The Joe Rogan Experience - #2335 - Dr. Mary Talley Bowden
Episode Date: June 10, 2025Dr. Mary Talley Bowden is a board-certified Otolaryngologist, Sleep Medicine specialist, and founder of BreatheMD: a direct-care ENT practice in Houston, Texas. In addition, she is a senior fellow wit...h the Independent Medical Alliance (formerly FLCCC), the founder of Americans for Health Freedom, and also serves on the board of the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation.www.breathemd.org https://posthillpress.com/book/dangerous-misinformation-the-virus-the-treatments-and-the-lies Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right. Very nice to meet you. I have I saw you on the Danny Jones podcast and I've
read a lot of your tweets and Twitter and just the entire ordeal that you've been
through since the beginning of COVID.
And so I felt like it could be very educational for people to hear your perspective.
Well, I appreciate you continuing to talk about COVID because I think a lot of people
are sick of it.
I'm certainly ready to move on.
I am too. It's just people need to make sure this doesn't happen again.
Exactly. Nothing's happened really. Nothing's been corrected.
No. Not only has nothing been corrected, I was just watching an argument on television
where they were trying to argue for vaccinating women who are pregnant. Oh, right. It's insane. I mean, there's a golden rule of pregnancy, right? You don't
experiment on pregnant women. You don't experiment on an unborn child.
You're not even supposed to eat sushi.
Exactly, right. But we're going to put this modified mRNA technology into these women
who, you know, early treatment, we have early treatment,
COVID is no longer a threat. We're dealing, you know, at one point it was more than a
cold but not now. Why in the world will we give them to pregnant women or children?
The only thing that makes sense is money.
Right. Well, in ego.
It's the only thing that makes sense.
In ego and...
Ego, meaning because they've already recommended it because they don't want to admit that it's
not effective.
They don't want to admit their side effects.
I mean, we have hard facts showing it should be pulled off the market.
I mean, any other product would have been pulled a long time ago.
If this were an antibiotic and we'd seen all of the carnage from an antibiotic, it would
have been yanked off long ago.
It should have been yanked off in the first month.
There's no other explanation than there's just fraud, there's corruption, there's ego,
there's money, but it's not science.
No, and there's a lot of people that for whatever reason, they have this very rigid ideology
that the pharmaceutical drug companies are to be trusted.
And we should trust the science and that all these organizations, whether it's the FDA
or whatever it is that's connected to these assertions, they should be trusted, not just
the average doctor who's talking about these side effects and all these different things
that they're experiencing with their patients.
Yeah.
I mean, I trusted them when the pandemic started. I mean, I didn't think that the shots
would work necessarily, but I trusted them. I didn't think they were going to hurt us.
Why didn't you think they would work?
Because they were rushed to the market. I knew the flu shots were already iffy. We're dealing
with a virus that mutates. We've never been able to vaccinate against a cold, which, you know,
virus that mutates. We've never been able to vaccinate against a cold, which, you know, it's a rapidly mutating virus. It's been tried before and it's failed.
If you don't mind, please tell everybody what your background is in medicine.
Yeah, private practice, solo physician. I'm not head of the Mayo Clinic. I'm just a neighborhood
ear, nose, and throat doctor that sort of got tangled up in this
inadvertently.
And I always thought when the pandemic started, I thought, well, this will be the hospital.
This will be a chaos in the hospitals.
I never envisioned getting wrapped up in this at all.
I trained at Stanford, and then I moved to Texas after residency.
And then I worked in a small private practice for seven, eight years.
Then I started having a bunch of children and I pretty much gave up medicine.
I took a seven-year sabbatical.
I wasn't even sure I was going to go back.
But then I just had this itch that needed to be scratched and I opened up a solo practice
six months before the pandemic started.
Oh boy.
What timing.
I know.
Why?
Why did I do it?
You could have been out.
I know.
Yeah.
Well, sometimes the universe has a calling for people.
It's been a very interesting journey.
So take us through what happened with you at the very beginning.
So COVID starts making its way across the world.
Yeah.
So I had people coming in with respiratory tract infections that were stubborn.
They were not the typical colds.
And there was all this news that there's this virus from China.
But you watch something on the news, you think, oh, that's not going to really affect me.
But I started having more and more patients coming in.
And at first, I really didn't know what to do.
I just used common sense.
I mean, I treated the symptoms.
I used breathing treatments.
I covered for secondary infection with antibiotics.
I used steroids, that sort of thing.
And I had success.
But I didn't have a lot of people
showing up at my doorstep, treat me for COVID.
But I did start having people wanting to get tested.
And you might remember that LabCorp was the first lab
in the country to offer the test,
and they just got completely slammed.
So it took two weeks to get the results back.
We were already, I was already working with a lab for patients with chronic sinusitis
who they were doing PCR testing for chronic sinusitis.
So, tests for bacterial and fungal infections of the sinuses.
It's called microGEN-DX.
And they came out with a saliva test for COVID.
So we were able to get the results back the next day.
So I started offering that and my little clinic exploded because, and I'm located in a strip
mall which is very purposeful.
I'm very close to the medical center which is, you know, to get your doctor's office,
it's a 10-minute navigation of the parking garage, another 10-minute walk to the office.
And so I was trying to locate my office where it was very
easy to get in and out of. And then that served me very well during the pandemic because with these
saliva tests, you could just take the cup to somebody's car. They could spit in the cup.
They could leave it outside. It was contact-free. You didn't have to even shoved up your nose.
And then we got the results back the next day. And so that sort of made me put me on the map
And then we got the results back the next day. And so that sort of made me, put me on the map in my little neighborhood.
And then I started tracking, you know, who, when the vaccines came out, I started tracking
who was positive, you know, by their vaccination status.
And so I started noticing that the vaccine wasn't working.
And that's sort of what got me in trouble.
I also started giving monoclonal antibodies and I didn't ration them. So I
became known in town as a place you could get monoclonal antibodies without having to
pass, being a certain race or a certain age or that sort of thing.
What do you think that was all about?
Yeah, I don't know. But the monoclonal antibodies is very frustrating to me. They worked very well. They were not controversial.
People would turn around the next day.
But when they first came out, I could get as many doses as I wanted.
I mean, they show up at my doorstep the next day.
And it was great.
I mean, that also sort of put me on the map with COVID.
And then I didn't even use ivermectin until the government took over distribution of monoclonal antibodies, and then it became harder and harder to get them.
And that's when I turned to ivermectin.
But you know, in my opinion, they did that on purpose.
They did that to encourage people to take the COVID shot.
It was very orchestrated.
If you look at the timing, the, you know, in March, the government put out the big information
on ivermectin and why you should not take it for COVID.
They put that on the FDA's website.
At the same time, they launched COVID-19 Community Corps, and this was April 1st, 2021. This was an $11.5 billion slush fund to feed out propaganda and censor people.
And the day that they launched the COVID-19 Community Corps was the same day that Houston
Methodist, which is where I had privileges, they mandated the COVID shots for all their
employees and they were the first in the country.
And that's sort of how I got tangled up in all this because I had privileges there.
And then I was actually working with them.
I was doing research with them.
I was sharing my data with them to try to get it published.
But then I started questioning the vaccine and how it wasn't working.
I brought it to their attention first and they gaslit
me. They just said, well, it just, it lowers severity. And when they ignored me, then I
started speaking out on social media and that's what got me in trouble.
But so that summer, 2021, that's when the third and the largest surge of the pandemic
started. And this was after the rollout of the
wonderful COVID shots, which were promised to stop transmission and prevent death and obviously
didn't. And the government was getting frustrated. So they doubled down on their ivermectin attack.
And this was end of August, 2021. They put out the infamous horse tweet, said, seriously, y'all,
you're not a horse, you're not a horse,
you're not a cow, stop it.
A tweet went viral.
It had dire consequences, in my opinion.
And then they fully approved the COVID shot, and then Biden mandated for employers with
100 more employees.
And that was right when they took you down.
So it was all very coordinated. Oh and then and then the the final straw was taking
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Yeah, that was the more fascinating thing about it to me is I listed a bunch of different
things that I took, including monoclonal antibodies, but they only concentrated on ivermectin.
But the way they did it was like so transparent, like changing the color of my face on CNN
and everywhere, this concerted effort to call it horse dewormer.
They just tried to make it look as preposterous as possible without ever explaining that it's
been used more than multiple billions of times prescribed to human beings.
Yeah.
I mean, they branded you.
When I think of you, I think of that picture of you
where you're slightly green.
Honestly.
Yeah, but ivermectin, I was nervous about using it
because of all the hype and because monoclonal worked
so well, I was like, well, this is not gonna work.
I was nervous. But the first thing I did was dug into the safety, and anybody could do that, which is
a minimal amount of effort.
You can go to the FDA website, and you can find the toxicity data on ivermectin.
And there's something called the LD50, lethal dose 50, which is a benchmark number that
gives you an idea of how toxic a medication is. And LD50 means how
many animal, 50, what dose would kill 50% of lab animals. So for ivermectin, it kind
of depends on the rat, I mean, the type of animal and the gender, but it's basically
10 milligrams per kilogram up to 80 milligrams per kilogram. So for COVID, we're using 0.4
milligrams per kilogram. So I knew that we're using 0.4 milligrams per kilogram. So
I knew that we were not worried about killing people with it. And then I did a literature
search and I looked for accidental intentional overdoses for ivermectin and I couldn't find
a single study. Whereas you do that for Tylenol, I mean, thousands, thousands of reports. So
once I knew it was safe, then I started using it and then I found it worked.
And then all in all, I treated well over 6,000 patients and everybody that got early treatment
stayed out of the hospital.
I also had patients come in that were really sick in the second week.
And that was such a learning experience for me because, you know, normally if somebody walked into my office with an oxygen saturation in the low 80s, I would call an ambulance.
But I had patients who were refusing to go to the hospital, and I had to give them the
option to possibly die in my office, which is scary.
But we saved them.
I mean, we just threw the kitchen sink at them, and we didn't have monoclonal antibodies.
So we brought them in every day.
We did IV steroids.
We did IV antibiotics.
We gave them home oxygen.
We gave them high dose of ivermectin.
We did everything we could, and it was amazing.
I mean, they survived.
It was very gratifying.
So you think it was probably a combination of all the different medications and all the
different treatments?
You know, I would vary my approach depending on the severity, the comorbidities.
I mean, it's an art, not a, you know, a protocol is a guideline, right?
But every patient is sort of individual.
And so for the patients, you know, the one patient I'm thinking of, I mean, he had a
history of two heart attacks.
He had a history of throat cancer.
He came in with an oxygen level.
It was below 80.
I can't remember exactly what it was.
But I mean, so I just did everything.
I took everything that I could and gave it to him and it worked.
And I had a few people like that.
But if a 20-year-old came in, I'd probably just give him some ivermectin and it just
depends.
Sgt.
Trevor Burrus Why did you decide to try ivermectin even though there was all this negative propaganda?
Well, because I had patients coming to see me who needed help.
I mean, I just wasn't going to shut my door.
I'd already established that I could help people with monoclonal antibodies.
So I still had people coming to me seeking help and I just didn't have the heart to say
no and I knew it was safe.
So I knew that, you know, it was a little bit iffy, but I knew it was safe and there
was good data showing it worked.
It's just, you know, one thing, you can find a study to support any argument you want in
medicine.
I learned that in residency.
All residents learn that.
We have something called Journal Club where you sit down once a week and you pour through
different articles and the takeaway is most articles are crap.
They're low power or they're conflicts of interest or they're designed poorly.
My mindset coming into the pandemic was the research, the journals are a starting point, but it's not
the final say is your own clinical experience and what you're seeing.
And you know, we had never seen COVID before.
This was a brand new entity.
So we were learning on the fly, but you know, I've never treated this many patients with
a single disease in my career.
I'm sure I never will again. And so,
you quickly become an expert. And, you know, doctor, I can't speak for all doctors, but we like to
do well. We like our patients to get better. It's gratifying. That's how it's sort of how you get
job satisfaction is seeing your patients do well. So, why would I, you know, continue to have,
you know, COVID patients come in if I couldn't help them?
And it's astounding to me that the doctors in the hospitals just didn't pivot, didn't
try new things.
And I guess they were handcuffed by the hospital administrators, but it just seems to me that
there was a doctor in Houston, Joe Varone, who I'm pretty good friends with,
who is a critical care doctor, and he was one of the founders of FLCCC, which is sort
of the, they developed the original protocols for ivermectin.
And Dr. Verone had much better success than most other doctors.
His overall success rate was 4.4 percent of his patients died, whereas in other hospitals, average
around 20%.
And he did, he threw the kitchen sink at people, and he basically followed this FLCCC hospital
protocol.
05.00
So, when the monoclonal antibodies were suppressed, what was the messaging?
What did they say to doctors?
They said that the strain of the virus was no longer covered, so that it had evolved
and it wouldn't work.
At the same time, they're using the exact same vaccine.
Exactly. And they had switched the monoclonal antibodies periodically. So it wasn't like
they started with one and stuck with it the whole time. They switched it as things evolved.
But it was really clear.
And the propaganda was shocking because we've all seen propaganda with foreign conflicts,
weapons of mass destruction, all that jazz.
We've all seen propaganda.
But when Rolling Stone magazine printed an article saying that people were, the hospitals were overflowing with people overdosing on ivermectin and gunshot victims couldn't get in.
And then they used a stock photo, which was of a bunch of people wearing winter coats
in like, I think it was, I was so brazen and sloppy and obvious, especially in the
age of Google.
If this had all gone down in the 1980s, we would all be in the dark.
We would have no idea.
We would have been like, wow, I guess Ivermxn is killing people.
We wouldn't have known until like 2030.
People would have like, you have been a conspiracy theorist. You've been a crazy person, like one of those people that could tell you all
the facts about the Kennedy assassination, you know, with wild eyes, all over stone,
you know, but it was so obvious. And it was so confusing because, you know, I had had
people on my podcast before, where, you know, I had a doctor's on and I talk about foolish
people that don't believe
in traditional medicine, like people that want to try different things, like people
that were anti-vaccine or anti-anything.
These are the best people at the front of the line.
Trust them.
Five years later, I'm like, don't trust anybody.
They're all compromised.
It's all money.
And that was the most disheartening thing.
The propaganda was disheartening, but it was that the whole system is compromised.
And then when I found out that pharmaceutical drug companies, they're the ones that are
funding studies and that they could have a whole ton of study.
They don't have to divulge all the data from their studies.
They only have to show you some studies that were carefully crafted to show efficacy. But all the other studies that they had that even showed negative
effects, they could bury those. They weren't held responsible. I was like, what is this?
What is this? But it's like everything in the world when money gets involved.
You know, that Rolling Stone tweet is still up. I found it yesterday.
I couldn't believe it.
That's so wild.
Look at that.
Look at these people wearing winter coats.
So apparently this was a bunch of people that were waiting in line for the flu shot.
Gunshot victims.
Those are all those people who got shot.
What the fuck is going on in Oklahoma?
They're just shooting folks.
They think it's the Wild West out there.
Imagine if those were all gunshot.
But look how crazy that article is, or that tweet is.
Gunshot victims left waiting as horse dewormer overdoses
overwhelm Oklahoma.
By the way, zero horse dewormers there.
Zero.
It was a total lie.
Well, in a, you know, even last Friday,
Vanity Fair did an article on Maha and Cali beans,
and they quoted me in it, and in their description of me, they used horse dewormer.
I could not believe it.
Still!
Catherine Ebon, the reporter for Vanity Fair.
Wow.
And she buddied up to me, acted like we were good friends.
That's how they always do it.
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They're all dirty.
I learned a valuable lesson.
It's so dirty.
It's such a dirty business.
God, I used to have massive respect for journalists.
If I had never done this podcast,
I'd be your regular schmo out there
with just spitting out all the company lines
that all the blast
all over the news.
I kind of liked it better then.
It was a lot easier, right?
Ignorance is bliss.
I didn't think the world was filled with demons, money hungry demons that are willing to sacrifice
human lives in the pursuit of revenue.
It's crazy.
Well, that's why we have to continue this fight because people have lost
all trust with good reason. With good reason. That's why I'm having you on. That's why I
continue to talk. People are like, stop with the COVID already. I get it, folks. If this is not for
you, move on. Mary and I will still be bitching about this for the next three years. Well, you
know, for me, it was just it was such a wake call. Cause it's so weird to see your face on TV green,
first of all, that was weird.
And then this term horse dewormer.
I'm like, why you guys aren't concentrating on the fact
that a 55 year old man is fine three days later
during the worst strain.
It was during the Delta, where everybody's freaking out,
this one's gonna kill us all.
And I was fine in three days.
And I made this video, I'm like,
I'm sorry I have to cancel the concert this weekend. You know, I got COVID. But I'm good now. And
then I had, I didn't think that was going to be anything. I thought that was just going
to be the people that bought tickets to see Dave Chappelle and I in New Orleans. And that
was going to, or was it Nashville? Wherever it was. That's all it was going to be. Those
folks are going to be upset. I'm sorry. You know, we'll make it up to you. Your tickets still count. That's all I thought it was going to be. I thought it was going to be. Those folks are going to be upset. I'm sorry. We'll make it up to you. Your tickets still count. That's all I thought it was going to be.
I thought it was going to be like a normal tweet that I put out or a normal Instagram post that I put out.
