The Joe Rogan Experience - #2454 - Robert Malone, MD
Episode Date: February 13, 2026Robert W. Malone, MD, MS, is a virologist and immunologist and an original inventor of mRNA delivery and vaccination as a technology, DNA vaccination, and multiple non-viral DNA and RNA/mRNA platform ...delivery technologies. He serves on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and is the author of multiple books, the most recent of which is “PsyWar: Enforcing the New World Order,” co-written with his wife, Dr. Jill Glasspool Malone. The Drs. Malone are the founders of the Malone Institute, which focuses on issues related to government, the biological sciences, and medicine.www.skyhorsepublishing.com/9781510782952/psywar/www.malone.newswww.malonebroadcasting.comwww.maloneinstitute.orgwww.rwmalonemd.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Joe Rogan podcast, checking out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Yep, bro.
We were trying to figure out how long it's been since you came in.
It's been somewhere in the neighborhood close to five years.
Yeah.
A lot of water into the ridge.
Your appearance on this show, boy, did that create a lot of problems.
Yeah.
Yeah, I didn't expect you ever had it me on again.
And I thought maybe Spotify was just going to say, hell no.
No, you were right.
Like, this is a victory dance.
Like, it turned out that all your warnings and all the things that you were saying about the problems turned out to be true.
Well, thanks.
And I know you've said that on a few shows.
Every time you do, somebody sends me a clip and sees, hey, Rogan said you did the right thing.
What was it like for you?
First of all, you know, they were trying to label you a quack and a kook.
Try.
I didn't know what they're talking about.
I don't think it worked with everybody.
I mean, it worked with people that weren't paying attention.
But anybody that really paid attention to your background said, no, this guy's very credible.
I mean, don't you have like nine patents on MRNA vaccine technology?
Yeah, on the MRNA, yeah, in a total of about 15, I think.
Yeah.
And you also took the vaccine and had a horrible adverse event.
A series of them, yeah.
Yeah.
At the time, it was so early.
That was when the National Guard was still doing it, and that was Moderna.
And I was embarrassed to have these experiences, and I was embarrassed when I got COVID in early 2020.
You know, looking back, there was so much fear, so much anger and so much anger and anxiety.
anxiety and everything wrapped around all of this.
And in retrospect, it was, you know, was promoted, but it was also very organic.
You know, it was, you know, looking back, being honest about it, it was a frightening time, what was happening.
And, and yeah, I, you know, I had those experiences.
My doc, who was a cardiologist, was like, why were you so stupid to take it?
this. Your doctor said that too. In 2021? Yeah. She was... Or 2020 or 20? It was 2021. It was 2021.
Yeah. I was going to kind of a cardiologist that had left traditional medical practice at UVA and the
associated hospitals. And I was going to her for hormone replacement therapy and bioidentical
hormone replacement therapy. And she was monitoring a lot of things. And yeah, that was her response.
Why did you do this? Of course, I've had that question a thousand times since. You know,
why were you so stupid? You were the one that should have known. And so I have to answer that still.
It just kind of gets a little tiresome. What was your perspective on the vaccine before you took it?
To be honest, I was a little, I was amazed.
I was amazed that the claims that the problems that I encountered when I had been working on it had been solved.
I didn't see how that could be the case, but I knew that a huge amount of money had been thrown at it, so it was possible.
What were the problems?
In my hands, it was inflammation primarily.
It was also, you know, it was absolutely not localizable.
It was in the monkey models that we tested, it was incredibly inflammatory.
It didn't give long, long, prolonged levels of expression.
It was hard to make.
It was kind of back then it was almost a little bit of witchcraft.
You'd drop, I mean, for me as a graduate student when I was doing that, it was incredibly scary
because it was a couple thousand dollars worth of reagents in a little tiny tube.
And, you know, back in the late 80s, that was real money.
And it didn't always work the reactions.
So, you know, it was a little bit of a wing and a prayer.
But then as I started working with animal models and with the different formulations,
I could come up with a variety of different compounds and formulations that worked pretty well in cell culture.
but not so well in animals.
