is 01:41:47 Others, you know, you had Q&N saying this guy is thinking 5D chess. Who is Donald Trump in your mind? Well, I can give specific examples to give the color to the answer. When I was in the Oval Office with President Trump, he asked good questions, he listened thoughtfully.
Starting point is 01:42:11 he understood the answers. He had common sense. I brought in several outside experts from across the country. Back in September of 2020, he went through us and asked individuals these very important questions about COVID. He understood the data. So to say he's illogical, I mean, that just doesn't fit. You know, you have a president who, this is just my opinion, but he, he didn't have friends because he didn't probably have a lot of respect for politicians.
Starting point is 01:42:47 And, you know, politicians are on both sides of the two-party system. He had very few people who he could trust. He trusted his families and his intimate advisors. He was under attack 24-7 in a very vicious way. I mean, the press briefing room. I was in the room to answer questions about COVID. and the reporters were frankly animals, and I don't say that lightly. They're vicious, sick people, despicable people shouting out vulgar things to the president,
Starting point is 01:43:23 loss of complete human decency there. But things, obviously not things we're hearing on the news. No, well, see, what happens is that the president gets up there, gives the remarks, people are we are on the sideline to answer specific questions if they come up he would take his questions then he would walk out and then i and others on the side would walk out behind him and it was very common that the reporters were shouting out things at him this is after the press conference was over uh you know and people calling him a murderer and a liar and uh you know just very uh i was shocked at that uh and you know there's just uncivil poisonous media so
Starting point is 01:44:05 So given all that, he was in a very difficult position. Now, that's not to excuse anything. And, you know, I'm not political at all. I was sort of an observer there of what's happening of the political side. But I would say that when you're in charge in the pandemic, okay, you own the decision-making. The president owns the decisions. And, you know, when I got there, I would have been happy to see disbanding of the medical side of the task force. By the time I got there, you're talking August 2020, the policies were wrong and they were failing,
Starting point is 01:44:49 and they were failing to stop the death. They were failing to stop any spread of infection, of course, and they were destroying people. And let's just say we have one of the highest death rates in the world. That's right. This incredible medical system, a free market medical system we brag about. and our death rates are among the highest in the world. And yet I'm amazed that Berks and Tony Fauci considered heroes at all in this.
Starting point is 01:45:14 Well, this is very important. I would like to answer this this way. The lockdowners got what they wanted. The policy in the United States for most of the country was lockdown. They own the outcomes. If you want to say that there was a good outcome, then they should be congratulated. If you want to say that there was a bad outcome under Trump
Starting point is 01:45:34 and under Biden, Because by the way, the deaths per day from COVID, it's a straight line for the first two full years from March 2020 through April 2020. You're talking about over a year of Joe Biden. Yeah. The two years of the pandemic, deaths per day, no change in the slope of the line, even with the vaccine. Okay. And so the point is that the lockdowners got what they wanted. Their policy was implemented.
Starting point is 01:46:02 Their policy failed. There is no space, by the way, between the Trump administration policy and the policy of Fauci and Birx. True. That's a really good point. They got their policy implemented. There's no space. And so what we're seeing here for your viewers is a rewrite of history, and it's so illogical and bizarre, it's hard to even express. There's two things being said. Fauci and Burke somehow say they weren't for lockdowns.
Starting point is 01:46:29 They weren't for school closures. Okay, this is a complete lie. And the second thing is they're trying to blame the people who were opposed to what was implemented, the lockdowns, for what was failed as implemented, the lockdowns. They're trying to blame the failure of the lockdowns on people like me who opposed what was implemented. This is unacceptable, and this goes to what we need to do. We need to have a public airing of what happened here. We have an ethical society. We need, our public needs the truth about what happened during COVID.
Starting point is 01:47:03 if for no other reason than what they've been through. But the second thing is, and the important part here is, we need to have a public demand for admission of error from Fauci, Berks, Redfield, and the lockdowners. Why? Not because we think they're going to apologize. It takes integrity to apologize, as we all know from our personal lives when we're wrong.