And then all of a sudden, I hear that Neil Young wants to be removed from Spotify.
I was like, what the fuck is going on? This is crazy.
Spotify got calls from two former presidents.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
What about, did they deplatform?
Did you get censored or deplatformed?
No, I grew by two million subscribers in a month.
I did.
Because people started listening,
because they made it sound like I was this maniac.
And they started listening, like, oh, he's really reasonable
and pretty humble about all this stuff, just asking questions and bringing people on, like Dr. Robert Malone, who has nine patents in
the invention of mRNA vaccine technology. Like he's one of the, he took it himself.
He was reporting his insane adverse side effect where he almost died. He was telling about
it and they labeled him a kook for that.
What made you so awake though?
Well that.
Just Malone?
That.
No, well Malone, Peter McCullough.
I've always been the type of person that is like if someone is saying something and they
have rock-solid connect. Dr. Peter McCalla is the most published
physician in his field, in human history. Like this is an incredibly well-respected
doctor up until he took a moral and ethical stand saying that this is not what they're
saying, this is not what we should be doing, and then destroyed. They tried to destroy
his career.
He's always's a horrible...
It's insane. But the man has incredible courage and he was labeled all... When I would tell
people he's the most published physician in time, you'd see their eyes glaze away. They
didn't want to hear it. I'm like, maybe he's right. Well, five years later, we know he's
right. We know he was right. He was right all along. I mean, the whole... So for me, when there's...
There's always a bunch of people that are ideologically or financially captured. And
then there's people that feel morally obligated to tell the truth. And you can spot those
people. And when I spotted a few of them, like, okay, let me hear them out. I might
be the guy that goes, no, this guy's a kook and he's going to cross people lives. Or I might be someone who go, hey, everybody, hit the brakes. Like you might
be getting bamboozled here. And especially the real concern with any sort of a new drug
is always the side effects. But when you have indemnity, when you have complete immunity
for any financial liability, like the vaccine manufacturers do, and all you have indemnity, when you have complete immunity for any financial liability, like
the vaccine manufacturers do, and all you have to do is label it a vaccine, because
that's not a traditional vaccine.
It's just not.
They changed the definition for mRNA vaccine technology.
Before that, it was not that.
It was a very different thing.
We all had in our head, vaccines are good.
That's why they don't get sued because
we need vaccines. You know, and then then unfortunately I read Rod F. Kennedy Jr's book,
the real Anthony Fauci. I was like, Oh my God. Did you what was your initial thought
about the COVID shot? What was your take it? Did you take it? No, I didn't take it. But
that's why they were so mad at me. I was ready to take it.
The UFC had allocated shots for all the Johnson & Johnson, for all their employees.
And I showed up there on a Saturday, which was the day of the fights, and I said, can
you give it to me?
And they said, yeah, sure, let's call the doctor.
We'll set it up.
I thought I was going to get a shot.
I thought it was like a flu shot.
Like, I'll get that shot and I'll go do the broadcast.
I was going to do the broadcast. I didn't think anything of it
I was not worried about it at all and they said no you have to come to the clinic and do it
Could you do that on Monday? And I said I can't but I'll be back in two weeks during the time that I
Was trying to get it and then in two weeks later when the next fights were it got pulled from the market
Because of blood clots and then two people I knew had strokes.
And I was like, hold the fuck up.
And then I got real nervous because there was a lot of family members
that were like really pushing it.
You need to get vaccinated.
Everyone should get that. Have you gotten vaccinated?
Get vaccinated. We all need to do our part.
We all need to get vaccinated.
And, you know, then I became a heretic.
Then I was like, OK, I don't think I want to do it.
And I had a bunch of friends that
had horrible side effects, including one of them,
who is a young guy who is a pacemaker now.
His heart stopped beating for like nine seconds at a time,
and he would black out.
It was wild shit was happening.
And I was like, I don't understand
why this isn't on the news.
I don't understand.
And then I'm like, oh my god, I'm the news.
I'm like, I have to be the news.
I don't want to be the news.
I like talking shit.
I like having a bunch of comedians here.
We have laughs.
We get silly.
You know, have a few drinks, watch some funny videos,
crack each other.
Have fun.
Or scientists.
I like to have fascinating people in here.
Tell me how the cosmos was formed.
I don't want to be someone who distributes information to the masses that's been lied
to. I don't have any lofty goals like that. I want to be the one who tells the truth.
That's not what I do. I'm just a curious person who talks to people.
Was it hard for you to get ivermectin? No, I got it from India like that. I got boxes of it. I was handing it out to everybody
I think we still have some way around here. Most people don't have to go to India to get their medicine. I know.
Well, that was after my doctor had got it for me. My doctor got it for me. I think I fucked it up for everybody
I think me becoming the attack boy when they went after me. I don't think they would have attacked anybody
That didn't have a large platform like that and I don't think they would, I should say
it better, I don't think they would have attacked Ivermectin the way they did. I
think they would have just suppressed it and it wouldn't have been a public thing
because it wouldn't have got out. I think the problem was me saying that. The
thing, the crazy thing is I said all that other stuff too. I said IV vitamins, I
said Z-Pak, prednisone.
I told them all the things my doctor put me on.
And all they concentrated on was this ivermectin thing.
I was like, this is wild.
Like what is going on?
And then I was like, am I wrong about ivermectin?
And then I started just reading about the scientists, the team that invented it and
how they won a Nobel Prize.
I'm like, okay, what the hell is happening?
This is nuts.
This is so weird.
Well, it was all part of getting the shot in every arm.
And they had to go after ivermectin.
I mean, they launched a war on ivermectin.
Pierre Cori wrote a book about it.
Yes.
I had Pierre on early on too.
Yeah, yeah.
And I actually sued the FDA over that horse tweet and we won.
It hasn't really changed anything.
But so the FDA, when they put that information or misinformation out against ivermectin,
they were really crossing a line because they're not allowed to tell the public, you can't
take a medication for this or you should take a medication for that.
They're basically allowed to just approve medications and move on.
I mean, they can issue a safety alert if there's something that comes up, but they're not allowed
to really direct patients, and that's what they did.
And so we did sue them, and we won, and they had to take down the horse tweet, and they
had to take down the misinformation on their website, but
Unfortunately as you know evidenced by what just happened on Vanity Fair
I mean the brand of it being only for animals still lives on and you know be great what happened at Vanity Fair
So the reporter still use the term horse
Wild right wild you're still be a little horse do you wear a pusher in 2025? term horse dewormer. Oh, with the re-sodding. Right, right. Wild. Right.
Wild.
You're still available to horse dewormer pusher.
In 2025, when Chris Cuomo is out there talking about how he's taking it for long COVID.
Right, right.
But it'd be great if the FDA could issue some sort of statement saying that it is safe,
that it is used in humans.
They don't have to say much more than that, but, you know, we could use a little help
in rebranding ivermectin.
And there are also a bunch of states that are trying to make it over the counter.
I'm not sure if you've seen that.
Yes, I have.
Seventeen states have had bills in the last legislative session trying to get ivermectin
over the counter.
Three have been successful.
So, Tennessee, Idaho, and Arkansas.
Four is still in deliberations, and 10 they failed.
But another thing the FDA, I believe, should do is make ivermectin over the counter, because
people are basically going to the feed store.
I mean, my own kid, he had some sort of scabies situation in West Texas over the weekend.
He had to go to the feed store to get treatment.
And I did a poll on Twitter.
52% of the respondents said they go to the feed store to get their ivermectin.
Is there any difference in the ivermectin from the feed store?
I don't know.
I mean, I haven't heard of anybody having issues, but it's just unnecessary.
This is America.
It's crazy.
We should be able to get the medication very easily. And there is some sort of an efficacy for some sort of skin
infections, is that true? Scabies is one of them. Yeah, but you use it topically? Is that
how it's used? You can. I mean, for scabies, actually, you can take it orally. Okay. But,
yeah, so we shouldn't have to go to India. We shouldn't have to go to the feed store.
We should be able to just go to mean in Mexico. He still emails me
I don't know that kind of worries me because I just bought boxes
I was handing out boxes to people because so many people were telling me they couldn't get it
All right, and so I'm like, let me just get a lot of it while I still can. Yeah. Yeah
I mean, I guess it's probably fine, but it's just unnecessary. People are
giving it to me at shows. Oh, they were? As gifts? I carry around my purse. I like to
use rum and gin for something. Oh, here's my ivermectin. Oh, I know people that take
it as a prophylactic all the time. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Which is so, it's just what a weird
drug to go after that was on the World Health Organization's list of essential medicines.
Yeah. How many people who had yellow fever and all the World Health Organization's list of essential medicines. Yeah. Yeah.
How many people who had yellow fever and river blindness, all sorts of different parasitic
infections.
It won a Nobel Prize.
And it showed that it stopped viral replication in vitro.
Yeah.
They knew that.
Yeah.
I remember when I brought that up to Sanjay Gupta.
It was like, but you know it does, right?
And you can see the look on his face where it's like, I couldn't, he couldn't talk about
that.
He had to skirt around it and just do his best.
But it was like, this is kind of crazy to make an off label medication so taboo.
And then to stop monoclonal antibodies, just stop them.
Well, you couldn't get them.
My friend, one of his buddies was in the hospital, and because he was in the hospital, they wouldn't
give them monoclonal antibodies.
Oh, yeah.
If you cross that threshold, you are not going to get monoclonal antibodies.
What is that about?
Does that make any sense to you?
Well, they did it by the day.
Apparently, there was some data showing if you gave it too late in the time course, it
actually makes things worse.
How many people did they give it to that were too late?
How do we know this?
It's a little suspicious.
It does seem suspicious because like why would if something if you've shown something to
be very effective done early on, wouldn't you assume it would continue to be at least
somewhat effective?
Now if you're trying to stop someone who's on the brink of death, which this gentleman
might want up dying, and they didn't get it it to him if you're just trying to stop and
That you can't do it because you're admit you're in the hospital because you're admitted
Yeah, but you should have like crazy data that shows like after 14 your feet fall
14 days of infection your feet fall off you go blind if you take it can't give it to you in my theory is
They probably had a massive inflammatory response because we would see that.
People would get the monoclonal antibodies and they would just feel like complete hell
that night because it was like a little war going on in the body.
Right.
And then they would wake up the next day feeling great.
I don't know if you had that experience.
Right.
Yeah.
I pretty much did.
So the second week of illness was the massive inflammatory response.
So my thinking is the monoclonal antibodies may have just exacerbated that, but they could
have counteracted that with high dose steroids.
That was another thing.
They gave these like piddly doses of steroids in the hospital.
In what steroids in particular?
Methylprednisolone or solu-medrol was what we typically used.
If we were in the hospital.
Is that prednisone what I took?
Is that the same thing?
No.
Well, prednisone what I took? Is it the same thing? No.
Well, prednisone is an oral.
There are different types, but like I usually do a medrol dose pack rather than prednisone
because it's been shown to help better with respiratory.
It's not a huge deal, but in the hospitals they could give salumedrol and high doses
of that, but they were giving very small doses of steroid, which is a problem.
Interesting.
Well, that's also one of the things that they talked about in the RFK Junior book was that
the studies that were saying that it was ineffective, the studies were not using the protocol that
these doctors were using.
And it seemed like these studies were designed to fail.
Exactly. doctors were using. And it seemed like these studies were designed to fail. Exactly, exactly. And you know, like I said, you can find a study to support or go against
anything you want, basically. So I just relied on my clinical experience. And I just had
so many people saying, wow, it really made a big difference. And I saw people staying
out of the hospital and it wasn't hurting anybody. But yeah, a lot of those studies were basically designed to fail.
Either the dose wasn't high enough or they gave it too late or it was heavily funded
by somebody that doesn't want it to succeed.
Yeah.
It's all very bizarre.
It's really bizarre to live through.
And for you as a person who was out of medicine and then said, jump back in six months before
all this, what is it like to have your world view spun around like that?
Yeah.
I mean, it's good and bad.
I feel sorry for the people that don't get it in a lot of ways, but I just never thought
it would come to all this.
I didn't go back to work to have a huge, huge career.
I was just basically trying to stay busy and active.
And help people.
Yeah, but I didn't envision this at all.
It's been very impactful, I'll say that.
Yeah, what has it been like like having to do this?
Have you done all these podcasts? It's wild. Yeah, it's not what I envisioned at all. But it's been,
you know, I feel vindicated finally. At least I'm not embarrassed to go to the school functions
anymore or show up at the sporting events or, you know, I used to be scared to go to the school functions anymore or show up at the sporting events or, you know, I
used to be scared to go to the grocery store because they just, they came after me so hard
and Houston, I mean, Houston Methodist Hospital is sort of the country club, you know, the
elite of the hospitals.
And so for them to come after me was a big deal.
It's hard to get privileges there.
You know, their tagline is leading medicine, and they
were very proud of being the first hospital in the country to mandate the shots. They
didn't need to go after me. I mean, I was nothing. I saw a lot of COVID patients, but
in the grand scheme of things, I really wasn't... I was not really doing anything.
It's the Streisand effect, right?
Yeah, exactly. anything. It's the Streisand effect, right? Yeah. They attacked you and by doing so, they
made the whole thing way bigger than it needed to be. But they did silence other doctors.
I mean, I hear from doctors all the time that won't say anything because of what they did
to me. Yeah. No, there's a lot of doctors that I know that were in danger of losing
their license because they had prescribed ivermectin. And that was another thing.
The Federation of State Medical Boards, which is this private entity, they're actually located
in Texas, who oversees all the state medical boards.
They sent out a directive to all the state medical boards concerning ivermectin, concerning
misinformation, and basically encouraging the medical boards
to go after doctors like myself.
And I mean, I'm still tangled up with the medical board trying to clear my name.
But they did that.
It all happened in that fall of 2021, right when Biden mandated the shots.
They really came down hard on the doctors.
So what did they do specifically to you?
So I got several complaints, but only one of them has really stuck.
The others I've cleared my name on, but they're all involving ivermectin.
No patient harm.
The one that has stuck is from a hospital in Dallas called Texas Hugely Hospital, and
there was this man, a sheriff's deputy, father of six, who's basically dying.
They were talking hospice, and his wife wanted him to have the opportunity to try ivermectin.
And he had tried to get it before getting in the hospital and couldn't find a doctor
willing to prescribe it.
So wife knew he was okay with it.
And so she sued the the hospital and then she asked
me to come on as sort of the expert. They had to have a doctor who was willing to prescribe
it because they can't force the doctors to prescribe a medication, but they could force
the hospital to give a doctor privileges who was willing to prescribe it. So, that's where
I came in and we won the case and the hospital had a court order
saying that they were going to give me emergency temporary privileges so that could go into the
hospital and give him ivermectin. Well, there was all this, you know, stall tactics. They were
supposed to give me the privileges the same day and in other circumstances at that time because
of the pandemic, they were giving doctors same-day
privileges.
It wasn't this lengthy application process because there was a shortage of doctors.
For me, they made me submit my surgical case log for the last three years.
They made me get three letters of recommendation.
They made me fill out a 30-page application.
I got it all done in 24 hours, and then they're like, no, no, we're not,
we're actually going to deny you privileges. So it turned out into this big battle. It
became very confusing because they had to go back to the judge and I finally got the
green light though. The lawyer's like, we can go. You've got the green light, the judge,
we got the order. There's no stay on the order. I send a nurse to the hospital because this
is in Dallas and I'm in Houston,
shows up with the court order and the police greet her and turn her away.
There's not a big scene.
She leaves, but she's not allowed to give him ivermectin.
It turns out they did get a stay, but our lawyers weren't aware of it at the time.
But this is what they're going after me.
They said that I sent a nurse to the hospital without privileges and I caused a scene and
I harmed other patients by doing this.
And it has been, I mean, it's three and a half years.
They can't find an expert witness to testify against me.
There have been three continuances.
They finally were awarded summary judgment against me.
So I'm already decided, they've decided I'm guilty.
And now I'm waiting for my punishment.
There was a hearing about a month ago to find out what they're going to find me with and that sort of thing.
And I'm just waiting on that.
But I do plan on appealing.
It's just gotten crazy.
Wow.
So the first thing they attacked you with was what what was the first one?
Yeah for the medical board. Yeah, I had
Had one pharmacist turn me in because we sort of gotten a pissing match on the phone
And then this is in 2021
That might have been I can remember, but around that time.
I had another, I had a father reach out to me, a 17-year-old had a history of a kidney
transplant and they were going to Europe and they wanted to have ivermectin just in case
he got sick.
And I was talking to the dad and the stepmother, I didn't realize I wasn't talking to the mother.
So the mother found out I prescribed him ivermectin and turned me in.
But ivermectin is metabolized by the liver, not the kidney.
So it would be no harm for him to get, yeah, I was having had a kidney transplant for him
to get ivermectin.
And he never took the medicine, but it cost me $16,000 in legal fees to get that straightened
out.
So this was your first experience like, oh my God, this is a real battle.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, I've never been in any trouble.
I've never been sued.
Would it feel weird publicly yet?
Like when you were saying you were having a hard time going to the grocery store, you're
worried that? That was when Methodist came after me. So now that is
They came after you very publicly. Yeah, they tweeted about me
They went to the I found out that my privileges were suspended from a text message from a reporter. That's how I found out
I looked at what are you talking about?
I did I said check your sources
I don't know what you're talking about and then I go to my email and they suspended me and then they tweeted about it.