And I spent a lot of time trying to do that, optimize that,
and what I ended up with is just seeing that it really caused,
you know, I'm sorry to use medical jargon,
that's kind of where I'm from, so that's the language.
No, it's probably better if you do.
It caused a lot of inflammation.
You know, white cell infiltrates, really aggressive white cell infiltrates.
In my hands, in both mice and monkeys,
And I'd abandoned it as something that just, you know, was useful in research, particularly in cell culture.
But I just didn't see it maturing as an efficient delivery strategy with low risk, you know, acceptable risk in animals.
And that also became the experience at this company that I had first joined where a lot of the original patents were.
filed, VICAL. They abandoned the RNA because they couldn't make it. And they turned largely to
this strange discovery that we had that was in negative control, that the RNA alone or DNA alone,
was actually more effective in animal models, mice, for instance, than it was to use the
positively charged fats. Now people call them lipid nanoplexes, lots of fancy words around it.
It was just positively charged fats of various types that were mixed that bind the DNA or the RNA
and kind of spontaneously assemble. And a lot of work went into trying to improve that. We did what we
could in the 90s when I was at Davis to try to advance that technology and develop new lipids
We had a number of them get patented and they were marketed by ProMega and others, but could never solve the delivery in vivo.
But this group up in University of British Columbia that had been banging away at this kind of related liposome tech for years and years, even before I had known anything about it, were the ones that kind of came up with the magic sauce that is used essentially.
by both the Moderna and Pfizer products, and that's the stuff that we've all been exposed
to, those that have taken it.
So when you were first experimenting, you said it couldn't be localized, so meaning that
in the injection site it was supposed to be there and then your body was supposed to produce
antibodies because of the injection.
Yeah, and it goes all over.
But it went all over the body.
Yeah, it does.
But the assertion, what they were telling you when you got the shot initially was that
was not going to leave the injection site.
Yeah, and I called my colleagues at University of British Columbia that I had known back in the day as I was grappling with whether or not to take the product because I had to travel.
And as you recall back then, forget international travel if you weren't jabbed.
Even national travel.
Yeah.
You couldn't get on an airplane.
In Canada, it was even worse.
You couldn't get on a train.
Yeah, so I called Peter and had a chat with him, and he said that they had solved the problems of the distribution that now when you injected it, it would stay local, it would go to the draining lymph nodes.
It was much more effective and that they didn't have those safety issues anymore.
So that was one of the reasons why I decided to go ahead.
Did you ask how they solved that problem?
Yeah, yeah.
I asked in detail because I knew some of the nature of the nature of.
the formulations. Again, I don't want to get too technical. But what was claimed was that the
incorporation of polyethylene glycol, so this is, you know, you would know that as antifreeze.
But it's in the liposome world, it's long been known as a way to create what are known as
stealth liposomes that circulate in your body for a long period of time and make it so that these
particles don't get inactivated by extracellular proteins and the liver and stuff like that.
And so he was using the gentleman in particular is named Peter Culles.
By the way, he is the one that should have got the Nobel Prize for these products as far as
I'm concerned and got slighted in the pick.
But Peter Culles said that he had, they had experimented with a lot of different structures
of the fat particles, chemical structures.
So they came up with some that had these properties of staying localized
and then built the formulations in ways that were similar to what I'd done
with cholesterol and other things.
But then also added these shorter polyethylene glycol molecules
attached with a really short organic, you'd call it fat or gasoline-like molecule
that put the peg into the liposome particle,
but in a way that once it got into the body,
it would fall off.
And so this is, you know,
some people have the sensation as I did
with my second jab of, you know, you get it,
and then suddenly you feel tingling
in the end of your fingers or things like that.
That may be the peg.
But it was those advances in the components,
because these are self-assembling particles
that were used that Peter and his group...
Peter McCullough?
No, Peter Collis, P-I-E-T-E-R.
Okay.
From UBC and his group built these products with in this technology.
And that was...
They had it available their choice
because they created companies for this.
I mean, a ton of money must have been made
because they
licensed it non-exclusively
to bio-intech
and Moderna.