Starting point is 01:47:25 They're not going to apologize. They're not going to admit error. But we need to demand it because we need it in public because otherwise the people in power, they will do it again. And they not only will do it again for a pandemic, which is inevitable, there will be more pandemics. I was going to ask you about it. But there will be other things. Climate change, I anticipate there will be reasons made to do lockdowns.
Starting point is 01:47:49 We cannot ever have this disastrous policy ever done in a free society again. They can do it in a country that has a barbaric human rights violating government like China. But that's not what this country is supposed to be. You in the middle of this, and I, you know, obviously nothing's going right. You're trying, at one point, I didn't realize until I read your book that, that you were a part of bringing this group together for the Great Barrington Declaration. I don't want to get deep into it because we don't have a lot of time, but Sinetra Gupta, Jay Abadacharya, Martin Koldorf.
Starting point is 01:48:23 Of course, you were talking to Joseph Lattapo before that, you know, other great luminaries, John Ionidis, You were trying to bring them. It seems to me reading this book, but I was also watching it in real time. You're trying to bring them in. You're trying to get someone in the Trump administration. Will you let me put my side in front of the cameras? And it just, Berks says no.
Starting point is 01:48:46 Why does Berks have that power? It just seemed to me, why didn't Donald Trump just say, here's Tony Fauci and Berks, here's Scott Atlas and Sinatra Gupta and the Great Barrington Declaration, and the world you should all hear what they're arguing about. because I as president being asked to make a decision here, and it's not one-sided. Like you think, why wasn't that his job?
Starting point is 01:49:06 Shouldn't he just said, here it is to the public. And if you don't arrive, then Scott Atlas is going to get the entire hour and his group. Why did that never happen? It just seemed to me this would have solved everything. Well, it certainly would have been important. And I'll say what exactly happened. When I first got there, which was basically August 1st, 2020, July 30th, I said, okay, I need to bring in people to speak to the president who are doing the research
Starting point is 01:49:33 because Fauci, Birx, Redfield, these are bureaucrats, they don't know what they're talking about, and I am not enough alone. So I brought in, I arranged a meeting with Joe LaDapa from UCLA at the time, Cody Meisner from Tufts in Boston, Martin Koldorf from Harvard, Jay Batacharia from Stanford. And we five, this is in September of 20. 20. We all came in to the White House and the day before the meeting, Burke sent it, and this was arranged so that Berks could attend. The day before the meeting, these guys were already flying out there, Burke says in an email, I'm not coming to the meeting, it's not good
Starting point is 01:50:14 for me. And I thought to myself, okay, this person cannot take the scientific debate. Okay, that's not science. If you're afraid to stay your... You can't have science without the debate, number one. There's obviously not the behavior of a scientist. That's the behavior of an insecure bureaucrat, in my opinion. But in the meantime, I was called into Jared Kushner's office right then and said, okay, the meeting's off. And I said, well, what do you mean the meeting's off?
Starting point is 01:50:43 I think it's actually the end of August beginning of September. And he said, well, Berks isn't going to come. And the secretaries around were saying, you know, it's going to. look bad if we have it without her. I said, well, Burks was invited. She's deciding not to come. This is way too important. Again, I sort of went ballistic. If people are dying here, I insist they're coming to speak to the president.