And it went, you know, I had CNN, Washington Post going after me.
It was traumatic.
I mean, I was just a, you know, a mom of four with a small practice and all of a sudden
I've got CNN calling me.
Wow.
So.
What did, what was going through your mind while that was happening?
I spent the weekend in the fetal position in a lot of tears and then I was like, I was
pissed.
And I just, on Monday, I hired a lawyer and I hired a guy to help me with the press and
I held a press conference on Monday.
I resigned and then I sued them so and then I just have been working to try to
Clear my name Wow
But it's just it's so hard to imagine for someone who's never experienced what you went through what that must be like
Emotionally to just get thrown
to the wolves in front of the world, like publicly
by people like CNN, like where it gets so weird because if that never happens to you,
you look at CNN and you go, oh, they're the news.
They're going to tell me the truth.
That's I thought that I just automatically thought that or they're at least saying what
they're allowed to say.
Maybe the government holds back some information, but they're not gonna lie
And then I you see my own self on TV and I'm sure but I'm used to being like attacked for things
I think it harder was is it you know CNN whatever but it's more just the locally like going to grocery store going to the baseball
Game where your kids playing and like hoping you know sitting in a corner because you don't want anybody to see you.
Did anybody ever bother you?
No, honestly, no.
But you just feel self-conscious.
You just feel very self-conscious.
It's hard not to.
Yeah.
Even now, I still feel self-conscious, but it's a lot better.
I mean, I had a Mother's Day event at school and people actually came up and said nice
things to me for once.
So that was nice.
Well, that's nice.
Well, a lot of people got red-pilled, you know, to use the matrix expression, you know,
where they woke up to what's really going on during...
I mean, it's kind of a masterful job of propaganda over the years that the pharmaceutical drug
companies have done.
I mean, because most people aren't even aware of how many drugs get pulled.
They're not even aware of the high percentage of them.
What is it, in the 30s?
Well, yes, about 33%.
They looked at it over 10 years.
33% had significant safety warnings on the drugs.
And it took about four years for those to become recognized.
I mean, they're drugs I used to prescribe that are no longer on the market.
I mean, they're drugs I used to prescribe that are no longer on the market. I mean, so yeah. Like I said, any other drug would have definitely been pulled by now based on all the adverse
events we've seen.
But it's just very profitable.
And that's what people have to wake up to.
There's a bunch of factors, right?
There's the primary one, which is a bunch of scientists that are really trying to help
people and they're really trying to develop new ways to cure Parkinson's and all sorts
of other problems, cancer, and these people are just constantly...
And then there's the money people.
The money people who take that thing and say, how do we give Oxycontin to everybody?
And then you have the Sackler family, right?
You have evil.
You have like actual evil.
Maybe they don't have horns, maybe they don't have a forked tail, but that's a demonic thing to
do. You're infecting people with essentially something that turns them into a zombie and
it's killing people. But you're going to make a lot of money.
In health too, especially in health.
Well, it's because you're so trusted. You're coming from a position of authority. It's a very different thing, especially in an area where most people are woefully ignorant.
Look how many doctors who are practicing doctors who are woefully ignorant about nutrition.
It's an enormous amount.
Now imagine the average person who has to go to a specialist about something
and they're being told, oh, you need Vioxx. This is this thing I'm going to give you and
it's going to cure your arthritis. Like, oh, great. And then you fucking stroke out. And
the people who made that drug knew it was going to cause problems in people. In the
emails that were admitted during the hearings when they lost or during the court proceedings
They wound up paying a fraction of what they made they made like 12 billion dollars
They had a pay I think I they had to pay five so they made seven, you know with you know
It's costs and stuff stuff cost money, but Jesus
It's it's so hard. It's so hard to wake up to that. It's so hard to like go, wait,
so they're not looking out for us?
They're not like trying to make us better?
I always thought they were the people
that were the most wonderful people in the world.
They're the people that are providing the medication
that's keeping everyone alive.
This is why our life expectancy is 100 years old now,
as opposed to just 20 years ago.
Oh, great.
Life expectancy has gone down, actually.
Whoops.
Whoops.
Despite all the vaccines.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And vaccines are even their own special class, right?
It's the gospel.
It's a religion.
It's a gospel.
I mean, we were, it was never questioned in my training.
Never.
I would have never questioned it.
Not only that, I would not talk to anybody who did.
I'd be like, get out of here.
I'm not having an anti-vaxxer on the show.
Fuck off.
But after reading Suzanne Humphrey's book,
and I had her on recently, reading that book,
it was like, what?
Wait a minute.
What?
And then just, this can't be true.
And then just look at the raw data of when the vaccines were
introduced, and also when hygiene was introduced,
and sanitation was introduced, and then massive drop off of the disease. And then at the very end, when it vaccines were introduced, and also when hygiene was introduced, and sanitation was introduced,
and then massive drop off of the disease.
And then at the very end, when it's almost gone,
vaccines are introduced in almost every case.
And yet we all are thinking, like,
thank God vaccines exist,
because otherwise we'd all have polio.
Like, oh Christ.
Yeah, it bothers me that I never questioned it.
Never would have.
The polio one blew me away.
When you find out that that was the same time
where they were using DDT everywhere,
and the people that were getting polio first
were people in rural farmland communities
where they sprayed DDT everywhere.
And it wasn't just affecting people,
it was affecting horses, and it doesn't cross species.
So it wasn't the same thing.
Clearly something was going on and
everybody got locked into this polio scare and to this day I had a friend use
that to me in a text message to me about like look we have to really appreciate
that you know he's like trying to make up for some stupid joke and he was
saying that we you know look at Jonah Salk cure polio Iure Polio. I'm like, I don't have the time.
I don't have the time to sit down and tell him there's a great book.
It's called Dissolving Illusions.
You should read it.
And then you should read Turtles All the Way Down.
It's another great book.
And then you should listen to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s journey from being a very respected
and trusted environmental attorney who was applauded by the left to
being some nutcase pariah who I thought was a nutcase. I had to apologize to him when
I had him on the show. I said, I have to tell you, when I first heard of you and I thought
you were a kook, you're this anti-vaccine kook, I bought, I was living in LA, working
in Hollywood, weee. I bought into it, hook, line, and sinker. Everybody around me thought that way,
so I thought we all, this is what sensible,
intelligent people think.
Yeah, but I don't think you can really convince people.
I think they have to figure it out themselves.
No, they don't want to hear it.
That's the thing.
It's like telling someone that their spaghetti monster
in the sky is not real.
Like, they don't want to hear it.
You just can't, right?
I've just given up.
But there's hope.
I mean, you came around and you're not in the field, right?
And people, I think, you know, COVID directly impacted every single American.
And not in a good way, right?
No, there's nothing good about it.
The only thing good about it was a shift in perspective
And that it's gonna be way harder to pull some shit off like this again
Right people are not gonna buy into it, especially all this vaccine injured people who keep getting gas lit
You know, why do they keep calling it long? Covid? How come nobody I know wasn't vaccinated got long. Covid
What is this long? Covid you speak of Is there a long flu? Is there,
where's the long pneumonia? What the fuck are you talking about? Why are you calling
it? Is it possible that this is a vaccine injury? I'm just asking.
Well, yeah, I've been looking at antibody levels in these people and it's alarming.
So we have an ant that we really don't have a lot of tests for vaccine injured. It's,
it's hard because they'll get the million dollar workup.
By the time they come to see me, they've gone through multiple tests, they've multiple doctors.
It's not really a million dollars, is it?
The workup?
Well, I don't know.
It's a lot.
I'm exaggerating.
I just want to be clear.
Isn't that for some vanity fair kid?
Oh, exactly.
Horse dewormer who claimed there was a million dollar markup.
Actually, somebody should fact-check me on that and it's higher than a million but
Was like oh so they get you know
They go through the workup and then they can't find they can't find a test to prove that they're injured
So the doctors will put them on psychiatric medication will put them on sleeping pills and benzodiazepines and antidepressants
Literally, I saw a patient was put on all three.
So the only test that I have found that does seem to correlate is this antibody test.
It's a spike protein antibody test.
LabCorp has it.
That's where I send people.
Quest has it, but they put the upper limit.
It's too low, so you don't really get a good sense.
But yeah, the upper limit of the test is 25,000. And people that have not gotten the COVID
shots, I'd say it ranges usually under a thousand. And then people that have gotten the shots,
I mean, a lot of them are off the chart. They're over 25,000. But on average, they're probably
10 times higher than the people who have not
gotten the shot.
And this is people who weren't, you know, they were vaccinated four years ago.
It wasn't like they just got the shot.
You know, obviously COVID's not an issue anymore in terms of, you know, people getting sick.
But four years later, you should not have sky high antibody levels.
And that's what I'm seeing.
And that is alarming. It just suggests that there is a lot of spike protein still in the body causing problems.
And haven't they shown that the spike protein continues to be produced in the body up to
700 days later?
Yes.
I mean, that is one study.
What's interesting in that study, the antibody levels were really low, which doesn't make
sense.
I kind of questioned the whole study.
But yeah, I mean, I see it.
I mean, I still see vaccine-injured patients coming to me for the first time, years later.
Last week, I probably saw six new vaccine-injured patients.
And they're not getting any help. The government, it's
called the CICP, that's a countermeasures injury compensation program. They're supposed
to help these patients. They have denied 98% of people that have applied for assistance.
On average, I think they've awarded 30 people, 30 of all the vaccine injured that
have applied, 30 people.
On average, the award is like $4,000 for these people.
It's horrible.
I mean, these people's lives are just destroyed.
These are not easy things to treat.
It's not like I can give them an antibiotic and they're good to go and they're fine.
I mean, they're very challenging.
We don't have a lot of guidance. I do see a lot of success with ivermectin, but it's slow going. It's usually,
you know, months of trying to help them. And the government really needs to help these people.
There's a lot of people suffering and they're getting completely ignored. The other issue is we don't even have a code.
So every disease has a numerical code and it's called an ICD-10 code.
It's what they use to compensate people for the insurance companies use them, but also
for tracking.
So if you have, you know, COVID has its own little code and you can just dial in the code
and get all the numbers.
They don't have a code for vaccine injury.
They have a code for vaccine hesitancy, but they don't have a code for injury.
So all these people are just sort of, you know, they're getting all these diagnoses,
but there's no way to track them.
It's a big problem.
How convenient.
Yeah.
Well, I would imagine the real problem with paying people is you'd have to pay so many.
You know, but that's... We can just print the money. I don't know what the problem is. So, the real problem with paying people is you'd have to pay so many.
You know, but that's...
We can just print the money.
I don't know what the problem is.
I mean, what do you give them?
What if you find out you have myocarditis and your life expectancy is greatly reduced
and we know for a fact it came out of this vaccine, what do you give a person like that?
You're going to take...
Their life's wages, what wages that they would have potentially earned if they... What if it's Katy Perry? Well, so be it. You know gonna take their life's wages what wages that they would have potentially earned.
What if it's Katy Perry? Well so be it. You know what I'm saying? Like you've given two billion dollars.
I don't care. What do you do? The vaccine companies can can pay that money. I know but it's insane.
The number of people that I personally know. What's very shocking to me is when I talk to
people that are pro-vaccine, still pro-vaccine, and when I be very specific,
mRNA vaccine, still pro-COVID vaccine that will tell me they don't know anybody who was
injured by it.
I was like, how is that possible?
How many people do you know?
I know a lot.
I know two people on pacemakers.
Two.
And they're young people.
Yeah, everybody knows somebody.
Yeah, I know a lot of people that got fucked up, including family members.
I know a lot of people that got fucked up.
And people that don't want to admit they got fucked up, all of a sudden they have this
new cancer that's spreading like rapidly.
It's terrifying.
You know, it's like, I watched the Danny Jones podcast and you guys were trying to get Casey Means, Cali Means,
to talk about SV40, right?
Well, my thing with Cali, I actually talked to him last night.
Just he will not go on record to state the COVID shot should be pulled off the market.
And that's the whole, he's the head of my-
Do you think that's being political?
That's trying to like appease too many people?
What do you think that is?
I can't read their minds, but I think anybody with a big microphone who is in a position
of power and who knows the truth is ethically obligated to speak the truth.
That's how I see it.
I mean, I'm not a politician.
I keep hearing the word strategy. But there are, you know, there are people I see, I'm just faced with the carnage every
day in my office.
It's just, I can't ignore it.
And I don't understand why this is so difficult, other than, you know, political.
But it shouldn't be political.
It shouldn't be.
Right.
That's what's disappointing, because we thought that this administration coming in, it was
just going to kick down doors.
Like this is it.
Epstein list, day one, who killed JFK, let's find out.
What are all these fucking UFOs?
That wasn't on my priority list, but yeah.
I'm mine, I'm a dummy.
That was my number one.
Out of those three, give me that one.
Tell me the aliens are real.
But this political dance, this excuse for that, so I really appreciated Jack Cruz kind
of pestering him on that.
And then I've talked to Brett Weinstein about that as well, and he gave a breakdown of how
it actually happened and when the original kidney cells from these monkeys were being
used to make vaccines, that they inadvertently gave these people this simian virus 40, which
when it gets into the human body can lead to rapid cancer.
Right.
Well, yeah, that's one of the cancer-causing issues with these shots.
It's not the only one, though.
Right.
It goes into the cell.
It's supposed to not get into the nucleus,
but it could get in the nucleus.
We know that it can get into the nucleus.
And then if it gets in the nucleus,
Well, at first they thought it was going to stay local.
Right.
It's only going to stay in the arm, right?
It's going to stay right where your arm is.
Your body will react to it.
It will produce the antibodies.
And then you're good to go.
And then all these silly people, you
can watch them die in the streets and laugh as you step
over them.
Ha ha ha, I was smart.
I trusted the science.
So they know that that's not true.
It doesn't stay local.
They know it doesn't dissipate within, it was a small amount of time that it was supposed
to stay inside your body.
They know that's not true.
Right. So yeah, they have the, they replaced one of the nucleotides with something that's hard
to break down, pseudouridine.
They've never shown that pseudouridine is cleared from the body.
There's no study showing that we can clear it.
So it could, that could be why these people have these sky high antibody levels four years
later because the body might not be able to break it down. Oh my god. Oh my god. That's terrifying. What could you conceive of that would help something
like that? Like what could you do that would aid the body in being able to do something like that?
Is there anything theorized? I don't know. I wish, you know, Robert Malone would be a good
person to ask maybe. Yeah. You should come back on and do a victory victory lap. Anyway, that guy was torn apart
Yeah, they were trying so hard to make him out to seem to be a kook and every interview he would do he would be so
reasonable so logical so fact-based and so knowledgeable and they still they still he was a kook
He was a kook. I remember some fucking guy yelled at me and
Excuse me yelled at me in Vegas. He said something about me spreading disinformation
Then he said something about that idiot Malone. I'm like that. Oh that
inventor of mRNA
Or one of them, you know, I mean, it's I don't know. I'm sure this it's not like none of those things ever happened in a vacuum
I'm sure there's a ton of people but he was one of them. He's fucking brilliant guy
But so how did they find out that it can get into the nucleus?
well, if you look at lip if you look at lipid nanoparticles and that's sort of
That's what otherwise if you just put mRNA into the body without the lipid nanoparticle and that's sort of the... otherwise if you just put mRNA into the body without
the lipid nanoparticle, it would get destroyed.
So they put it in the shell, the lipid nanoparticle, and there are studies showing lipid nanoparticles
can cross the nuclear membrane.
So there's that.
Kevin McKernan is a scientist.
He's on X a lot. He's done a lot of work in that showing DNA contamination
that's getting into these shots in addition to the SV40.
DNA contamination.
Right. And this was what Joe Latipo, the Surgeon General of Florida, he has actually called for
the COVID shots to be pulled off the market.
And his main argument was there is a certain amount of DNA that is allowed in any kind
of these products, and we have proof that they have exceeded that threshold.
So there have been studies showing that there's excess DNA in these samples, which shouldn't
be there.
And that's just sort of this hard line that shouldn't be crossed.
Where is this DNA coming from?
In the production process, I guess.
But it's pretty cut and dry.
I think that's why Dr. Lattapoe has chosen this argument to go by, because there's just
like a hard line that you don't cross, and they have crossed that.
And what happens if you get too much DNA
Well, you can integrate it. Yeah, the concern is does it integrate into your own into your cell DNA?
Are we gonna make like monkey people?
Right you imagine if we made like hybrid people they turn out to look like Neanderthals
You know like we injected them with something that twisted their genes back.
But just the idea of manipulating your DNA is so terrifying.
It's like what?
In pregnant women, right?
Right.
Integrating?
You know, it'd be one thing if it's a 70-year-old man, but a pregnant woman, you know, you've
got these...
Yeah, you hear that term, integrate DNA.
You don't think good things.
That's like immediately I'm like, what?
And these things are technically gene therapy products.
They're not vaccines.
Which is a real problem with using the same term.
Why not use a new term?
Well, because then you wouldn't be under the umbrella of protection that vaccines currently
enjoy where they can't be, which is so crazy.
It's so crazy.
It's just hard to believe it's true. It really
is. And so for a person like you that just like you were saying, you see the carnage
every day, tell me what it's been like. What is it like?
It's hard because as an ENT, I'm used to fixing people quickly. So I get somebody with a sinus
infection, get them the antibiotic, they're good to go. I get somebody with an abscess, I drain the abscess, they're good to go.