And that's still
kind of the core tech that
makes this particular
category of products work.
And so
this was enough to convince you that they had
solved that problem? Yeah, I took his word at it.
I mean, he's an extremely
experienced knowledgeable liposome formulation expert quite senior. He's older than me by another
decade at least, and been doing this forever. And he asserted that he had solved the problems.
And I believed him. I needed to travel internationally. And also there was this buzz going around
at the time that if you had long COVID, which at the time, if you think back, you think back,
to then, there was a whole cloud over even using the words long COVID, that the idea that
you would have these long-lasting effects from getting the infection was controversial and not really
accepted, but partially promoted, and there was a narrative that was, you know, in retrospect,
actively promoted, that if you took the vaccines and if you had this symptom,
of this chronic malaise and loss of stamina.
I mean, you're a guy that's important to you to be physically fit.
For me, it's been important to be physically fit all my life
because I've always been a farmer and a carpenter
and worked with my hands and my body.
And I have farm chores.
I still have farm chores every day.
And I couldn't do them.
I couldn't walk up hills.
I just had lost my stamina.
I'd lost my pulmonary function.
and it wasn't getting better.
And nobody, you know, nobody knew anything about this, what was causing it, whether it was even real.
But I was experiencing it.
You know, there's a whole cluster of people who say there's no virus, and there's certainly not any long COVID, but I experienced it.
So did you experience?
And so it was promoted that if you took the jab and you had this symptom, then it would kick your immune system up.
you get more of a response to the spike antigen, and that would allow you to clear these symptoms of long COVID.
That turns out now we have data in just fairly recently that, in fact, the opposite is true.
So this idea of long COVID, so you got long COVID from the actual infection of COVID-19 before the jab.
Yeah, I got infected in late very end of February 2020.
I was in Boston at a conference on drug discovery, computational drug discovery, high throughput stuff, very high-tech, MIT, and staying in a little firehouse that had been converted to a hotel right across the street from the biotech company that the initial Boston outbreak was associated with.
And I came home sick as a dog.
I thought that I had influenza B because the narrative was that was circulating at the time.
And I was just, I remember laying in bed just feeling sick as hell, hard to breathe.
And my wife came in, it's just been on the TV.
COVID is circulating right there in Boston where you were.
So that was pretty early on.
and it hit me pretty hard.
So that would have been the Wuhan One variant.
And then there was a couple of genetic changes that occurred apparently in Boston around that time.
So how long did this affect you, this long COVID?
I was sick until I took the jab, you know, just not having stamina, just feeling.
How many months was that?
I had never even thought about it, many months.
And did you try anything else to mitigate those symptoms?
Yeah, I did.
So my whole story, you know, there's a whole bunch of what I did back then that never gets discussed, and that's okay.
But I, you know, the kickoff was that I got this call from Wuhan, I think.
It was for a Wuhan from this guy that used to be CIA named Michael Callahan.
who I'd worked with in the past.
And he told me, he told me with the call that there was this virus in Wuhan, this coronavirus,
that looked like it was going to be serious.
And I ought to pay attention to it, and I ought to get a team wound up to try to address this.
So what I'd done, because this is coming off of what I did in Zika,
and I'm the vaccinologist at core, but developing a vaccine in the face of a vaccine,
outbreak historically has taken a decade.
And it just isn't a practical way to address an emergent infectious disease crisis.
And I had become convinced that the best way to do that was through repurposed drugs.
So after I get this call, I put a team together building on the technology that I'd been
working with at Usamrid during Zika for rapid identification.
of repurposed drugs to address a new crisis.
And this time we'd really taken a computational approach.
So I used some tech out of UC San Francisco to recreate one of the key proteins in SARS-CoB-2
based on the sequence that got published from Wuhan in January 11th, I think, of 2020.
And we started doing what's called computational docking of very, very large virtual libraries
using Amazon AWS and high throughput parallel processing.
And came up with a list of compounds and then kind of screen those against problems, adverse events, that kind of stuff.
More coffee, good.