Starting point is 01:51:06 And so I was told there's five minutes instead of what I had wanted, which was a big meeting with a press conference. And reporters asking questions. That was the point of this. But no, five minutes I got. And so I said, okay. And so we went into the White House overall. office, I told these guys, Meisner, Lodapo, Jay Batichari, and Martin Koldorf, be very succinct, we're there for a few minutes, just answer his questions. Don't go off, just answer his questions. That's the role of an advisor. And so the president goes in, as I said, he starts going one by one
Starting point is 01:51:41 asking, the meeting went between 45 minutes an hour. And I kept getting tapped on the shoulder by people in the Oval Office saying, you know, Scott, we have a lot of other things on the schedule here. I'm not going to interrupt the president, number one. Number two, he needs to know the information. And so we went on, he even had a video camera brought in asking me to narrate, although that video has disappeared. But we answered his questions. And then what happened was a month or so later, I said,
Starting point is 01:52:09 okay, it's still a disaster here. I want to bring in Sinatra Gupta. So by this point I knew Martin and Jay, and I called up Martin. I said, do you know Sinatra? And he said, well, yeah, we're talking to Sinatra. I'm trying to get her to come to the U.S. And so I helped arrange her security clearance to get her to come to the U.S. Because this is when flights were blocked.
Starting point is 01:52:32 And on the way, they all stopped in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. That was a way for them to get together. I don't think there was a real plan to do much except get together and maybe do an interview or something. And because I had set up a meeting with Secretary Azar of Health in Human Services in in the White House and so they met there and then flew to Washington and we four the three Great Barron. This is the day after the Great Barrington was written declaration, but it was not, it was
Starting point is 01:53:08 arranged way before. So we went and we, we answered Azar's questions. And of course that was reported by the poisonous media as somehow he had a bunch of herd immunity advocates in there trying to push for letting it rip and that was never even discussed. There was never a discussion of that. We went through the data on children, on schools, on the harms from closing schools, on the fallacy of lockdowns, on how to protect the elderly even better. That was the purpose of the meeting.
Starting point is 01:53:37 So I thought we were gaining traction, but again, the media was frankly very harmful to the public good. I mean, there's a good comparison study of the media of America versus non-American. English-speaking media. 90-plus percent of stories during 2020 about the pandemic by American media were quantifiably negative, even when the cases were going down. But outside the U.S., 54% were negative. They had the same pandemic.
Starting point is 01:54:05 Were these people, you know, Berks and them, I mean, we had these solutions that could have reduced, as you brought up hydroxychloroquine. Did you ever hear them saying, you know, like there's been a lot of censorship, huge sense of going on. We need to shut down, like perhaps Dr. Peter McCullough and his conversation about hydroxychloroquine or Dr. Pierre-Corri and Ivermectin. Did you hear anything like going out of the way to sort of shut that conversation down? Well, I didn't hear an explicit mention of those people or any kind of censorship.
Starting point is 01:54:37 But what did happen was Redfield went to the press and said something like everything Scott Atlas says is wrong. Of course, everything I said was 100% right. And it was known when I said it. It wasn't new knowledge, by the way, I want to make that clear. This was not learned during 2020 late or 2021 or 2022. It was all known in spring of 2020 that masks didn't work, that children were very, very low risk, that you got protection after getting COVID and recovering.
Starting point is 01:55:10 You know, all these things were known. But what they did was use their leverage and with their friends in the media to delegitimize people like me. That is a form of censorship. Not only that, but there was censorship that was uncovered in the emails directly, commandeered by Fauci and, unconscionably, the head of the NIH, Francis Collins. That was later after October. And then, of course, my own...
Starting point is 01:55:41 They had a hit basically on the Great Barrington Declaration. Right. We need to strike this down. So, I mean, you're very busy, and I know you have to get on the run. I want to ask you this question because you're in the middle of it. We're all sitting here saying, why? What? Why was a virus that we now know for certain had a death rate?
Starting point is 01:56:00 I think it's coming at about 0.035%, you know, across. So really right as perhaps a bad flu, 3% maybe amongst the most, you know, significantly, at risk at the highest points. But it was so specific, so easy to have protected. Great Barrington Declaration made perfect sense. Let's just bubble wrap every nursing home in the world. The rest of us get out. Let's live our lives. If there's a vaccine here, great. But if not, colleges should stay open. You made great points. Colleges should stay open. Yes, they're catching it, but they're all walking around asymptomatic, not a single hospitalization or death on a college. Instead, they shut them down, sent them home to infect their families, their grandparents, and keep spreading this thing.