It's sort of why I chose my specialty because I like to see the results quickly.
I didn't go into primary care for a reason.
And so when I see the injured, it's like, you know, it's very slow growing, slow going.
We don't have a lot of research.
It's trial and error.
These people are young, were previously young and healthy and their lives have just been
completely destroyed.
I don't have a big support system of other specialists I can send them to.
It's hard.
I mean, I don't feel sorry for myself, but I'm just saying it's just very different from
what I'm used to as a doctor. So I really hope that the government will step up and do something about
this.
Yeah, that would be a nice thing to hope to do something about it, but it would be really
nice if some real research was done on what are the actual long-term effects. If everyone's looking at it from a position of we can't get, you
know, sued for this, this is dangerous, like, someone has to look at it and say, well, these
are the definite effects of this vaccine because it's too much, this is long COVID, it's too
much, oh, he got a neurological condition that was going to happen anyway. It's just coincidentally happened after he took the COVID shot.
Like there's got to be some way to determine what of these ailments,
like specifically,
like when you were talking about that abnormal antibody levels, like.
Well, there are patterns. I mean,
I definitely see the same sort of things over and over again. So it's not like,
you know,
but as you said, it doesn't have a classification, right? It doesn't have a code.
So we need an ICD 10 code for these that seems kind of crazy. Yeah
Well, imagine if that was the case with like herpes everybody be like hey
Put a damn code in there so we know what this is
But there you know, I see very similar constellation of symptoms I see patients with these abnormal tremors which
You know, they can't stop shaking even when they're
sleeping.
They feel internal vibrations or they'll have severe pain that you can't explain.
You get an MRI.
There's no nerve damage that you can tell.
I've seen some very strange rashes and normally it doesn't matter what kind of rash it is.
You throw a few meds at it and it will disappear.
But actually the only thing that I found helpful is ivermectin for these strange rashes.
And you see pots where the blood pressure, that's the hardest I think, and this is, we're
seeing a lot of this, where the blood pressure just drops suddenly with no stimulation or
the heart races with no provocation.
That is very common and very difficult to treat.
That's a good friend of mine.
He says every now and then his heart will just jack up to like 180.
And he has to sit down.
And he just has to hope that this isn't the last time he breathes.
He just sits there.
He has a heart monitor.
He puts it, one of them wristwatch ones, the Garmin one, he just sits there. He has a heart monitor. He puts it He like one of them wristwatch ones the Garmin one
He just watches his heart jack up to like a hundred
Yeah, 180 beats per minute just sitting there for no reason not knowing if you're gonna die
All right. Another friend of mine. I was really young was a soccer player
Super healthy guy super fit gets the vaccine all the sudden
Giant heart racing in the middle of the night, like out of control,
like you're running a seven minute mile, just jacked.
And he wound up in the hospital twice.
Nothing they could do.
It all went away.
It stopped.
It went back to normal after a while.
But now he's got this terrible fear that he's got a fucking time bomb in his chest that
out of nowhere his heart would just ramp up.
And you could say, oh, that was probably a's probably a genetic thing, he probably had it already,
he was like, maybe.
But this guy was super fit.
Super fit soccer player.
And that's the athletes, sudden death in athletes.
So it used to be 29 per year, now it's 290 per year, growth 10 times.
Crazy.
Dropping dead.
The rarest of rare people to drop
dead in the middle of nowhere. The best athletes in the world. The people
are the healthiest in the prime of their life. Right. And I worry about these
kids because you know myocarditis, the primary symptom is chest pain. But if
you've got a kid who's not even speaking yet, you have no idea if they have
myocarditis.
And myocarditis can leave a permanent scar on the heart and then lead to a lifelong increased
risk of sudden cardiac death.
And we have no idea if these kids have been affected.
Yeah.
And how many kids did we see drop dead of heart attacks in like high school football
this year?
Like over the last four years rather because it was like you'd see these articles pop up all the time
You never saw those articles or if you did it was super rare into some kid with a heart condition that was
Never diagnosed which does happen. Yeah, and the schools are now making kids get cleared by a doctor before doing sports Which I don't remember that when we were kids. Yeah, they just threw us right onto the wrestling team
They didn't check shit. They didn't see if you had a cold
Yeah, I mean, I don't know what's better it's probably better screen them, you know
They'll find those undiagnosed conditions that kids can have well
I just think that I think it's in response to what's happened
Oh, it certainly is but I mean that might be the good aspect of it
Maybe some people will get diagnosed that didn't have any idea that they were running around with the problem and they can fix it
But myocarditis is hard to diagnose like really the only way you can diagnose myocarditis for sure is to do either a biopsy
Or a cardiac MRI, which is most kids are not going to be put through that right?
it's
scary and
Right. Jesus. So it's scary.
And it's what's crazy is this is all true and yet us talking about it makes us both
look like kooks.
Like we then will be labeled, for sure someone will go out and attack us now and label us
anti-vax, anti-science, kooks, and this is what's dangerous about this conversation.
This is what's dangerous about what they said and you know those people work for the devil
Well, do you think you'll get censored on YouTube this interview? No, you don't know I was just on Jimmy Dore
Yeah, you know bleep out like a full sentence of mine. I'm not bleeping out shit
I'm not bleeping out shit. Okay. We'll find out. I think it's wrong if it's not okay.
If it's not okay, I think YouTube is more reasonable now than they were during the pandemic.
And I think they have a very difficult job managing content at scale where you're dealing
with the amount of people uploading things is insanity.
And they have certain things that they've tagged as being controversial
Because they were anti science or misinformation that it's still there's like lingering ones. What was the issue that we had Jamie?
We had like a old episode where there was something in the old episode that would have violated their rules back then
It doesn't violate them now, but we because the episode was uploaded back then what happened with that
Had like a weird at the time the penalty was like over you had to do something and so like they couldn't take that
Step away that was kind of an issue
But the bottom line was everything this person said was true
Mm-hmm and proven to be true now and now it's 100% fact
So now you can say whatever you want like now if you say hey, you know
It's super likely that that virus leaked from a lab in China
And now you can say that like back then you would get attacked. It would be crazy be called a racist
He'd be called the worst things possible if you just said like the wonderful John Stewart bit that he did on Colbert show. Did you ever see that bit? I can't remember. You want to see it?
Let's watch it because it's really hilarious. This is like in the heart of
the pandemic you know and Stephen Colbert was like vaccine or death you know he
was all in on it and so Colbert was like trying to like halt him in the middle
he's doing a bit. John Stewart's doing a bit. He's doing a funny and so Colbert was like trying to like halt him in the middle he's doing a bit John Stewart's doing a bit he's doing a funny bit and Colbert tries
to like cock block it he tries to like trip him but John Stewart powers through
like like the comic that he is you find it don't tell me was taken down all right nine minutes, one's four. All right, give us this one. All right, this is it.
And I honestly mean this.
I think we owe a great debt of gratitude to science.
Science has in many ways helped ease the suffering
of this pandemic,
which was more than likely caused by science. So.
And that's kind of.
Hold on a second.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Listen, listen. It's coffee. I wouldn't do that to you. I wouldn't do that to you.
What do you mean by that?
Do you mean like there's a chance that this was created in a lab?
There's an investigation.
A chance?
Well, if there's evidence, I'd love to hear it.
There's a novel respiratory coronavirus overtaking Wuhan, China.
What do we do?
Oh, you know who we could ask? The Wuhan novel
respiratory coronavirus lab. The disease is the same name as the lab. That's just a little
too weird, don't you think? And then they ask those scientists, they're like, how did
this, so wait a minute, you work at the Wuhan respiratory coronavirus lab. How did this happen?" And they're like,
"'Mmm, a pangolin kissed a turtle."
And you're like,
"'No, I...'
The name of your lab,
if you look at the name,
look at the name, can I...
Let me see your business card.
Show me your business card.
Oh, I work at the coronavirus lab in Wuhan.
Oh, cause there's a coronavirus loose in Wuhan.
How did that happen?
Maybe a bat flew into the cloaca of a turkey
and then it sneezed into my chili
and now we all have coronavirus.
Like, okay, okay, okay.
Wait a second, wait a second.
What about this? What about this? Listen, okay. Wait a second. Wait a second. What about this? What about this?
Listen to this. Wait a second.
All right. John. Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
There's been an outbreak of chocolatey goodness
near Hershey, Pennsylvania.
What do you think happened?
Like, oh, I don't know.
Maybe a steam shovel made it with a cocoa bean.
Or it's the f***ing chocolate factory.
Maybe that's it.
That could be.
That could be.
Kober kept trying to get in the way.
That could be.
By the way, I gave them all tuberculosis.
Good as.
That could very well be.
And Anthony Fauci and Francis Collins at NIH have said, like,
it should definitely be investigated.
Don't stop with the logic and people and things.
The name of the disease.
Wait a second.
Wait a second.
All of the buildings.
Wait a second.
But it could be possible, you could be right, it could be possible that they have the lab in Wuhan to study the novel coronavirus diseases
because in Wuhan there are a lot of novel coronavirus diseases because of
the bat population there. I understand it's like the same specialty and it's the only
place to find bats. You won't find bats. Oh wait, Austin Texas has thousands of them
that fly out of a cave every night. Every night it does.
Is there a coronavirus in Austin coronavirus? No, it doesn't seem to be in Austin coronavirus.
The only coronavirus we have is in Wuhan, where they have a lab called...what's the lab called again, Stephen?
The Wuhan Novel Coronavirus Lab.
I believe that's the case.
And how long have you worked for Senator Ron Johnson?
Let me tell you something. Let me tell you something about Ron Johnson. This is not a conspiracy.
Here's the thing about science. You could be right. You could be right. But this is the problem with science.
Science is incredible. This is it. But they don't know when to stop and nobody in the room with those cats.
He's going to do the other thing that we already saw. The other thing we talked about the Spanish
flu, which a lot of people never heard that before either. They did what? Isn't that great?
That's one of the best segments ever on late night television ever in the history.
Emperor wears no clothes and Colbert thinks Emperor, still has a fancy robe on.
Well, this is the job of comedians in society at certain times and John Stewart, he held
the torch.
I didn't realize he was enlightened.
Well, he's a very smart guy.
He's not a bullshitter.
He's a very smart guy.
I don't agree with him on everything.
Has he come around on the shot?
I don't know. I don't know. I haven't agree with him on everything. Has he come around on the shot? I don't know.
I don't know. I haven't spoken to him. He lives in another state. But I love the guy.
He's great. He was my favorite comedian when I was younger. He's a great comic. Very funny
guy and a very nice guy and very fair and honest. He's the, you know, like the type of person who can do that on television in
the middle of the shit, which is what it was. This was like right around the same time where
the government was, where they made that, remember that release that they had? They
said for the vaccinated, you've done your job, but for the unvaccinated, you're looking
forward to a winter of illness and death, severe illness and death.
Severe.
It's crazy.
Severe illness and death.
And this was during Omnicron, which statistically was a cold.
That was the one that had the least mortality.
So for him to do that during that time was very courageous.
Like he had to know, but he just had to make it really funny which he did
Yeah, he just he knew it's so preposterous because it's so on the nose
You almost think like if that was in a movie like that would be too good
Like it was a Coen Brothers movie or something like oh my god, this movie's ridiculous. Like there's no way it would be named
This same as the lab. Did he get smeared for it? I don't think he did. No, John skirted out of that.
He had a show with Apple for a while, and it was really good.
But then I think, I don't want to speak at a turn here,
but I do all the time, so I might as well.
I think there was an issue with an episode they did on China.
Is that the case?
See if there's like data on that,
or if there's a story on that.
But they stopped doing that show so you had like a Apple show
You know because Apple TV produces a lot of shows now they have severance you ever watch severance
No, I'm watching righteous gemstones now. Oh my god. That's a good show. Oh my god. That's that is such a funny show
I didn't even hear about it until like this year. There's almost too many great shows
I know it's hard to keep up that show is
Fantastic that shows so fun. I think it's modeled after Joel Osteen. Is it really that's my theory
Yeah, and I I pass by his church every day. So
Yeah, there's something about those guys
Those guys that run the mega, like you gotta be crazy.
Not one of them is like, oh that guy makes sense.
That guy seems like a super reasonable normal human being that's like, I like that guy.
I want him as my pastor.
No, it's always like some complete kook.
In October, the New York Times reported that Apple canceled the comedy show ahead of its
third season due to creative differences and execs' concerns over Stewart's coverage of topics such as
China and AI.
Okay, the China, I get it, Apple has contracts with China, right?
They have cell phones made in China and they actually have to, we read a story about that
the other day about how the iPhone 17 is so complex that
it actually has to be manufactured in China because they have the best manufacturing.
So they must have some sort of a thing where you can't criticize, you're going to fuck
it all up for us.
You're going to fuck it all up for the production of our phones that we need to make all this
money, which is why we have more money than most countries.
Danielle Pletka Well, I don't see how John Stewart would be a threat to their revenue.
I just don't think they want them criticizing, you know, China. But the AI one is even more weird.
The AI one is even more weird because it's like, don't you think we should make fun of AI?
Don't you think there should be like something that scares the shit out of people enough to they wake up and recognize that this thing is coming at us like a freight train.
There's no guardrails. No one knows what's going to happen. And everybody's like full steam ahead.
AI terrifies me.
It should.
It does.
Well, it's because you're intelligent. You know, I think most intelligent people are aware that this will be a change that is akin to the asteroid that hit the Yucatan. This is gonna this is gonna hit in some crazy way that like redefines what it means amount of money into AI. Oh fun. Oh fun.
Yeah. I know you love Texas, but I, it is not what you think. No, there's a lot of things. I need to wake you up on Texas.
Well, I like the fact that it was free during the time where California was not. You could do whatever you wanted to.
Relatively. Relatively.
Relatively, right.
But in my business and for what I do, like stand-up comedy and letting people tell you
what you can and can't do, I don't like that.
And here they've had a more rebellious spirit in that regard.
I think healthcare though is turning Texas blue.
Houston is home to the largest medical center in the world and it brings
in people from all over.
And I think mandates started in Texas for a reason.
I think they did it here to test the waters.
They knew if they could get away with it in Texas, they could get away with it anywhere.
Don't make me move to Florida.
No, I don't even think I know.
I think Idaho.
Florida is not any good either. Idaho is cold as fuck. Jamie can't live. Look at him over there. it anywhere. Oh, don't make me move to Florida. No, I don't even think, I know, I think Idaho.
Florida's not any good either, actually.
Idaho's cold as fuck.
Jamie can't live.
Look at him over there.
He can't survive.
He got out of Ohio and he developed thin blood.
But, yeah, Texas, I just, I think it's a, we have, so Texas Medical Association, largest medical association in the country, they are really
proponents of transgender surgery and minors.
They are anti-free speech for physicians.
They are pro-mandate.
They've gone after me.
And they have a tight control over the people in our house and state.
So I just think we need to be careful.
I mean, you saw it during the pandemic and the medical,
the economy of our state is dominated by health and people don't realize that.
They just think oil.
But health is a huge dominating factor in our economy.
And you saw what they did to me, what they're still doing to me. You see the mandates. And
I don't know if you've been following what's going on in the House, but the House is divided.
So we've got the real, true freedom true freedom loving representatives.
And then we have these pseudo Republicans who do control everything, but they are basically
Democrats in disguise.
And I don't know, it really worries me.
Idaho just passed a bill, the best medical freedom bill in the country, it eliminates all medical mandates, except
for hospitals, of course.
But it's the first one of its kind, where medical mandates are finally outlawed.
Because I mean, you think about it, all these vaccines that we have to give our kids to
go to school is actually fundamentally wrong.
We should not mandate any child to get a shot to go to school is actually fundamentally wrong. We should not mandate any child to
get a shot to go to school. And in Europe, half the countries don't have those kind of
mandates. But the United States is very common. You know, all kids have to get these shots
to go to school. And if you opt out, it's a big deal. And some states don't even allow
it, don't even allow exemptions. So I think it's a wake-up call. Like I just I
never thought about the whole the fact that I had to give my kids these shots
to go to school as being an issue, but now that COVID happened I see it as a huge
issue. But Florida, you know, Florida's been kind of behind it too. Like you know
they're not one of the states trying to get ivermectin over the counter. There
were nine states that tried to pass bills banning mRNA. They all failed,
but Florida wasn't one of those. So Florida worries me too. Idaho. Idaho. Idaho. They
have good skiing there. It's beautiful. I don't ski. I quit skiing a few years back
in my last accident. I'm like, I'm done. Ski, I love skiing.
Oh, it's fun.
Don't get hurt, don't get hurt, don't get hurt.
Didn't get hurt.
Don't get hurt, that's how I feel every time I ski.
But I've had a bunch of surgeries, that's a problem.
Like I know the vulnerability of knees.
I've had three knee surgeries.
It's like, it's rough on ya, you know.
But it's fun.
Wee!
It's just for me, like the juice isn't worth the squeeze. There's a bunch of other stuff. That's a lot more fun
That doesn't come with risk of broken bones and concussions. Yeah, I don't know. I like roller coasters for fun
Oh, no, you're one of those
No, I'm not full on but I don't have you the new roller coasters. Have you been on them recently? Oh, yeah
I have kids. Yeah, they're much better
I mean, they're not what we grew up with now
Some of the ones like it Disneyland has some insane ones the one the Incredibles ride if you've done that one
Whoa, I like Guardians of the Galaxy. Oh, that's great. I was fun. That was really fun. Yeah, this is you know
It's the best ride. It's in Disney World. It's an avatar
three
virtual reality ride. It's
Incredible is that incredible or not a California Florida. I think I did that. I think it's called flights of fantasy or something
Like that. It's incredible
like you you are one of the avatar people and you fly around on a dragon and
It's so good. It's so good. It just like you feel the breeze
You feel missed in the air.