I would. Thank you.
and so I had this list of compounds and then I was sick as a dog and you know what you get trained in if you do clinical research is docs don't experiment on themselves that's like breaking the rules but I'm lying there so sick that I'm just like what the hell what do I got to lose I'm probably going to die you know at that point I'd spend a lot of time already looking into the
virus and what it was causing and what people were saying it was causing.
And how old were you at the time?
Let's see, I'm 66 now.
So what's the 60?
60.
Yeah.
So you were in a high-risk group?
Yeah, for sure.
And I was obese.
I don't know if you noticed, but I've dropped about 40 to 50 pounds since we last met.
So I started taking some of those compounds and one of them was this drug that is normally taken
for stomach acid called famadidine.
And I got an immediate response with that.
And so I also tried isocorcitin.
That didn't seem to make so much of an impact on me.
But I experimented on myself.
And the famadine at higher doses now has been verified to be helpful.
And it was one of the first things out of the box that people started taking,
even prophylactically, before we knew about.
about hypermectin and other things.
And then that went on.
I mean, there's a whole thread here.
We could go on for an hour about what was done with the repurposed drugs.
I was working closely with the Fence Surreduction Agency.
And I managed to capture a few hundred million dollars
and direct that towards drug repurposing, adaptive clinical trials, et cetera.
and the thing that I zoomed in on through a collaboration with a dock up in Minnesota
was the combination of famadine, another anti-inflammatory called cellicoxib,
and then the thing that really kicked it in high gear was the forbidden horse medicine,
Ivermectin.
And we got, I managed to working with DOD, got over $100 million, set up a contract.
It got managed by SAIC, and we were going to go after that using a very cutting-edge clinical trial design.
And remember, this is the DOD.
We submitted initial drug applications for using this combination of licensed drugs, well-known licensed drugs.
And the FDA just dug in again and again rejected the application.
So long, what they said was we were going to have to do cell culture tests to demonstrate the antiviral activity of iburemectin before they would allow us to proceed.
And so in the end, the DOD caved and they dropped the ivermectin component and proceeded with the
phomodidine and silicoxic, which showed some effect.
Why were they so hesitant?
What was the resistance?
Your guess is as good as mine.
I really, people think that I have visibility into the FDA.
And yeah, I've met with them and I have her background in regulatory affairs.
But the policy decisions that were made during COVID instilled to this day,
are perplexing.
But particularly Ivermectin.
Oh, it was like a high sin.
Yeah.
They deployed, what do we want to call it, propaganda, psychological warfare, nudge, everything,
just like they did after you and I had our little discussion.
It was stunning.
I mean, like after we had our chat, I don't know if you remember, you asked me about
what is this about mass formation psychosis?
Yeah.
And it, I mean, the term broke the internet is overused.
It broke the internet.
Yeah.
The search results on Google went nuts.
Well, because it perfectly described what was happening.
Oh, and couldn't be, it couldn't possibly describe what was happening,
even though every single person that heard it knew damn well it did.
But it was forbidden.
I mean, this was forbidden.
For people who didn't hear our first discussion, please explain mass formation psychosis.
So since then, I've had a shitstorm come at me for using the term psychosis coupled with mass formation.
You can't, you know, the grief you think you got a lot of grief from Spotify and from...
Spotify was actually great.
I had no grief from them.
It was from like Neil Young and Joni Mitchell and other artists.
So you probably don't know the whole backstory.
Okay.
That's fun to dive into because it relates to the psychological warfare domain that now I've become a pseudo expert on, just in trying to understand what the hell I experienced and what's going on.
So, Mattias Desmond, who's a friend at University of Ghent in Belgium, who, by the way, has been pretty well railroaded in his university now, not allowed to teach his own book on the psychological basis of totalitarianism,
which is where that book had not come out yet, but it was the mass formation hypothesis
is what was the kind of core of that book that's now published and widely regarded.
So Matthias came, Mattias is somebody who, as a PhD, a full professor, had long taught
20th century
psychology work
relating to totalitarianism
and thought
that goes back to Freud and beyond really
all the way back to Plato
and the allegory of the cave.