Starting point is 01:56:48 You were making sense the whole time. It made perfect, reasonable science sense. As you said, it wasn't brand new. It's basically high school science. What do you think is the motivation in America especially? Did they make a crisis destroy our lives to get rid of Donald Trump as president of the United States? Is that a motive-fating factor or is it to push a vaccine program? Well, you know, the question about motive and why is always the most difficult, so it's sort of, it's partly a guess.
Starting point is 01:57:20 I saw many different motivations, but they had a common end point, okay? I'm not a believer that everyone was, first of all, you're giving people too much credit to assume that they had the brains to organize some kind of a massive thing. I say that a lot on this show, too. Yes. They're very non, they're low-level thinkers, frankly, and that's sort of a brain. broad brush, obviously. But I honestly think there were motivations of power. Power is very important to people, particularly people who are suddenly famous. Like you take a guy who's an epidemiologist who's never seen a TV screen and all of a sudden he becomes well known. You see a complicit potentially guilt in the funding of research that caused the virus, right? We know for
Starting point is 01:58:12 a fact that the NIH gave funding to the Wuhan lab. That's in the Wuhan publications. They list the grant numbers. Okay, so if you're just hypothetical, if you were a guy who was one of the people signed off on that funding and then there's this pandemic killing people, you might want to portray yourself as very, very safe, the safest person in the world. You may want to say stuff like wear two masks. You may want to say stuff like wear goggles, which Dr.
Starting point is 01:58:42 Fauci said in July of 2020. So there are different motivations. There's financial corruption. There's no doubt. There's a linkage with big pharma. You know, there's financial corruption of people even with a subsequent position. There are people that were secretary or head of FDA is on the board of a company that owns Medina. I mean, there were people that had their own personal motivations, and that's very sad. And there's also something we cannot ignore and cannot say enough. really is gross gross incompetence yeah you had people Burke's Fauci and Redfield had a common thread by the way in their history which is they all worked on AIDS HIV and AIDS and so they've you know Burke's funded directed
Starting point is 01:59:26 funding toward Redfield's labs etc she did postdoc work with Fauci their very long-standing relationship there but they also have a common mentality of HIV okay how does that virus spread well that's a virus that's a virus that's is stopped by barriers. That's not a respiratory virus, we all know. They had a different way to think about things that was grossly wrong. And by the way, you can look up Fauci's history on AIDS,
Starting point is 01:59:53 which is well known and well documented, where he was claiming even after it was known how AIDS spread, that well, you gotta be careful, you might be able to get it through casual contact with your children in your home. This was spread. That was said, he wrote that. He was also all in on a vaccine for AIDS.
Starting point is 02:00:11 And so he didn't put it. didn't push for drug treatment of AIDS, and the same pattern as what we see here. One of the biggest failures, maybe the biggest by the NIH and the FDA during this entire thing, was they did not do rapidly clinical trials on drugs that were already safe and FDA approved. They didn't do it. People died of that. That's right. And this is really a huge failure that will go on as one of the historical epic failures in the management of this pandemic, is they ignored easy to, to do clinical trials for drugs that were safe and why? I don't know. Maybe it was financial corruption. Maybe it was because Trump came out prematurely and said hydroxychloroquine works. He should
Starting point is 02:00:54 take it. But it became far bigger than politics, I think. Just my last question, because we sit here, we're being told by Bill Gates' World Economic Forum. W.H.O. is trying to now use all of this to, you know, control the world the next time there's a pandemic. they seem very excited about this idea of a pandemic around the corner. It doesn't matter that pandemics used to come like every 50 years. Now apparently it's going to be a biannual experience for the world. At least it seems that way. Our audience is out of here.