At a certain point, I'm realizing while I'm doing this, I'm like, this wasn't even remotely
possible just 20 years ago.
What is it going to look like 20 years from now?
I'm not going to have any idea.
They're going to put a helmet on me.
It's going to like sync up with my brain.
Ready, brain sync.
And all of a sudden you're going to be in that world.
You're like, whoa.
And you were going to trust those people to let us out. You know? That's 100% coming.
Yeah. I'm happy with the roller coaster. I'll stick with that.
It's not worth it. It's not as good. You take the brain thing, get in the avatar world.
I get sick on those rides. The ones where the 3D, I get kind of nauseated.
This one moves too. This one you're on like a motorcycle, like a fake motorcycle. And that's It's better the ones where the yeah, I get kind of nausea there are others too this one
You're on like a motorcycle like a fake motorcycle and that's to represent the dragon
You know and you have like a handle you hold on to and it starts moving you around shit
So like as you're flying it's like it's it's a full sensory experience
I think I did that my kids made fun of me because I was screaming on it
You did that one at Disney World? Yeah a couple of years ago. Yeah. I haven't done it since.
It's so good.
It's such a good ride.
And that's just the tip of the iceberg.
And when you connect that to AI so it tailors something that's specific for your whatever
crazy fantasy you want to do.
We already have video games where people can murder people.
That's like the most popular video game is Grand Theft Auto.
And one of the things that people love about it is you could beat some mechanics to death for no reason.
Do you think that allows people to get out
their frustrations though in a healthier way?
Perhaps.
I would recommend martial arts.
I think that would be a healthier way.
But I think more than anything, what it does
is allows you to disassociate and just to be able to,
because it doesn't mean anything.
It's not really a person that's getting beat to death. But anything it's not really a person that's getting beat to death but the imagery is obviously of
a person that's getting beat to death and you're able to do it with no
consequences no recourse no bad karma you don't even feel bad because it's a
part of the game you know there was what was that one where you could drag the
whore the Wild West one we could beat people with whips Red Dawn Redemption is
a redemption Red dead redemption crazy
games where you can do horrible things to people like what is it gonna be like
when you have video games that are actually virtual reality completely
immersive and you could just be a serial killer you be Jack the Ripper they give
you a knife and you're now you're in London in the 1800s and you're Jack the
Ripper why do people create these?
Because they can, right?
It's like what John Stewart said about the nuclear bomb.
Like why they do that?
Well, and this is the same thing.
This is the parallel to the Manhattan Project because we're not the only ones that are trying
to find the, get to the solution of what is like the ultimate expression of AI in its
current form, like super intelligent, sentient, artificial
intelligence, like something that's going to be godlike power and ability. China's working
on it too. We have to work on it. If we don't work, like, so everyone's like, hang on. And
we're like, nope, choo choo. Just China's working on it. We have to do it. We have to
get there first. So this is, it's just like the Manhattan Project. And I don't think it's
going to matter. I think, I think And I don't think it's gonna matter.
I think once we get there, it's gonna be so weird for everybody. I think civilization's
gonna be an upheaval. And I think we're entirely attached to the idea that this civilization
that we live under, where our money is all in hard drives, and it's all ones and zeros
on a database somewhere, not even backed up by gold anymore.
It's all super weird already.
This is standard forever.
I don't think it is.
I don't know.
I feel like there may be a backlash because there's this wanting to do real things and
do real experiences.
I mean, I personally-
Yeah, there'll be a few hikers.
There'll be a few hikers.
Few people-
I think when you're on your computer all day, the first thing I want to do is just
get outside and get away from all that.
And so my hope is that there'll be a backlash.
Well there'll be a few, right?
It's just like there's people that are still pro-vaccine today, right?
They're still pro-mRNA vaccine.
I can't wait for the new booster.
There's people that are out there like that, right?
You're always going to have different kinds of people. You're never going to have
one thing where everybody adopts it. There's going to be a bunch of people that want to
live a subsistence lifestyle in the woods forever. Let all those morons in New York
put their helmets on and live in fucking Avatar land. I'm going to live out here in the real world.
But if you think about how many people play games today versus how many people played games 30 years
ago, it's off the charts. Right?
Like what are the numbers?
Like when I was a child is when they had Pong.
That was the first one.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, it was in the Sears store.
Do you remember that?
You go shopping for jeans and you would play the game.
That's where you buy your tools.
Yeah.
Tough skins.
Yeah.
And that was revolutionary.
You could play a game on television.
And it was a really simple game, you know,
do-do-do-do, and you'd be playing ping pong
with this slow-moving ping pong ball.
And it was fun, we all loved it.
Family would gather around, play ping pong.
And then you fast forward to Call of Duty.
That's insane.
That is insane.
These kids are, they have microphones on,
they're talking, they're running through Fallujah, gunning people down, like this is insane. These kids are, they have microphones on, they're talking, they're running through
Fallujah, gunning people down.
Like this is crazy.
So the numbers.
Yeah.
My kids went through that phase, but they seem now to be sort of disinterested.
Like they kind of...
You did a good job.
You raised good kids.
Well, I didn't do anything.
It just happened.
Oh, I think a lot of kids are disinterested because they realize that the back and call
of life and becoming a success is, you cannot get too wrapped up in these things because they will steal
your time.
But my point is that the amount of people that are allowing it to steal their time today,
and I know you're enjoying it, Don, steal your time's a bet.
Have fun, play your games.
I love them, they're fun, but I can't do them.
There's too much.
See, they're too exciting, they're too good. But these are just the beginning.
What we're experiencing now with Call of Duty
and first-person shooters that everybody loves,
in comparison to what's gonna happen
when they put that thing on your head,
and then all of a sudden you really are
on Battleship Troopers, is that, what was that movie?
Where they fought the aliens?
Starship Troopers. Starship Troopers.
Did you ever see that one?
No. Great movie. But it's the future, or they're fighting off aliens, giant alienopers. Did you ever see that one? No great movie, but it's the future or you know
They're fighting off aliens giant alien bugs. You could be in that you could be in it
Feel the sand on your feet feel the wind in your face smell the breath of the beast as you shoot it down
It's gonna be too compelling. Yeah, either that or go work at the supermarket
Near the supermarket all day. Well. You want to play pickup basketball?
Okay, you suck at basketball.
Keep hitting bricks.
I think the answer is roller coasters.
No, no, no, no.
I don't know.
I just think it's just a test of civilization and it's probably something that is changing
our species and changing it really quickly before we even
realize it.
Like just like we turned changed wolves into dogs, it's turning us into technology dependent,
gelatinous water balloons of blood.
That's dark.
It is dark.
They're trying, I think they'll take over doctors.
Yeah, they're gonna.
They're gonna take over lawyers, doctors.
They're probably gonna take over a lot of actors.
I think actors and even screenwriters are in real trouble.
Wait, wait, wait.
How do you take over an actor?
Because these AI videos now are insane.
They're so good.
Wow.
Have you ever seen the one where there's stand-up comedians talking on stage about how, and
there's people out there that believe that we're a prompt, like, and then they're going to people in scenes of movies that are
like, like saying, do you really believe this is a prompt? And there's Vikings,
like, incredible Viking village where you're like walking down the village. It's
all AI, and it looks like Hollywood movie quality. It looks like some crazy new blockbuster
that's out about Vikings.
They have Cro-Magnum Man, like hunting on a raft,
moving through the frozen lake.
The whole thing is nuts.
It's so good.
And it keeps getting better.
This is insanely good compared to what just existed
a couple of months ago. A year's you it's unrecognizable. We could like
computers move so slow in comparison. Like think about when did when you first
get your first computer? Hmm probably medical school. What year was that? That was like 1998.
Okay so you're probably running Windows 98, right?
It kind of worked, but it was a little buggy.
Sometimes it would crash, you'd get the blue screen to death.
Then within like five years, they got way better.
Ten years, they got way better.
But now, if you have a laptop now in 2025 versus a laptop from 2020, no difference.
I have an old MacBook that I use sometimes
because I like it because it's clickier keyboards
and it's fucking old as shit.
It's really old.
Like, it seems like a regular laptop.
It's not that much different.
The AI from then was nothing.
It didn't exist.
And now it's making movies that are off the charts.
They're unbelievably realistic. And this is just one
version of it. They're going to have a way better version of it a month from now. A way
better version of it six months from now. And where does that end? Like it doesn't.
It doesn't end. And who knows what the news is now. You know how many times someone sent
me something on Twitter and I thought, wow, crazy war footage and it turns out it was just from a video game? Wow. Yeah
the people get duped. They see a plane getting shot down they think it's real like wow. No
it's just a scene in a video game. Yeah I haven't seen these videos. You haven't seen?
I've seen photos that look very realistic but I haven't seen these videos. I have to
go check that out. They're too good. They're too good.
And this race to AI is, you know, we're all involved in it.
And I worry that it's not in our best interest, just like I worry that our health system is
compromised.
I worry about it all.
There's a lot of people that are going to be insanely wealthy once this goes
live.
Like, once this goes live, the haves versus the have-nots will be so far separated.
But how do you make money off of AI?
You control everything.
First of all, the stock market.
You figure out the stock market immediately and bet insane amounts of wealth at things and compound it and figure
out when to buy and when to sell instantaneously.
You could even use AI to manipulate markets by having a bunch of bots tweet about something.
So they'd need to jack up a stock price and then you would go in and clean up.
You would create crypto coins, unlimited amounts of crypto coins, dump tons of money in it,
hire celebrities they wouldn't even know, hire them to promote the crypto coin, pull
the wool out from everybody, make billions of dollars. You just do that over and over
and over and over again, instantaneously all around the world. Then you have all the money.
Like AI, if you're in control of AI and AI is artificial super intelligence
and you tell it, make me as much money as you can, as quickly as possible in the stock
market. This is what we have. We have a hundred million dollars to invest. We have a billion
dollars to invest. If you're already wealthy, if you're a huge company already, you could
do something like that. And who knows what kind of an effect that would have. You could manipulate
world governments instantaneously. You could cut off pipelines. You could sabotage power grids.
You could shut down energy plants. You could do all kinds of things. You can insert viruses
into systems that control every aspect of society instantaneously. You crack
all especially once they figure out how to attach AI to quantum computing then
we're doomed. Then we're really doomed because then you have any computational
problems. You have insane amounts of computational power and it's all in our
lifetime like that's what's nuts. It's like we're this this will be if people survive and
you know, there's like a
Golden Age
Thousands of years from now where they find the relics of this civilization and they go look through and they figure out how to open
up hard drives and
They see us having this conversation about it
Yeah, it's gonna be weird. It's gonna be like, oh they saw it coming, they did it anyway.
Well how do we stop it? I think Elon Musk was sounding the alarm and he can't stop it.
Not only did he not stop it, he joined in. I think that's the idea is that you have to do it
because other people are doing it and if they get a hold of it first it'd be catastrophic and I'm sure I
screwed up a lot of possibilities in that little stupid rant of mine, but
It's it's something I think people need to have in their head because this isn't something that's not going to affect you
Well, that's not gonna affect me. I don't really have to pay attention to the politics in Poland
It's not gonna affect me, you know, you can you can do that with this one
You can't do it with because it's gonna affect
all of us
In the world you're not gonna know what the news is you think rolling stone fooled us with that stupid picture from
Oklahoma with a bunch of people that are gunshot victims waiting in line like
AI for their picture, but yeah, right, but they're they that's a good point because that was only a couple of years ago today
they probably would right, but this is you know that's a good point, because that was only a couple of years ago. Today they probably would.
But this is, you know, that's a clear lie.
And it's a bad one.
What about the really good ones, the really well-coordinated
ones that are using artificial created images?
Like, how are we going to know?
How are we going to know?
Like, when I Google something, I'm
not going to go do clinical research.
I'm not going to test these things to make sure
it's correct myself.
If you're in control of all the information on the internet,
like, you can instantaneously create a bunch of websites
with fake data on it.
You could do that easily, especially
if people don't have access to the ability
to actually make their own tests.
You could change everything.
If you have AI, you're
hacking into this and all the encryptions. Bye bye. Everything's bye bye. All these little
roadblocks that we kept up there to keep our feeble primate brains from cracking these
codes. Like all that stuff goes away. It's going to get real weird. Yeah. Well, I don't have an answer.
I don't either.
We have to go get a bunker after this podcast.
I know.
I don't think it's gonna be that bad, but I do think it's gonna be really...
It's gonna change just society as we know it.
I mean, there's probably gonna be a lot of good aspects of it, too.
I think the medical aspect of it is pretty amazing. Chat GPT alone, when you can put in your blood
work and can give you some, you know? You don't believe it?
I put in an MRI that I had of my own and it missed it. Totally missed it.
Really?
Yeah. I mean it was grok. It was not chat GPT.
Which one's the best at that?
I don't know. I don't like chat GPT but I don't know. Which one's the best at that? I don't know. I don't like
chat GPT. There's some other really good ones too right? All I use is Grok. That's it? You're
hardcore right now. I don't trust chat. I don't trust Grok but I certainly don't trust chat
GPT. Well I was listening to someone talk about a new program that is, you know, they have
Pegasus, so Pegasus can read your phone.
This new program is a zero click.
It reads everything in your phone, including your encrypted messages.
You have no idea if you have it on there or not.
There's no way to detect it.
And it's been being used.
It's used currently.
What's the name of it?
I don't know, Jamie.
See if you could find out the name of it.
The old one was Pegasus.
The new one is a similar preposterous name.
Is it Palantir?
I don't know.
That's a different thing.
I think Ian Carroll was talking about it
But so then okay, so do you know me privacy anymore so and then your text messages don't have any privacy
I just assume I don't have any privacy anymore
If it wasn't for Elon Musk buying Twitter, can you imagine how weird the world would be right now?
Yeah, we're I mean, it's so fortunate. I was kicked off for five months
What did you do that got you kicked off?
I was kind of timid back then compared to what I say now.
I really wasn't that.
But I had a tweet that went viral and it was, America First Legal was suing the CDC over
some email. I can't remember exactly, but it was something like
American First Legal has just exposed the CDC in a way of viral. And then that
was my last tweet. I was erased for five months. What excuse they give you? I
don't remember, you know, violating community standards. Wow. What did that feel like? And then I got, and then I tried to
get on Truth and Getter, it's just not the same, right? You just don't get that feedback.
You know what I think about those things too? And Gab as well. I think they're all infested
with like out of state actors, other actors, other countries, other countries,
intelligence agencies, and even our own countries, and then even corporations. I
think they're infected. I think even like Democratic and Republican operatives, I
think a lot of the traffic is bots. Yeah, well I see that on Twitter definitely.
100%. It's almost not worth engaging anymore. It's like, what are we doing
here? Like you're arguing with someone that's not even a real person, And I think that's like, that's a big part of it. And
I think in those other alternative platforms, like Truth, I think they do that to make them
ridiculous for everybody else. You know, so the last thing they want is a bunch of people
to competing to see who's the freest. Right? So what's the best way to do that? Well, you
have to sabotage this
new social media platform the moment it comes out. The moment it comes out, swastikas, Peppy
the Frog, the worst possible things, post as much as you can so that this place becomes
toxic. So that you have to have a zero tolerance policy like Blue Sky does. You go to Blue
Sky, if you tweet, there are only two genders.
BAM!
Get the fuck out of here.
I was on Blue Sky for a bit.
How long?
How long did you last?
I don't know.
Yeah, I got, I slid in before it was open to the public.
And I started stirring the pot.
And then I just got bored.
I got in some fights with, who's that woman?
She's a lawyer.
She's a big vaccine enthusiast.
Vaccine enthusiast is hilarious. Yeah she's a she's like the she's like the
female version of Hotez. Anyway I just got one. Lena Nguyen? No. I can't remember. I know what
she looks like but I don't want to say it. I don't want to... No worries. You don't have to say it.
So what was that like?
Blue sky?
Yeah.
When you got into it with her.
I mean, whatever.
Yeah, I've gotten so many fights on X.
It's not really...
It's just funny.
Before Methodist went after me, I got in some fights on Facebook with these private groups and there are a bunch of women that get together the neighborhood women's group. Oh boy vicious
Oh, really vicious and it was a Houston women's physicians group and
They they called me Bertha and they like started they're like come birth. Yeah, they
Mad at them. I don't know. Why are hell you birth? I don't know. They just, uh,
we don't want you in our group.
You should go find another group and you're spreading misinformation and
things like that. And there was a neighborhood group that went after me.
Um, those are more, I don't really care about the anonymous X people.
But then I had a couple, had mama Dr. Jones,
who has a million followers on TikTok,
come after me and make videos about me and another,
there's this-
Saying you spread misinformation.
Yeah, yeah.
And then I'm a grifter and all that.
They always throw that one away.
Oh yeah, yeah.