And in particular, there was a number
of philosophers in the 20th century
associated with
trying to make sense of Nazi Germany
and what had happened to the German people
and really all over the world.
but particularly relating to the Germans.
And Matthias had been teaching this on a regular basis.
And the way he tells the story, he had an epiphany one day that, oh, my God, the thing that I've been teaching, I'm living.
We're experiencing it.
We're experiencing this process of the formation of masses.
And you could call it crowd psychology.
So mass formation, it's kind of awkward or massive.
mass formation psychosis, which is what the term was that was used in the initial podcast that he
gave out. So that's why I use that term. But, you know, it's not in the, the attack was that it's
not in the diagnostics and statistical manual for the American Psychiatric Association. So therefore,
it doesn't exist. But, you know, all the attacks. But the core of it is that when people, to make
it simple, become disassociated from society and from each other. They become extremely vulnerable
to manipulation of a variety of different types. And a leader can come into that environment
and offer, let's, to simplify it, offer a solution to their pain because being isolated, socially
isolated is associated with pain. We as human beings have a need to connect with others.
It's a fundamental aspect of being human.
It's what you do.
I mean, you connect.
That's the essence of the Joe Rogan experience, I think.
So we need to connect with others.
And in certain situations where people are threatened, and in particular in the modern era,
where we have all of these things that drive us into isolation, most notably, are electronic tools.
we become disassociated from our community.
And when that happens, we have a strong need to become associated with community.
And a leader can come into that environment and basically say, I have the solution to your pain, your psychological pain.
And what will happen is a strange phenomena where people will, rather than building social networks, let's say horizontally, to those around them,
They'll attach to this strong leader and they'll get that, they'll get fulfillment for that need to belong by this attachment to that leader and following the edicts of that leader.
And this leads to this phenomena that gives rise, you know, enables to tellitarianism, but gives rise to this whole cluster of things that Misteas described.
that, you know, he uses the term mass formation.
In a way, that's kind of an odd artifact of translation, I guess, from the Dutch.
It's an easier way to think of it is a crowd formation.
And in his examination of the history of what happened in Nazi Germany,
where things, people really went crazy.
I mean, mothers were turning their children in.
Children were being executed on, you know,
consequent to mother's testimony,
which is really strange when you think about it,
just, you know, in a fundamental way.
You know, we had all of this dear leader kind of stuff,
the linkage of,
of the self and the soul to this central figure in deriving a sense of identity and belonging
from that that went on.
And there's still people from that generation in Germany that are still caught up in a lot
of that.
That's why the German laws.
And so that's the short version when we spoke before.
I gave a much more technical, precise definition of Matthias' core thesis.
But once this happens, then people become very, very easily manipulated through propaganda
and a variety of techniques that now I have a better comprehension of.
I mean, then I was still just trying to make sense, just like all of us, of what the heck was going on?
What's with this crazy?
But now it's kind of coalesced into an understanding of the fact that modern psychology has been weaponized.
It's been intentionally weaponized in the context of military activities in the domain that, you know, one way to express it,
The term is used kind of term of art in military jargon is fifth generation warfare, or you could call it psychological warfare.
And what it distinguishes the present from, say, Sun Tzu and ancient propaganda has always been part of warfare and humans.
But we haven't had the digital world.
We haven't had modern psychology.
We haven't had nudge technology.
We haven't had all these tools that allow the control of information, thought, perception, feelings, emotions that have become commonplace.
And that, you know, is, is, and has, you know, this suite of technology and capabilities that we saw deployed in all of us.
were built in a kind of a structured way, largely by U.K. and U.S. leadership in the intelligence community, as a weapon of war to counter these successful insurgencies that we keep losing wars over.
You know, Vietnam being a notable example all the way through Afghanistan.
in. And so that's why it was built, but then that tech got deployed by governments against their own citizens.
And this was really launched in large part in the United States by a presidential directive from Barack Obama.
I'm not making this up. You can look it up. And by the way, the presidential directive is still in place.
that establish the Nudge technology units of the United States.
They were already operating in the U.K.