Starting point is 02:01:28 I have a very intelligent audience. They've been following all the science you're talking about. Many of us were trying to make a difference in this world. What do you think about the state of this country? Did we learn anything? Are we ready for another pandemic? Are we on the verge of being locked down, shut down? Is it when we think of the world economic form?
Starting point is 02:01:47 It's a great reset that they seem to want to take away all of our rights as a part of these things. Well, I think we're in a precarious situation at the very least here. What we've seen here is not only the legacy of Fauci is that he presided over the biggest failure in public health guidance ever, not only is it the massive destruction of a younger, generation, particularly poor people and shifting the burden unethically to the poor and to our children, not only is there now a loss of trust in all guidance, but I believe part of that legacy is a complete loss of basic civility in this country. And so we have a cohesion problem.
Starting point is 02:02:35 We have a moral and ethical failure of shifting the burden toward poor. people and toward our children and we have a massive failure if you want to be going into philosophy of what it is to be a virtuous society. The kind of society we thought we had, the kind of society you must have in a free society, in a democracy where there's a diversity of views. And what is the biggest absence in our country? It's an absence of courage. We have a void in courage. In the people, that's what we're going to. we have seen, in my view, and as Aristotle has said, the courage is a predicate to all other virtues. You know, you can't have a functioning moral civilization, ethical civilization. If you
Starting point is 02:03:29 don't have people, have the courage to speak up against wrong. And I think that you mentioned it. It is true. We've had several presidents in a row now that. don't understand that when they're elected, they're elected to be leaders for everybody, including people who didn't vote for them. Okay, we need to reset our moral and ethical compass here. I want to make something that your public viewing may not even understand is that we did all these mandates on children for vaccines and boosters and forced testing and did medical clinical trials on infants and toddlers that are breaking all medical ethics rules at Stanford. at Johns Hopkins, at all of our great medical centers,
Starting point is 02:04:15 they did those clinical trials. With the hope that it would, what, shield, for a disease that young children have no significant risk from, healthy children, with the hope that it would shield adults from this infection, I'm a father. My children are not to be used as shields for me. I'm a shield for my children.
Starting point is 02:04:37 So we have to re-examine ourselves as a society, And by the way, the UK, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, dozens of countries did not mandate vaccines for children. They had the same data. They knew what the data was. We are an outlier on what we did to our younger generation and now have a younger generation that we have inflicted an obesity crisis on. The 52% of college-age kids gained an average of 20% of 20% of the 20% of the obesity crisis on. the 52% of college-age kids gained an average of 28 pounds during the lockdowns of 2020. That's an obesity crisis.
Starting point is 02:05:14 We've created a generation of young children, toddlers who think they are a vector of disease, that they are a danger to their parents and grandparents, that everyone's a danger to them. This is what we're grappling with. It's not the pandemic now. It's not about just reforming the funding of science, which is controlled by a cabal of people at the highest levels. We need to get decentralized funding. We need to make far more transparency in the discussions at the CDC. We need a complete house cleaning of the FDA, the CDC, and the NIH. That's going to require a real tough new president and new leadership, but we need something more.
Starting point is 02:05:54 And that is we need our people in this country to wake up and what I said, rise up. Rise up means speak up. Make your voice. This is a free society because when you turn around, you've lost all the freedoms that you thought you're had. And that's not the kind of country we want to leave to our children. Absolutely brilliant. You have a plan to catch. I could do this all day. Dr. Scott Atlas, it has been such a pleasure.
Starting point is 02:06:21 Thank you for having me. To spend this time with you for everyone out there. Amazon tried to block your ability to buy this book. Go out and get it. We only covered just some of what's in here. This is one of the most important stories of our lifetime. We have to understand this because if we don't know our history, we are doomed to repeat it. Definitely check out the podcast that Dr. Scott Atlas does, Independent Truths, with Dr. Scott Atlas, independent.org slash Scott Atlas.