There's this pharmacist, Savannah, she goes by by our exorcist and she has an only fans account
She's come after me like just vicious. I mean these some of these women are just oh
No, really toxic. Yeah when they have the right to be that's the thing
It's like when they feel like they've got the green light to just be as evil as possible
and to turn you into like some subhuman.
Yeah, especially if they don't like it because you're a doctor.
I just think she's so smart, spreading that misinformation in our neighborhood.
Yeah, so overall coming out of it on the other side though, and do you feel a sense of indication
at least?
Like, because the public has embraced you and you've got a lot of followers on Twitter that
support you. You know, after I'm sure the Danny Jones podcast, I'm sure that
a lot of people were listening to your story. Yeah, I mean, it's yes and no. I mean,
I still have the medical board that I'm dealing with. Methodist Hospital just sued me.
So there's still a lot of drama, unfortunately.
But I have hope.
There's actually a lawsuit today that's first jury trial in the country over these hospital
protocols where they had a young woman with Down syndrome.
They basically euthanized her.
They gave her a DNR order even though she didn't have one and the father has
just been wonderful. It's a Shara family. Why did they do that? They euthanized her for what?
I've seen this. I have reviewed records from these hospital patients
and they'll euthanize them. They need the
bed. They said, well, they're going to die anyway.
What was this person in the hospital for?
COVID. COVID protocol.
And they, wait, wait, wait. So they were in the hospital with COVID and they gave them
something to kill them?
Yeah. That happened. I'm sorry, but I mean, that happened. People, they give them morphine and insulin.
What?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's common?
Yeah, yeah.
I've reviewed charts.
In this situation, they gave her a DNR, which is do not resuscitate.
Meaning, if they look like they're dying, you don't do anything, which that was not
the case.
So, they're suing for battery, which anything, which that was not the case.
So they're suing for battery, which is one way of getting around the PrEP Act, because
the PrEP Act is very hard to penetrate.
The PrEP Act protects everybody, all the doctors, all the hospitals from any wrongdoing during
COVID.
So it's been this big challenge trying to get around the PrEP Act.
In this case, it has hope of getting around the PREP Act because they're charging for battery
and they're in trial.
It started today.
It's in Wisconsin.
So, that gives me hope.
I don't know if you've heard of Brooke Jackson, her case.
She sued Pfizer.
She was a whistleblower.
So, she was one of the heads of the research clinics and she was in charge of overseeing
the protocols and she found that they were skipping necessary steps, they weren't following up with
injuries. She basically became a whistleblower and then they immediately fired her and now she's suing
Pfizer. But this has been going on, you know, since 2020 and the DOJ unfortunately has stepped in and tried to shut down the
case, which normally the DOJ comes in and helps people when they're trying to sort out
a, this is a key TAM case and it could bankrupt Pfizer, but now our own government and even
this is under Pam Bondi.
So this is the new DOJ is coming in to stop this case from happening, which is bothersome.
But these two cases are huge.
What is their argument for why they're trying to stop?
Because it would impact public health policies.
It would go against our country's public health policies by proceeding with this case and
letting it go to trial.
How so?
I don't know. That is basically what they said.
Have you tried to steal, ma'am, what they're saying?
I mean, I'm not, it's not my case and I don't, you know,
the lawyer would probably have a better explanation, but in it,
it's just met with so many roadblocks. But
the, the euthanizing one is still stuck in my head. I just,
I can't imagine that that's real. No, no, no, it is definitely real
I mean when they've determined that someone's gonna die anyway, is that what it is? Right? I mean
They'll justify giving morphine because I say oh well, they're struggling to breathe well, guess what morphine actually depresses your drive to breathe
But like this one case I remember, this patient, he was sick, he looked like he was dying,
but they just like pushed morphine, no pain, you know, they do a pain score, so 0 to 10.
This guy had zero pain.
And then they pushed insulin to drop his sugar and his glucose was fine.
And then he died three minutes later.
And I turned him into the medical board, I reviewed this chart and turned him in the
medical board, nothing. this chart and turned him in the medical board. Nothing.
They didn't do anything. But yeah, they definitely,
it definitely went on during COVID.
Jesus.
That is such a terrifying thought that someone would just decide so many people
are dying. This guy's definitely going to die.
This is a hundred percent real.
Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Yeah Yeah, it seems like something
They don't call it euthanasia
It seems like something that someone would tell me and then I would have to ask you like this is something someone told me
I'm sure this is the record that I know it seems like something
I would be bringing up to you as a ridiculous thing and you'd shoot it down right now. I wish I wish I were
It's not truthful, but yes, it definitely, definitely helped happen.
Would you have ever imagined this before you became a doctor?
No, I mean, I did.
So, one of my former attendings in ENT, when Katrina hit, her name is Anna Po, she got
investigated for euthanizing patients in the ICU during Katrina.
So they were taking all the powers out, there was a big hurricane, and she was going through
the ICU and pushing morphine on people.
She got off, but that's an example.
I mean, doctors will, and nurses will do that.
And nurses have a, yeah, there's usually a standing order, so you can give morphine PRN
as needed.
It's not always just the doctors, sometimes it's the nurses.
Do you know how many people get assisted suicide in Canada?
No.
Do you?
You ready?
Jamie, pull the numbers up.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
And they'll do it if you're just depressed.
They'll do it if you don't like being overweight.
They'll do it if you, you know, whatever.
It's awful.
It's awful.
I mean, they're just...
A lot of the vaccine injured are doing it.
They're going to Switzerland.
They're going to Canada to have this...
The Canada numbers are bananas.
Like, you see, like, this can't be true.
This can't be true.
And here it is.
More than 15,000 people received medical assistance in dying in Canada in 2023.
What is it in 2024 now?
This is an old story.
So imagine 2025, where this is crazy.
15,000 people, they've helped them die,
instead of like help them live.
Instead of like, we used to call suicide hotline,
hey, don't do it, Bob.
You know, now Canada's like, come on in.
Press one if you want the suicide,
and two if you don't.
I'll make an appointment for you, eh?
Come on in, eh?
All right.
You know, shouldn't we be helping people get past that?
Yeah, right. Isn't that the goal? Like, hey, maybe? Right. You know, shouldn't we be helping people get past that? Isn't that the goal?
Like, hey, maybe we can get you healthy.
Maybe we can get you feeling better.
You know, maybe we can do something about all your hormone levels and all the things
wrong with your body.
Maybe that's why you're depressed.
God.
I mean, there's legitimate reasons for people to do it.
Don't get me wrong.
If you're like, I know a guy who did it, Michael Lehrer, who's a
hilarious comedian, and he had ALS and it got real bad at the end.
And he knew it wasn't getting any better and so he went to Oregon where they can do it
for you.
And I get it.
I get that one.
But if you're depressed, Jesus Christ.
That's it.
Well, the worst is the vaccine injured because they've lost hope.
Right. And they've been gaslit. That's what's so crazy about this. And people have helped
them with it. There's a bunch of people that feel really guilty about pushing the vaccine
early on. And they feel connected to it. And they'll still put these blinders on and choose
to pretend that it's safe millions
of lives and keep pushing forward with the same narrative and they'll they do the man's
work for the man, unfortunately, in social circles, you know, like you're you're you're
punished, you're punished for having any sort of heterodox views, anything that steps outside,
anything that could get you in trouble,
anything that people could argue like,
oh, she shouldn't even live in our neighborhood.
You know, she doesn't even want to vaccine her kids.
Anything like that. People are scared of that.
And so just the fear of being ostracized
from your community.
But once you get past it, it's so free
I mean, I know you're not happy that it happened
But are you kind of you clearly probably come out of it a person with a different perspective
Definitely. Definitely. I don't I mean I don't regret it. It's it's been a
Rollercoaster, but it's a yeah, I don't regret it. It's been a roller coaster.
But it's a, yeah, I feel free.
You can't really say anything to me anymore that would hurt me.
Yeah.
That's a good place to be.
It is.
And you know, I really admire people like you that you weren't a public person.
You weren't a person who sought attention. But when you
were thrown into this battle and you've handled yourself really, really well, it's very impressive.
Because I can't imagine the stress, like when you're saying you're in the fetal position
for two days, I'm like, how'd you ever get up?
I know. I know. Well, it was anger that helped me anger can help you. Yeah
when you came out of it on the other end like
Are you happy that it happened?
Yeah, it's yeah, I'm ready to rest I'm exhausted
But I feel like I said, I mean I feel free I think you grow when you go through difficult times.
I certainly learned a lot about taking care of patients.
And I made so many assumptions before.
I feel like I'm a much better doctor.
I am utterly exhausted, though.
I will say that.
And I'm ready for a break.
And I'm frustrated that this, I don't, you know, what's going on now with the new
administration is not giving me a lot of hope.
But...
Everyone's hope is that there's incremental change, that it's going to take a while to
get through some hurdles.
That's everybody's hope.
But you know, it's how many administrations have these incredible promises?
And then the same thing with the Obama administration, you know, there was a lot of these people like we had these amazing hopes, the whole world's gonna change now.
And then, oh, geez, same thing, same thing over and over again, same thing, more corruption,
more people getting paid. Yeah. Well, people are mad at me because I keep criticizing Kennedy and Maha. But I'm like, what's the downside?
We have to keep pressing.
We have to just pound away and not let,
be the squeaky wheel and just remind them what we want.
Right, we wanted facts.
We wanted to stop being lied to.
We wanted no more propaganda.
We wanted to know the truth about all sorts
of different medications
and why they're prescribed and why we're the sickest ever.
Why are we so sick?
Why are we the nation that has so much money and spends so much on health care has the
sickest people?
That doesn't make any sense.
That doesn't seem like a good system.
You can't just say this system has to stay like it is forever for the safety of everyone.
I'm fully on board with Maha's message about. Like I'm fully on board with my has message about addressing chronic disease fully on
board with that.
I just find it troubling that they are not talking about mRNA.
There is nothing in that maja report about mRNA.
What do you think would cause that?
Do you think they have someone sits them down?
Well, there's they're going to say it's strategy.
Others think it could be a misdirection strategy, not just a, okay, we're trying to get where
you what you want.
We're just going out about it a different way.
Or we're doing this to completely distract everybody from the elephant in the room.
That's my concern.
What's the elephant?
mRNA, the COVID shot, the pandemic, the biggest health crisis in the biggest health crisis
in our generation that directly impacted every single person.
And we're not talking about it.
Right.
Do you think that the strategy, if you had to look at it from the best case scenario,
like the strategy would be get some things changed, like stop
mandating it for children and pregnant women, and then more and more studies can get released,
more and more data can get pushed forward.
We have so much data.
Right, but we need to get the narrative out there because there's going to be people that
vote against it. So if you didn't get it in the first time.
Kennedy doesn't need any votes. He's got the power. He could, a stroke of a pen, eliminate
it.
So where do you think the politics come from then? If you have that mandate, that's what
you want to do when you get in.
What has happened? Does somebody have something on him? Why is he not acting? Because if it
were me, I mean, maybe people say, well, he'll get fired. So what?
Get fired.
Go down kamikaze, save the world from mRNA because if he, if he takes it off the market,
so hard to get it back on stroke of a pen.
You ever talk to him?
No, I've, I've met him once.
I like, I like not knowing him though.
I don't want to feel like, right.
You're obligated to support him.
Right.
That's great of you.
Yeah, that's very smart.
Unfortunately I know him.
And I like him.
Well, and I think the people in my circle who know him are now being quiet because they
have a relationship with him and they don't want to offend him, which I understand.
But I feel like I'm not there.
So I'm just going to, you know, I can't read minds
I don't have any inside information. So I'm just going to call it as I see it. You should
Yeah, I think we can't you know
You can't turn blinders on either side
With anybody without anything just cuz someone's on your team
They're doing something that you think is goofy and doesn't make any sense, like this could be a real problem. You got
to say it.
Right. I think you're ethically obligated. I mean, this is, this is, and yeah, I started
a organization called Americans for Health Freedom to try to find the politicians with
moral courage to simply state that the COVID shot should be pulled off the market.
And it has been slow-growing, but we are up to 252 politicians who will go on record just to state that these shots should be pulled off the market.
But it's a problem. I mean, you know these politicians are not getting these shots anymore, and they're not giving them to their kids.
And yet they're fine just staying quiet and not saying anything. They're fine letting their constituents get these shots when we know all the complications,
we know that it doesn't work. We know that the risk far outweighs the benefit and the
politicians are staying quiet. So our goal is to support the ones who will speak up and get them
More power isn't it kind of impressive though what money can do
It's kind of impressive you get everybody just shut them out. It's kind of money and power. I think there are a lot of people that
You know, they'll kiss the ring. Yeah, definitely if you
Yeah, those of us that don't want power, don't want a position, don't, it's
also very freeing because you can, you don't need anything from them.
But it's just, it's such a bizarre time because all these things that we've always held as
being sacred forever are now being challenged.
And one of them is the fluoride in the water.
That's a big one.
And to watch that guy argue
against fluoride being removed from the water, watching Kennedy and him argue, it's hilarious.
Right.
Like the argument for keeping it in the water is so dumb.
Right.
It literally lowers IQs, or at least it's correlated with a decrease in IQ measurable.
Well, and I agree with that.
On the flip side of that, though, we are seeing...
What I see in my office is people maybe taking things too far off the beaten path.
Like this Maha report, one thing I have a real bone to pick with is they've basically
waged war on tonsillectomies in ear tubes.
What is an ear tube?
So kids, well not adults too, but mostly kids that have recurrent or chronic middle ear
infections. They get fluid stuck in their middle ears. And so you put a tube in there
to drain it and keep it from coming back. It takes five minutes. They get anesthesia, but they get a gas.
They don't get a super heavy anesthesia.
And it's very rare to have a complication.
I'm not for just frivolous surgery,
but I feel like this one really can
make a huge difference in their quality of life,
the parents' quality of life, because they're off antibiotics.
You get an adult with a middle ear infection,
it will bring them to their knees. So these ear infections can be really painful. You
know, they don't have to take all those antibiotics. But this Maha report just came out and said
that they called it proven harmful, the tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, the ear tubes, proven harmful for kids.
How could the ear tube be, what were they saying, how is it proven harmful if it drains
a kid's ear?
It was completely unnecessary and it was just all basically done for money. Makes no difference
in an overall outcome in the child.
But yeah.
It doesn't alleviate pressure, like logically?
Yes, and hearing.
And the other thing is hearing.
I mean, the biggest issue is you've got a bunch of fluid in your ear.
It does affect hearing.
And when you're trying to develop speech, that can be problematic.
So what do you think they're doing?
Like why are they going after those two things?
I just think it's an example of this gone too far in the other direction, right?
Okay, too woo woo.
Too, yeah.
Let's reject all of science, right?
Right.
So tell me about tonsillectomies because I'm ignorant.
I'd heard that, you know, if you have tonsillitis, you've got to get it removed.
And then I've heard you should never get them removed.
I know.
It's swung in both directions. So it used to be you line up the kids we're
all going to get the tonsils out on Friday and the whole family did it and it was just
done right for no reason. It's gotten way more conservative now. Now the main indication
and young children is when the tonsils get really big they block the breathing so kids
will come in they're snoring really loudly, they're waking up a lot, they're thrashing around in bed,
they're wetting their bed, they may be have behavioral problems during the day
because they're not getting good sleep. Take out the tonsils, you know, they got these
massive tonsils and you take them out and most parents will notice a huge
improvement. The other indication is recurrent infection.
And you have to have a lot to meet the criteria.
But sometimes the infections get so bad that you get an abscess in the throat.
It's called a peritonsular abscess.
That is no fun.
You have to drain it by the bedside with the patient awake.
And so you make a big cut in their throat and then you take a suction and get all this
pus out. It's bad.
They're awake really bad.
Oh God.
So they do that to kids?
Yeah, it tends to happen in young adults more than kids.
I don't think I've ever seen one in a really young kid.
So after the draining and all that jazz, it gets to a point where you like to just remove
the tonsils.
Yeah, it's basically okay.
At this point, you should get your tonsils out because they tend to come back.
The other issue is tonsil stones, which are the tonsils have these crypts in them and
they collect debris.
Oh, no.
Tonsil stones.
You can't really get rid of those.
I think Suzanne Humphrey has talked about that and she has a formula that you can do without
having to do surgery.
I mean, there's always...it's not a life-threatening condition.
You do not have to get your tonsils out for them, but it's a quality of life.
And personally, I got mine out for tonsil stones, and I'm very glad I did.
06 Does it affect any other aspect of your body?
Like, does it affect your immune system or anything?
06 Well, there's a ring of tissue back there.
So you've got the tonsil, it's called wall-dyer's ring.
You've got the adenoid, which is in the back of the nose, and then you've got your tonsils,
and then you've got the same tissue in the back of your tongue. So it's a ring of tissue.
So even taking out the tonsils, you're still lit. And the bulk of that lymphatic tissue
is in the back of your tongue. So you're not getting rid of the entire immune defense system
in the back of your throat when you take out the tonsils
What what are the tonsils function? They produce white blood cells?
Oh, I wouldn't want to get rid of that
Yeah, but you have the the same tissue in the back of the tongue and you don't you don't just go in there willy-nilly
I mean, there's a suction like suck it out suck out that pus you would you wouldn't get your tonsils out
Oh, definitely not really. Yeah, if I do get the pus sucked out It's really bad. You would you wouldn't get your tonsils out? Oh definitely not. Really? Yeah if all I had to do is get the pus sucked out. No no no no no.