And in the U.K. is quite advanced.
When you look at the U.K. politics right now and what's going on there with all the censorship and everything,
you know, this is no joke.
We're barreling right to that end point, same as Canada has.
You know, we're just a little bit behind.
And there they, you know, we have the benefit of the First Amendment in a Constitution.
and, you know, often on courts.
But there they don't have those obstacles.
And the government believes in the U.K.
That once they have won an election, it's perfectly acceptable to deploy this modern psychology and information control technology on their own population.
And I argue that once that rubicon has crossed, the idea of democracy, because the tech is so powerful,
becomes completely perverted.
And we got a good, hard taste of that during COVID.
What you and I experienced, what you experienced with Ivermectin,
what you experienced with, you know, just talking about your own experiences.
And the blowback that happened after we did that little hit
is a super powerful, clear case study.
in understanding this intersection of modern psychology, warfare technology, and the digital world,
and algorithmic control of information, the creation of digital avatars for all of us,
the application now in the present of artificial intelligence to custom, craft,
messaging that gets fed into our digital domains on a regular basis in order to, you know, sell us
whatever, but also to shape how we think and to control what information we get access to all the
time. Just to give an example, my wife who does a lot of our research for our substack,
I was talking to me the other day.
She just gave me a couple examples where stories that were in corporate media in the United States that weren't listing certain key names or whatever.
She said, I'd just go to the Hindustu Times.
Hindustu Times is a great source for all the stuff that we're not allowed to see here in the United States.
You're now in an environment, in an information environment where you cannot,
rely on, but we all know that. You can't rely on corporate media, but the rules, the boundaries
that are being set up about information are profound and they're completely distorting
our ability to process what's happening around us. Can I give you the example of what actually
happened? You said in our example with the blowback in Spotify, this is documented.
by a report out from the house about COVID and what happened.
And that report only carries just through to the early part of the vaccines and then it stops.
For some reason, they didn't really want to go down the road to the vaccines.
They did talk a lot about the events around the, let's say, lab leak hypothesis,
which is allowed.
You're allowed in D.C. now to talk about.
that.
Finally.
Yeah.
You're still, well, and.
It was about four years later.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So what was documented was that the trail of events was that we had our discussion.
That triggered, and this is going to sound bizarre, but this is what's documented.
That triggered Coca-Cola Corporation to complain to the global.
The Global Alliance for Responsible Media, which is created by the World Economic Forum,
which is one of these global aggregators that controls advertising.
The Global Alliance for Responsible Media, which, by the way, had it dust up with Elon Musk
and lost, and they closed it down as a nonprofit.
It still exists in other ways, but as a structure that could be sued by X, it disappeared
when he stood up against it.
that Global Alliance for Responsible Media had a socket with Google Edsense.
By the way.
So they control the advertising ecosystem, which kind of matters to Spotify.
So Coca-Cola complains to Garm saying, this guy, Rogan, you got to shut him down.
You've got to put pressure on Spotify.
So Spotify gets the message from Garm that we're going to, we're threatening to pull your advertising.
Okay. Now, what happens between that and your experience? I don't know. You know, it's not transparent to me what you experienced. Yeah, we all remember the Laurel Canyon crowd saying they were going to pull their catalogs, which they didn't actually own, right? That was another thing. And then they went after you with this mashup of inward historic events. You know, there was clearly a
concerted effort to take out Joe Rogan, much more than to take out Robert Malone.
And so then the question comes, why the heck would Coca-Cola be the socket with the global
alliance for responsibility?
One of the biggest advertisers in the world, right?
Why would Coca-Cola give a hooey about what Joe and Rogan said to Robert Malone on, you know, New Year's Eve?
Coca-Cola is really tight with the CDC.
Coca-Cola has funded buildings at the CDC.
Coca-Cola funds the CDC Foundation for the CDC,
as does Bill and Melinda Gates, has done all the major vaccine manufacturers, etc., etc.
The appearance is, I can't verify this, that CDC acted through its ally, Coca-Cola.
Why are they allies?