Starting point is 02:06:48 Just Twitter, same thing. There it is. And all of this will be available to you if you're on our newsletter. I'm going to be joining Aaron, Siri, and I are going to be on stage for the first time together. Of course, our lawyer that wins all the lawsuits for us. We're going to be at Freedom Fest in just a few weeks. You can get tickets. You can get discount tickets through ICAN 50.
Starting point is 02:07:09 This is what Freedom Fest is all about. We want to bring people together to have really deep conversations about liberty. We know it needs to be done. As a free people, we have an obligation to do it. Capitalism, free market capitalism especially, is being recognized as the savior for humanity. This is a record. record-breaking freedom fest.
Starting point is 02:07:39 Language of the unconsciousness, the language of dreams. We can take our future back for us and our children. Freedom here and now, we are in good company. It's amazing to sit with a man that took on his civic duty to try and protect humanity, to stand for his constitution of the United States of America, to try and and fight to open our schools, to keep our businesses open, to have a well-rounded concept of policy. Unfortunately, no matter how hard he tried, he was thwarted by those lesser thinkers, low-level thinkers, as he called them. And unfortunately, a president that didn't seem to
Starting point is 02:08:35 have enough strength, I guess, to really just put that team of brilliant scientists in front of the media so that we could have all asked the appropriate questions and maybe have seen some change. We have talked a lot about COVID and I would say of all the conversations I've ever wanted to have, Scott Atlas represents sort of the most important one to me. You just heard what happened in many ways. Definitely check out this book. So important that you understand this and wrap your head around it to see what these players are. These are not heroes. Deborah Birx and Tony Fauci. And these people in the task force represent the greatest failure in history when it comes to health. Over a million people died from COVID.
Starting point is 02:09:22 The vaccines didn't do anything, probably causing even more harm than good, deaths, all of it. But no matter what, you cannot say this was a success. We had more deaths than the third world. Africa did better than us. India did better than us. That is an outrage when they have no money. We're one of the richest nations, if not the richest nation in the world. And yet all we did was destroy our children, destroy our jobs, destroy our economy.
Starting point is 02:09:50 And as Dr. Atlas put it so well, you can't hang it on what administration. It went without pause from Donald Trump into Joe Biden. And what it is his call to action for all of us, be brave, grow some courage. We allowed this to happen. We all went along with it. protected our jobs. We took our shots just because we were afraid to stand up. We didn't speak our truth. We didn't know how big our movement was. If we'd have known that inside of our own office buildings, 30 to 50 percent of us were all looking at losing our jobs, but we didn't threaten
Starting point is 02:10:28 to walk out together the way the troika of Redfield and Fauci and Berks had, we should have used their method inside of every one of our schools and every one of our, uh, you know, you know, workplaces to say, we're all going to work out together if you'd try to fire one of us. It's a great idea. We should have done it to stop the insanity that these morons forced it upon us and killed us with. We have to take account of what took place here. Science has a reckoning to do, and that's what we spend a lot of our time here. The debates need to happen. But none of that will happen if we as people do not grow some courage. We've got to find our truth. We've got to find our strength. We've got to realize how powerful we are. Every one of us. We're all God's children.
Starting point is 02:11:21 But if we don't stand up for those inalable rights that are endowed into us by our creator, If we let our governments of the world rob us of that, in the world economic forums, and the Bill Gates, and the low-level thinkers to make our decisions for us, that will be on us. We've got to get involved. We've got to start reading. We've got to start watching. As I've said it before, I think you should be signed up to every single website of someone that's running for president. Let's see what they all have to say. Get involved.
Starting point is 02:11:55 Stop letting bumper stickers decide. how you're going to make your decisions. These aren't five-word answers. They're the future of humanity. It's in our hands. We've shown what we can do. We've had a lot of success. Now let's start standing together, shoulder to shoulder,
Starting point is 02:12:17 dreaming together of what this nation once was and how it could be even better. If we dream and we become courageous. I'll see you next week on the high wire.

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