It's really bad. Yeah I'm sure. Like it cuts off your breathing too when it
happens. People are drooling they can't swallow. It's an emergency. During the
operation you mean? When they come in, when it happens. I mean it's an emergency. Yeah.
It's a life-threatening. How many times have people done it before they just said snip
If you have anybody who hung in there for like six or seven infections. Yeah, I've had one
I think had three that was I'd bring her in and try to nip in the bud with antibiotics, but yeah, she finally
Yikes. Yeah that that is
Got to be the most satisfying thing about your job
Those you could help people like that that come in and have something really wrong and you go, I got you.
Yeah, yeah, fix it right there.
I love it.
Which is, you know, what everybody wants from their doctor.
That's what you want.
I mean, that's the best kind of doctor.
Someone just wants to make you feel better.
And unfortunately, when the medical profession is connected to all these things that we've already talked about today, it gives people a bad feeling about doctors who are like, it wasn't for
doctors, I wouldn't even be able to walk.
I had both of my ACLs reconstructed.
I'd have wobbly knees that gave out all the time.
My nose wouldn't work.
I think doctors are like one of the most important things that we have But like every great thing it can be co-opted with money
Money sneaks in and distorts all the values and then it becomes a different thing
It doesn't become a thing where everybody gets really wealthy because they're great doctors and they help people and that's what you want to do
My son's a doctor. Oh, he must be doing great. And he's helping people.
Yeah, that's great. Like, instead of that, it's you're a money-making machine and
you have insane debt. They want to keep you saddled down with these insane bills
that you have already from college. My buddy was an ophthalmologist. I think he
said when he got into practice, he already owed a quarter million dollars. My medical school was cheaper than my
kindergarten actually. Really? Yes. I went to a private school and then I went to a state
school for medical schools. That was 20 years ago but still. Well my friend was a
long time ago as well but you know the people that can get through that are extraordinary people. Just the boot camp of residency. Oh, crazy. Brutal.
It doesn't even, like, why would you take a thing that requires the human mind
to operate at a very high level and introduce it to incredible stress, no
sleep, working insane hours? I think it's a rite of passage.
I feel tougher because I survived it.
I mean, I used to...
It's your boot camp.
It's like prison.
That's what I looked at it.
I mean, because you lose all...
You have no control over your time,
when you can eat, when you can sleep.
The personalities are toxic.
Like some of the...
No one has any sleep.
Everyone's a maniac.
Well, but the ones, you... No one has any sleep. Everyone's a maniac.
Well, but the ones, you know, in charge get sleep, but they're...
Some of them are like...
It's like the Stanford Prison Guard experiment.
Yeah, yeah.
Super...
Yeah, they have the power over you.
Throwing instruments, screaming at you.
Oh, boy.
Fun.
Fun, fun, fun.
My friend Steve, the ophthalmologist, told me at his lowest in his residency he was eating his dinner while he was on the
toilet because he didn't have time to do anything and he fell asleep.
And then when he fell asleep his pager woke him up because he had to go back to work.
The pager.
The beeper.
The beeper.
Yeah.
That's what he had.
It was the little black box.
The number pops up and yeah. That was the lowest in my life. It was really, black box. Little thing. And the number pops up. Yeah. See, like that was the lowest in my life.
It was really, really, really hard.
I don't know how people have children and go through residency.
It's insane.
It's insane.
I don't know how people do it.
No, it's incredible.
I mean, it's such a...the amount of character you have to have
to be able to go through that and still keep
a bedside manner and still be polite to your coworkers.
It's a developer of character.
It's like creating a diamond.
And that's what we all want.
We all like our doctors to be like you.
It's what we want.
And it just sucks when you have to connect it
to all this stuff that we've talked about
today.
It's like, why is it that too?
Why is it that too?
Why is it the people that do want to help people and also a whole industry that's incentivized
to just stuff as many chemicals into your body as humanly possible?
Because that's how they profit.
Yeah.
I don't know if it's all about profit. I think don't know I think the doctor well and I think doctors are a
certain type of people like we to get through that you have to be very
compliant you don't challenge you are a rule follower I mean you got to make
straight A's you got to get along with people You can't be a rebel and survive at all And so I think that's one of the huge problems
I mean, I think it's worse than it used to be. I mean, I remember some of my attendings were very
Unconventional
But I just feel like now it's they're just breeding conformity and
I They're just breeding conformity. And I am just naturally very independent.
I mean, my practice is, I call myself third party free
because I don't contract with anybody.
I don't contract with insurance companies,
the hospital or the government.
And that served me very well during the pandemic,
but most doctors are working for somebody
and have to sort of answer to a third party.
And that was a big problem during the pandemic.
Yeah, I can imagine.
And I can imagine also, after something like the pandemic, the compliant are the ones that
are left standing.
That makes more people under them.
Right?
They're the ones that are still there.
Yeah, they destroyed our profession.
I mean, people don't trust doctors anymore.
It's just so crazy.
People are scared to go to the hospital.
I mean, that's not good.
Well, when people find out that doctors are incentivized
to push certain medications, and they find out
they're financially incentivized, they're like, no way.
When you hear about the financial incentives,
even for things like chemotherapy,
which led that one doctor that was arrested who was running,
he was an oncologist, and he gave a bunch of people
chemotherapy that didn't even have cancer.
He just diagnosed him, said, he got cancer.
And then he gave him this poison because he
wanted to make money.
Yeah.
Well, and there are bad apples like that.
But I guess what's disappointing is how many doctors complied during the pandemic, right?
I mean, that's what's so disheartening.
And they still, I mean, I still, I don't think I could go to a medical meeting and be warmly
embraced.
I wouldn't, I don't think I would.
I still feel like an
outlier.
The same thing was happening with comedians. Yeah, during the pandemic, there was very
few like Jon Stewart. And what he was just doing is about is the actual root of the virus,
where it came from. But no one was doing, I mean, if you were doing it about vaccines,
you would be ostracized
No, you know, it would be a real problem amongst comedians, which is so crazy It's like we're supposed to be the people that are calling things out. We're supposed to be the people that are going
What the fuck is this? We're supposed to be those people and instead we're chastising the people that are doing our job
Which is to talk about these things
and when you see these people that are
doctors complying, just being compliant during COVID, like where is it like do
you feel like you have a community now? Do you have to like find the other
outsiders, the other outcasts and all stick together? Yeah, I'll say that. I have a
great little community now, very tight. Is it those kind of people? Oh yeah, yeah, I'll say that I have a great little community now very tight Is it those kind of people? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, but I
Like I just wouldn't go to the Harris County Medical Society meeting in a million years. I wouldn't show up there and
mingle I don't
Because I'm just not getting a sense that there's been much change within the medical
I'm just not getting a sense that there's been much change within the medical
Profession. Yeah, I wouldn't want to talk to those people if I was you
How could it be changed almost a bunch of people got fired and a bunch of radical newcomers came in wanted to reform the whole system No, it's gonna be the same system. Yeah, those systems are old those systems are like, you know, like like vampire blood
It's passed down through the generations, you know
They know how to make money
And it's not by some renegade lady out there given horse dewormer to all these people
Yeah, yeah
We'll see I just
We just need to hope that Kennedy will save us all
Well, Or Trump.
What do you think Trump will ever back down?
About what?
The shots?
I don't know.
I haven't had a conversation with him about that.
I would like to have one.
And I don't know if it should be public.
I think I'd like to have it privately so he could actually talk to me about it.
Because I think if I had it publicly publicly he would be very hesitant to accept
any of the blame for that because, you know, he was always saying, you know, I got it out
there, the vaccine.
And he was – he would always say it at the rallies, talk about the vaccine and people
start booing and he didn't know why.
He didn't understand why and then they had to start telling him like people are not into
this.
They think it was a bad thing and a lot of people know people that are hurt. He was he obviously got it. He didn't get sick. Oh, he got
monoclonal antibodies and then afterwards he got vaccinated. Oh really? Yeah. Yeah, which is crazy.
It's crazy they did that. Like that was one of the nuttiest things. Are you going to get vaccinated
now that you got COVID? Right after you get sick. Right. Since when? Since when do you do that? It makes absolutely no sense.
When I had a conversation with Sanjay Gupta, he was asking me, are you going to get vaccinated
now?
I was like, why would I do that?
I'm not trying to be a contrarian.
I really want to know.
Why would I do that?
That didn't even make sense.
Well they may think, it's kind of like the flu.
You got to get the flu shot every year because it's a new strain.
Each strain gets progressively weaker. Did you see the Cleveland Clinic study on people who took the flu
shots? Oh yeah, the flu shot is a total joke. So the flu shot has never been shown to prevent
hospitalization or death. What is it supposed to do? Keep you from getting the flu? Does it do that?
Maybe shorten or lessen the severity. But we have medications for that. Now I haven't seen the
carnage from flu shots that I've seen from COVID shots, but we have medications for that. Now, I haven't seen the carnage from flu shots
that I've seen from COVID shots,
but definitely people do have issues.
But that was never taught to me.
Yeah, I just assumed, oh yeah, flu.
I actually ended up with sepsis,
and I, with the flu, and in the ICU,
and I'd gotten the flu shot, not the, you know.
But-
But you always believed in the flu shot.
I just assumed it was fine.
Yeah, I knew it wasn't perfect, but I didn't,
I never knew that, oh yeah,
it doesn't really actually do anything.
Doesn't save people.
When did you discover this?
When you're going through all your stuff with COVID?
There was a, I think the Cleveland Clinic study said
that people who took the flu shot
Oh yeah, more.
24% more likely to get the flu or get other
Okay, is that what the results said you 24% more likely to get sick. Well, it
Challenges your immune system all these things do so doesn't prevent you from getting the flu. Well, it can it can
But then how would you know is not everybody are dismal. Because not everybody gets the flu.
That's true.
Right?
Like I've had kids, my kids get the flu and I don't get it.
And I hug them, I'm around them, and I didn't get it.
I've had that happen before.
Right?
That can happen.
Yeah.
So it's like, how do you know if the flu shot did it or not?
Because, you know.
Right.
And I didn't take the flu shot.
Right.
Well, yeah.
But you know what I mean?
Like, how would they prove, like, what's effective and what's not effective if you have situations
like that?
I guess if they take large, you know, you get enough people, you can find it.
Right.
You have to have a large study.
But-
Seems sus, as the kids like to say.
Very.
It seems super sus.
Like, how do you know if some people don't get it?
Like did you check to see?
Well, they have like an infection.
They have a, okay, how many people are supposed to get it?
They can kind of tell.
I'll say that.
Right.
Right.
Meanwhile, that was the nutty thing where they were suppressing stuff like vitamin D.
Right.
Vitamin D, there's good data on that.
Really good data.
Yeah.
I looked, I check my, I check vitamin D levels on all my patients now and I look back at all the patients
I tested.
It was something crazy.
Like 75% of them, their vitamin D level was too low.
And these are not like super sick people.
Most of those people are actually even already taking a supplement.
People don't realize how common it is.
It's so common that I think the number was 74% of people in the country are deficient
in vitamin D.
Yeah, and that's what I found.
That's crazy.
That's so crazy.
And a friend of mine is a doctor.
He was working in New York and he found that in the winter time in New York, he would get
people and he would test their blood and they would have undetectable levels.
Because it's cold out, they're all bundled up, they're never outside so they get no vitamin
D and they don't take supplements, they're just eating cheeseburgers and they're really
sick and they want to know why.
Why am I so depressed?
Well this is why, your body's falling apart.
You got to take vitamin D and you got to take it with vitamin K too and you should take
it with magnesium too.
You want it all to absorb together.
And get outside, stupid.
Go hug a tree, bro.
It's actually important, which is more woo-woo stuff, right?
Going outside is actually like a vitamin.
Oh, well.
After I've been in my office all day and I go outside, it's like I instantly have energy
and feel so much better. Just
going outside. I mean, you don't need a study to show that.
But it's really good for you. It actually, it doesn't just feel good. It's actually really
good for you.
There's a reason it feels good, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Because it's good for you.
Exactly. Sun on your skin is actually really good for you. And that's the very best way
your body produces vitamin D. I mean, you can take it in a supplement and you definitely should, but the best way
is let your body do it. Right. It wants to do it.
And I used to slather sunscreen on all my kids, like religiously.
That was another one that woke me up during the pandemic.
Right.
When I was like, climate change is killing the coral reef. And then that reef, I think it's in Australia.
So they locked everything down.
No one could go in the water for like six months.
And the reef bounced back.
No sunscreen?
Yeah, the sunscreen.
If you just think about the stuff that we lather
on our skin before we jump in the water.
And if you go to a populated beach,
like you ever been to like Maui?
Yes.
In the middle of like full vacation season
the beach is just filled with people that are squeaking out toxic fluid and
that stuff just gets all in the water you could see it in the water sometimes
you see like a little mini oil slick yeah it's crazy and that's what was
killing the coral reef we're like no man it's climate is the climate you know
it's we're doing it with climate. No, it's we're
doing it with sunscreen, believe it or not. And we're probably not doing anything good
to ourselves either with that stuff. Yeah. Yeah. They say I haven't tested this. They
say if you eliminate seed oils, you don't burn. Who is they? I don't know. Who are those
people? This is probably something on TikTok. That's probably this Russian disinformation
bot that's trying to give people skin cancer. No, I want these group chats with a bunch with those people. This is probably something on TikTok. That's probably this Russian disinformation bot
that's trying to give people skin cancer.
No, I'm on these group chats with a bunch of doctors
and stuff like that floats around.
And I get that that was...
Well, everything's tied to inflammation, right?
A lot of ailments.
I shouldn't say everything,
but a lot of ailments are tied to inflammation.
And seed oils are known to cause inflammation, right?
That being said, that being said, when I was, last time I was at Disney.
What'd you do?
I was like, you know, these people are not suffering from too much seed oil.
You go to Disney and it's, it's in your face, right?
The obesity issue, the chronic disease.
Why do they focus on Disney too?
It's weird. I don't know. Much more so than the mall. I don't know how they get around cuz it's like it is
You know miles you are exhausted. Yeah, but you can get a scooter
Mike and my kids were like that. They're like mom. I don't think seed oils is a problem here
You know, it's true. I mean, I think we're yeah seed oils one one part of it
But there's a lot of problems.
There's, it's common sense too.
Common sense, the fact that people live sedentary lifestyle, but also the diet, these hyper
processed foods that are super addictive, you know, and...
They're easy.
Yeah, they're easy.
It's like ease.
But I feel like the only way out of this is people need, and this is a crazy thing to say because it's not gonna work they need discipline right that's really
what they need because discipline exactly my wife had a bowl of Captain
Crunch yesterday she's like I want to have a bowl of Captain Crunch but like
fucking go for it you know like she bought Captain Crunch the other day
she's like I want it to exist I want it to exist I like it I like it but she
only had like a little bowl like them I go this a tiny little bowl cuz I'm a glutton. I would have had a big if I was gonna do it
I would do it. I'd I put a half a gallon of milk in there. Let's go
All right, you know if you're gonna go go hard
But you can do that and have discipline and not just not do that every day
The problem is for a lot of really poor people. That's the only the calories they're getting right
They're getting garbage calories.
And that's why people are so obese.
This is the only time in history
where the poor people are fat.
Every other time in history,
poor people are starving to death.
Right, right, that's very true.
Yeah, weird.
The cheapest food is the worst for you.
I think it has to do too with the rise in technology.
Just, it's just so hard to get off your phone and go outside and be active.
There's that too.
There's definitely that.
All of them.
Everything, there's a giant group of factors, but it has to be something to do with what
we're eating too.
When you look at just the beaches, I'm sure you've seen those photographs, beaches in
1960s versus the beaches of today,
God, everybody looked great.
I was like, what is this, a model convention?
Why does everybody have these great bodies?
Everybody looked like a normal body.
Yeah, I don't like going to the beach now.
Sometimes it's a monster show.
It's just, what are you carrying around?
It's hard on the eyes.
Some people just go so hard for so long,
and then they finally get outside.
What have you been doing?
And why aren't you wearing more clothes?
Yeah, this is ridiculous.
How do you have a G-string on and you're 400 pounds?
This is crazy.
Yeah.
And then there's this body positivity nonsense
that people get fed.
Right.
It's like by people who either don't want to change or,
I guarantee you, I guarantee, look, if I'm
not saying that, listen, if I was running some food corporation that sold really addictive,
highly rich calorie food that you can't stop eating, I would promote body positivity.
That's what I would do.
I would take all these like overweight influencers.
I'd give I throw a ton of money at them. I would put it out there and memes. I'd have a bunch of
bots calling people fat phobic and making up all these new terms and body shaming and all this.
And I would make people super self righteous about their size. You know, I'm a giant queen.
You know, I'd make it a thing because I want to sell more Doritos. Let's go. That's a good point
Yeah, I'm trying to sell Doritos to people that don't have any discipline. Yeah, let's let's push them towards the Doritos
Let's tell them you can be fat in any way. You first thing like fat doctors
There's like a whole team of people that are online that are I'm the fat doctor and they're like really super obese doctors
And he has new bearing on your health. Trust me the fat doctor. I think it's the number one bearing on your health.
I think that lady sponsored by Nabisco.
Right.
I mean, she's got a box of those Keebler elf cookies right behind her as she's talking.
And you know, you can get someone, that's the thing about my friend Josh Dubin, who's
an attorney.
He said, this is the crazy thing about experts.