What's Coca-Cola got to do with CDC?
The angle there is that Coca-Cola wanted the CDC to get WHO to not implement restrictions in messaging about sugar use.
Okay?
They didn't want those messages.
Remember, this is at the heart of the inverted food triangle now.
The old food triangle was the product of sugar lobby.
I mean, the sugar lobby is incredibly powerful because this stuff is a different.
addictive. I mean, it's like having the cocaine lobby, right? Well, and, you know, that's an interesting
analogy because, of course, the history of Coca-Cola. But so sugar's addictive. The CDC,
Coca-Cola didn't want the CDC to influence public health policy to avoid global positions
on the risks associated with sugar intake because it would potentially hurt their market share.
They're a major globalized company.
So that's that little ecosystem that I just described illustrates what we're dealing with here.
And the many ways that all of this kind of influence in messaging and signaling
happens in this kind of integrated horizontally and vertically ecosystem that we live in,
right now. And one of the things that came out of that, you'll recall, was that you were asked, as I recall, you gave this, you know, I've had a hostage video. I think that was a close to a hostage video from you back in the day when you were saying, this is what I'm going to do. It was like out on your porch or something. I remember I was sitting around a campfire in Maui quite literally when somebody said, oh, did you just see this from Rogan? And a matter of fact, I was sitting around Gavin DeBeckers.
campfire at that time, somebody that you know. And so the compromise was that there would be a
little trailer put at the bottom of that episode. And by the way, you probably know that episode
for a long time became very hard to find. It was basically blacklisted from the search engines,
et cetera, et cetera. But it carries on, I think it still does, that little banner that says,
you know, you should go to the CDC if you want the true true about COVID. And you can
still find those kinds of banners popping up all the time on YouTube. If you talk about vaccines
or COVID vaccines, that will get, if you pass the filters, if YouTube will allow that to still
be up, because you didn't say something, whatever it is, then you'll get the little banner.
Okay, that banner is pushed out by the Nudge units at the CDC. Okay, that is Nudge technology.
It is all around us all the time, and it's basically still public policy consequent to the old Obama presidential directive that still hasn't been rescinded.
You know, I love President Trump.
I think he's doing amazing things.
I think he's amazingly brave.
I just mentioned our friend Gavin DeBacker referred to Trump the other day when I saw Gavin in Maui as a once-in-five-year leader.
And that's not nothing coming from Gavin.
And so I'm a big supporter, but the president has still left in place this mechanism that exists that directs the federal government to use nudge technology and related what I assert is psychological warfare technology on the American populace.
Right.
This is from back in, what was it, 2015 or something like that?
Yeah, it's quite early.
And then you had his, you had Obama's subsequent like the notorious speech at Hoover,
at Stanford, where he talks about in order to preserve democracy, we're going to have,
basically says we're going to have to have censorship.
Right.
In order to preserve democracy or whatever democracy is.
For people that don't know where we're talking about, we're relating to the Smith-Munt Act.
The Smith Month, everybody focuses on Smith Month.
But as I examined Smith Month, and we did an essay on this in the substack, you know, like three years ago, because that was the kind of the narrative that was coming out in, let's say, our side of alternative media.
Right.
And in my examination, Smith Month's impact is a lot more limited.
It has to do with Voice of America and some of those things.
The broad impact wasn't quite, in my opinion, what was believed to be of enabling propaganda domestically.
More specifically, there is a presidential directive that nudge technology, that established a nudge office, that nudge technology shall be used.
What do they don't call it?
They don't know.
They don't know.
They've gone through various iterations, and I'm sorry, I don't have the latest version.
And it's kind of become decentralized.
It was called the Social and Behavioral Science Team.
Wikipedia says that that was stopped in 2017, but continued under the Trump administration under, sorry, the General Services Administration's Office of Evaluation Science.
There we go.
Yeah.
Boy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's kind of become, like I said, it's been pushed out into a lot of the agencies.
They don't use that lexicon because then it's easy to find them.
Right.
There's other euphemisms they use to describe those kinds of activities, but it's become normalized.
The weaponization of propaganda has become normalized.