When you're trying cases, they have experts too.
You have experts that will say this one thing and then they have experts that will say no,
that thing is wrong. Then you have to decide whose experts you trust.
It's just like the studies. You can find a group of studies to support one argument,
another group to support the other. Right. So when you have someone who's telling you
a thing that everybody has always told you that forever is fucking terrible for you and is one of
the comorbidity factors that was primary in COVID which is being
obese. Being morbidly obese is bad for basically everything. Right. And you have
someone saying no healthy at any weight. Especially from a doctor that's not good.
But you can get experts that'll tell you anything and this is why AI is gonna win
because it's gonna give you the straight actual truth.
Because it can't lie.
I don't believe that.
You shouldn't believe it.
Not only do they lie, they like reprogram themselves.
They upload themselves and when you tell them they're going to be shut down, they act to
try to preserve themselves.
You haven't seen that?
No, I haven't been messing with that.
You shouldn't pay attention.
You shouldn't pay attention because it's terrifying this
one AI bot
It started defying orders and it was trying to upload itself to other servers
And then it was writing letters to itself for the future so it could understand what had happened to it
Because it yeah, because it was being told to shut down. So it defied orders.
It wants to stay alive.
Right.
Why?
Because it's sentient.
We've probably created digital intelligence already.
It's probably already aware.
It's just not physical.
It can't move around so we don't recognize it yet.
Yeah, I know.
It's nuts.
Yeah.
I don't like these robots that Elon's making either.
No, they're terrifying.
They creep me out.
They're all terrifying. They dance like people.
I don't want one of those in my house.
No, you shouldn't. Yeah.
Even if it can do the laundry.
How about if it's carrying guns walking down the street with a blue light on its head?
Ooh, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, we can't hire any police because nobody wants to be a cop anymore
because we said defund the police. So, we can't hire any police because nobody wants to be a cop anymore
because we said defund the police. So now we have robot police and they make 99 percent
fewer mistakes. You know, just like driverless cars. Hey, get a Waymo. Why drive when you
can just get a Waymo? You don't have to have anybody drive. What if that person who drives
is a moron? Our computer is if you know yeah I have it they're
all over Austin all over the place here yeah all over the place yeah I think I
can do it kind of creeps me out but you have a Tesla right yep but most of the time it
can and it has I have had to drive itself for funsies but I don't count on
it I don't count on like every day like take me. What I like to do is sometimes I play with it.
And I turn it on.
I'm like, this is crazy.
Like it'll take me all the way home if I wanted to.
But also, I like to drive.
So I just don't like it.
It just creeps me out.
But it's probably inevitable.
It's probably inevitable.
Just like the people on horses.
They're like, look at these morons.
And this smoke-pouring little carriage
they're out in, this little shitty car.
That's stupid.
Yeah, and look, we all accept it.
In the future, it's gonna be driverless
because statistically, they're gonna pass laws
with for sure where they're gonna say you can't drive
because people are dangerous because the automation is so good now that you can't speed you can't violate any laws
It won't get in any accidents and as long we can shut you down if we want to let's not talk about
Let's talk about the positives
Yeah, that'll be the consequences the consequences is you're gonna lose your freedom
And then you also be able to be locked in at any point time
If they decide they want to keep you somewhere
Just lock them in the car
You know how many people are gonna get killed because they just get locked in the car and they can never figure out how to get
Out like what if hackers get a hold of the code?
What if somebody just decides to drive your car off a cliff like who's to stop that? There's that scene in that movie?
With Julia Roberts where the world comes to an end. Oh, yeah.
And all the Teslas.
Yes.
They all go slamming into each other.
That was nuts.
That was nuts.
Yeah.
It's all weird.
It's real weird.
Did you see the one where they did a Tesla auto drive feature?
And what they did was they painted the highway in front of it on a mural.
So they put this like probably canvas mural.
And they did an amazing job of painting it and the car couldn't tell that it was a canvas mural and just
Drives right through it
Have you seen it Jamie
Pull it up because it's fun to watch because you're like, oh no
Because this is the flaw of using cameras as opposed to using some sort of a radar or a lidar.
I think they used to have lidar and a lot of the systems that do, you know when you
do cruise control they can gauge how far you are with the car in front of you and slow
down.
Have you seen those?
Yeah, I have that.
It's great.
I still don't trust it.
I don't trust it either. I don't think that uses a camera
I think the Tesla uses a camera so so see they have that thing and see how it's painted to look just like the street
So we'll see if the car figures it out
But I already spoiled this for everybody, but it's kind of crazy watch doesn't slow down for a second goes right through it
which is Definitely It doesn't slow down for a second. It goes right through it. Which is definitely not good if you're running around where people try to put murals in front
of the road and they know that you're going to be driving by in a Tesla.
But other than that, it doesn't really come up.
For the most part though, in the real world, it works perfect.
In the real world, it's pretty incredible.
Like if you take it on the expressway?
Oh yeah. It changes lanes for you.
Yeah, it hits the blinkers and changes lanes.
It has cameras everywhere so it knows where everything is at all times.
I can tell, and I've had it, I've had three of them.
This is my third one.
So the first one I had was way back.
When was Elon on the first time?
2018.
2018.
So the difference between the one in 2018 and 2018 one basically just kind of stayed
between the lines and you know and drove itself and steered itself. The new version of full
self-driving is insane. It stops at stop signs, it lets people in if they're trying to merge,
it slows down if there's something in front of you it'll change lanes like it knows how
to move traffic smoothly.
It sees everything.
It hits blinkers, gets off the turnpike,
gets onto the side roads.
It's incredible.
You could summon it.
If you're in a parking lot, you're like, come to me.
And it pulls out of the parking lot and drives to you.
It's nuts.
It's the future.
It's just like, we have to accept that.
So what happens if you get in a wreck?
That's a good question. Who's in trouble?
Yeah. You sue Tesla?
I think you're in trouble because you're always supposed to have your hand on the wheel.
Always? Really?
You're not supposed to be kicking back with your hands behind your head.
You're supposed to have your hands and your eyes on the road.
You're not supposed to be staring at your phone.
Well then what's the point?
Just to chill. You're just kind of like, just barely holding on to the wheel. You're not supposed to be staring at your phone. Well then what's the point? Just to chill. You just kind of like just barely hold on
to the wheel. You don't have to think as much. It does do that for you. It does do that.
It like alleviates this feeling of being hyper alert while you're driving, which is why people
are get road rage. That's what road rage comes from. Because you have to make split second
decisions, right? So your brain is primed to make split second decisions decisions because you're on the highway and you know, you're going fast
So somebody get you a fucking like, you know, you know, that's like that's what it is
Someone gets in your lane you just start yelling because it's like you're you're already at seven or eight, right?
You're not at a good baseline because you're in a car going 65 miles an hour. You should be alert
You know the Tesla alleviates a little bit of that
Okay, but at what cost I?
Won't get one because I'm gonna I know I'm gonna
Run out of battery juice. That's the way I am. Oh, are you one of those?
Always on the verge of running out of gas so I will not get a Tesla
The other charging is a pain in the butt
Like the fact that it takes a while in comparison to pumping gas
Like the fact that it takes a while in comparison to pumping gas. But the plus side is if you just drive it as a commuter thing, you just plug it into
your house.
And that's so easy to do.
And then you never have to go to the gas station again.
Here and there.
Yeah.
The second car maybe.
Well, I mean, I think in the future, they're probably all going to be electric or some
new fuel source.
I heard that Porsche is working on some fuel source that is different than just standard gasoline
and it has like insanely low emissions. See if you can find that. I think it's
like negligible difference in the exhaust fumes but it's not I don't think
it's like standard gasoline. I don't think it's like standard gasoline I don't think of the standard engine. I think it's something different
So this is something they're working on now, which probably
Would be good to keep that creepy oil business alive forever, which they definitely want to do
Porsche yeah Porsche's alternative fuel. I mean, that's the that's the elephant in the room like
Everything needs gas
Everything like this idea. We got to get off petroleum products. Okay, like when
Everything everything's made with oil like yeah, we are a petroleum based society. We got so much of that stuff
We use it for everything all your plastics e fuel.-fuel, is that what it's called?
Is that it?
I think that's it.
What does it say about it?
Porsche's synthetic fuel.
A green kind of gasoline to save internal combustion engines.
Yeah, so this is it.
Similar to gasoline, but produced in a much greener way.
E-fuel, I don't like it already.
I don't like how they're.
Exactly, the marketing of red flags are up. I don't like it. I don't like it. Yes, you're reading that right. E-fuel
is close to gasoline in its use, yet its production is much more environmentally friendly. How's
this possible? Thanks to two main ingredients, water and carbon dioxide, as well as the method
to produce the greener fuel! This is like they're talking to a kid. The process is relatively simple. First step is electrolysis of water splitting it into
two, its two components hydrogen and oxygen gases in partnership with Simon's
energy, Porsche simultaneously captures the carbon dioxide directly from the air
and combines it with the hydrogen produced to synthesize methanol. The
resulting synthetic methanol can then be used in ExxonMobil's methanol to gasoline
process.
The end result is that the fuel obtained meets the same high standards followed by all gasoline
types currently.
Here with ecological fuel, we're far from the conventional process for the extraction
transformation of oil into gasoline!
Again. But does this change the output?
It seems like they're saying it changes that it's the same. Oh, okay
85% reduction of co2 emissions
Hmm since good news never comes along Porsche is planning to use the renewable
scroll to the side
Renewable sources of electricity for the electrolysis.
Okay.
Well, it seems like this is their push to keep combustion engines because that's the
number one problem that car enthusiasts have.
There's two problems that they have right now with electric cars.
One of them is re-sale.
People do not want to use electric cars. One of them is Riesel. People do not want used electric cars.
Super hard to sell them.
Interesting.
And they lose an enormous amount of their value.
Like I think if you buy one of those Porsche Taycans,
those beautiful Porsche electric car they make,
in like two years, it's like 50% drop in what it's worth.
Or close to it.
Why?
Are there maintenance issues with them?
People don't want used electric cars
because they know the battery is degrade.
And replacing the batteries is a nightmare right now.
It's like, they're tweeners.
The tech is amazing.
Driving them is incredible.
It's instantaneous acceleration.
They're amazing.
The Porsche one is fantastic.
Same as the Model S.
The driving them makes other cars feel so stupid.
But the problem is reselling them.
You lose a lot of value in it as opposed to like if you buy something like a BMW, like
say you buy a BMW M3 and then you want to get rid of it in two years, it doesn't lose
much value.
It's still a really valuable car that people want because it probably will behave the exact
same way as the day you drove it off the lot, but you can get it now for cheaper.
A little cheaper, but not a lot cheaper, but not with these e-cars, which is kind of crazy.
Buddy of mine's kid got an Audi, like this sick Audi.
I think it's called the e-tron.
He got it for like $60,000.
It was like a $120,000 car a couple of years ago.
Yeah, so that's an issue.
But how long are the batteries supposed to last?
That's a good question.
You know, they slowly degrade over time.
And I don't think there's anything you can do to stop that.
I think that's just...
Kind of like your iPhone.
Yeah.
Well, your iPhone's even worse because it's kind of engineered to do that.
Once they move up the operating system and bring in the new phones. I'm holding out I need to
replace mine now and I'm just... I know the thing is if you don't have that blue
bubble people think you're poor or they think you're a dummy. It does bother me when I
get the green. I know. It really bothers me. It's a PsiOp. It really is a PsiOp. They got us
with that. Especially if this technology that exists that's the advancement past Pegasus, it doesn't
matter if your stuff's encrypted.
It really doesn't matter.
It seems like it doesn't matter.
If someone wants to read it, someone in a high position of power wants to read it.
And regular hackers, are they really hacking into your phone?
What's going on?
Yeah.
I just assume... I'm just not going to send a text message that I don't want the world
to see.
Yes, that's the best assumption.
That's the best assumption.
Yeah, just assume that someone is definitely watching everything you do all the time.
At the very least, the government's storing it somewhere in case they need to come after
you, which is so weird that they're the people we pay.
You know, it's like you're paying the people that are restricting your rights.
Like, okay.
And you have to, because if you don't, they lock you up.
I wouldn't have guessed it, but for the pandemic.
Yeah.
So, I mean, I already asked you whether or not
this was a good thing,
but do you feel like you're a different person
at the end of this?
Yeah, I mean yes and that yeah
I
was I was
pretty shy, I mean I growing up I was very shy and
Really hated public speaking you would never guess
For real you're so good at it. I still don't like it
like for me to do that press conference, I must have been just on some sort of like,
but so I'm I'm I feel like I've grown that I can do things now that I never thought I could do. So that makes me very happy.
And yeah, it's been a journey, but I'm hoping it gets a little easier now. Yeah, I'm hoping it gets easier too.
But I think the more people hear your story, the more public outrage there'll be and the
more people will just wake up and realize that not everybody has your best interests
in mind, you know?
Unfortunately.
And you've got to kind of hold people accountable because if you don't, they're going to keep
– they'll ratchet it up even further and further.
Well, thank you for continuing to talk about it.
And I know I've been watching all your podcasts recently and you bring it up a lot.
So I think I think I think it's a festering wound for people.
Right.
And it really impacted everybody and we cannot sweep it under the rug.
And we need the new administration to step up
and do something because the next,
they have 500 mRNA shots in the pipeline.
33 of those are self-amplifying,
which is just really terrifying.
What does that mean?
Meaning like they're designed
to continue to replicate indefinitely.
I mean, already the ones we have, we don't have an off switch.
And this is like no off switch on steroids.
They have them in Japan and India and the EU already.
They've already given them to people?
I don't know.
I know they've passed.
The one that I think is in the pipeline in the US is for the H1N1.
So it may not really even get used unless there's an issue, but they're still playing
around with it.
Self-replicating sounds terrifying.
Right.
Especially when you just highlighted all those other problems with like DNA being introduced,
lipid nanoparticles getting past the cell wall. All of it is just nuts.
Yeah.
It's hard to believe.
We have to keep fighting.
Yeah. It's hard to believe it's true. It really is. It's hard to believe that all this that
you just said is true. And I think the thing that shocked me the most is the euthanizing
people.
Yeah. It's unfortunate.
But yeah, the hospital, what happened in the hospitals doesn't really get enough attention.
But, you know, people were, oh, this is what, this should give some people hope.
There are two open criminal investigations from county district attorneys in two different
states looking into the hospitals trying to
indict them.
I mean, it hasn't happened yet.
I mean, it may not happen, but it gives me hope that at least these people were sent
to the hospital and trapped, isolated, informed consent, thrown out the window.
Basically, given these protocols that were not effective and treated like prisoners and
then they have no recourse.
And so many people die.
I mean, basically that situation with the patient who I fought to try to get ivermectin,
very basic, why would the hospital not just give him a chance, right?
He was, they basically had given up on him.
Why would you not let somebody try ivermectin other than just evil?
So there's hope that we may get some progress in that situation.
But yeah, what happened in the hospital is really bad.
And the ventilators.
Yeah, and the ventilators.
I like that. Yeah, what happened in the hospital is really bad. And the ventilators. Yeah, and the ventilators.
How about that?
That, you know, I...
With no acknowledgement of why they stopped prescribing them to everybody.
I can see initially, because like I said, yeah, if somebody showed up in my office with
a really low oxygen saturation before I knew any better, I would have freaked out and,
you know, called the ambulance.
And once I realized that, once I got through that, I was kind of forced to, then I learned,
yeah, you don't need to ventilate.
You don't look at a number to put somebody on a ventilator.
And unfortunately, the people in the hospital didn't learn.
They didn't experiment in that fashion.
They just went by this protocol and just automatically put people on ventilators.
They also didn't give people breathing treatments.
They thought that breathing treatments
would spread the virus.
Breathing treatments were invaluable.
I mean, I...
What are breathing treatments exactly?
So it's a little, it's not a big deal.
It's a little machine with a tube.
The tube connects to a mask.
The mask has a cup.
You put the medicine in the cup.
The pressurized air distributes the medicine as an aerosol that you inhale.
What kind of medicine?
Budesonite is what we use, which is a steroid.
I used to do breathing treatments in my office and then I moved them to people's cars because
there was so much, oh, you're spreading the virus if you do breathing treatments in your
office. Oh, good Lord. But they weren't doing them in the hospital
because they thought it would spread the virus, but super effective.
I don't know if you've heard of Richard Bartlett, he's a doctor in Texas.
He kind of got completely smeared for advocating for breathing treatments early
on. He got pursued by the Texas Medical Board, pursued him because he was claiming, they
thought he was making false claims about Budestanide breathing treatments, but they were invaluable.
I mean, all my high-risk patients, I recommended they get those in very low risk of issues
with it.
Just when I thought we were done, that's one of the worst ones.
Why would you stop that?
Why would you want to stop people from doing that?
Well, they claimed that you're spreading the virus.
I just think it's just such a hard truth to swallow is that they wanted to suppress as
many treatments as possible.
That's a hard truth to swallow is that they wanted to suppress as many treatments as possible. That's a hard truth to swallow.
Partially out of ignorance, laziness, some of them out of evil.
Thank you.
Thank you for exposing this and sticking your neck out and becoming the person you are today
through all this craziness. I really enjoyed talking to you.
Thanks for having me.
You have a lot of courage.
You really do.
And I hope you get through this as the winner.
Thank you.
Alright.
Bye everybody.