There's the wording from overall behavioral interventions or nudges like the ones implemented by OES have been found to be effective in recent psychological science article.
Researchers identified several policy areas of interest, example, health care.
Here we go, 2015, is when it was implemented.
So 2015.
Exactly.
President Obama signs an executive order requiring federal agencies to incorporate behavioral insights into their evaluation efforts.
That's a nice way of saying use of propaganda on the American people.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
And so this is kind of become, thank you so much for pulling that up.
That's super helpful.
So this is, like I said, if I can illustrate, I was on a Great Britain news broadcast about four years ago.
at the time when they would, you know, there was a window time where they would have me on,
but it was sketchy.
And G.B. News was the only one that would do it.
And but the rules were then that if you were going to have somebody that was speaking against the government narrative,
then you had to have somebody representing the government's interests in the same broadcast.
So that's implemented by basically the UK has an active censorship organization that controls.
news media. And so I'm on with this guy, Great Britain News, pinstripe, bow tie, you know, it just reeks.
And I'm talking about psychological warfare and the 77th Brigade, which is part of the British Army,
which is their psychological warfare unit. It's very open that that's the case, as is the existence of a civilian branch.
that they set up and paid people to do social media in opposition of counter narratives that the government didn't approve of.
I mean, now they just, under Starmer, they just censor you and send you to jail.
They just cut out the middleman.
But back then, they were still kind of buying civilians.
And so I'm talking about this.
And that's that.
The guy says, yeah, but here in the UK,
Our belief is that if the government wins the election, they have the right to govern.
And that right to govern includes our ability to use this type of technology and we believe
that it's justified to do so.
And when that conversation happened, frankly, we hadn't launched the book yet, Cy War,
which is our most recent publication.
And it just kind of all coalesced in my mind that, oh my God, what all these things,
Matthias is teaching about mass formation, what I saw, what I experienced with you, what I experienced with the concerted attacks of the media.
And then subsequently, it's been validated by this congressional report that talks about, for instance, the juror ticket system.
Juror tickets are what, it's a system that all the software companies use to track glitches and complaints and stuff like that.
Well, the government had their own juror ticket system set up.
to log information about activities of persons that they wanted to have censored and suppressed.
And they would build these jurot tickets with information.
And so one of the things that's out on the congressional report was that I actually had a
juror ticket.
I was surprised that this is the case, or not surprised in retrospect.
And in my personal sins were that I was listed as an anti-vaxxer and a conservative.
Even though you're a vaccinologist.
And a conservative.
That's interesting.
You can't be a conservative.
Exactly right.
I mean, the stuff that's coming out.
That's wild.
It's fascinating to query things like GROC, even GROC, about certain subjects.
And you will find where they have algorithmically built firewalls.
And you can approach them.
detect them because it will act dumb.
You know, it'll lock up seemingly.
It won't give you that answer.
Or it'll talk around the issue, et cetera, et cetera.
You can identify these things that have been built in algorithmically.
And, of course, then we had all of the disclosures, the Zuckerberg, oh, I'm so sorry,
apology tour that happened to remember when basically got outed by Congress.
and the rest of the tech bros.
And, of course, the thing that catalyzed all of that was that Elon decided to pony up a good chunk of change and buy Twitter.
Which I think is one of the most impactful decisions that any American citizen has ever made.
Amazing.
If he didn't do that, I think we would be really screwed.
How can you debate that?
How can you debate it when you look at the Twitter files and you find out how much the government was involved in censoring
accurate information from legitimate professors,
esteemed researchers,
anybody who didn't go along with the official narrative.
It's all coming out now in spades.
And we're dealing now.
The lovely thing about all of this,
I mean, let's try to,
it is morning in America, in my opinion.
I mean, a lot of people get very dark
and there's a darkness to the times.
But there's, you know,
not to push the metaphor too far, but there is new light coming in.
And the fact that we can now see this, and we recognize that you and I are of a similar generation.
I mean, one of my earliest memories was the assassination of the president.
And all of the propaganda around that, the propaganda around Vietnam War, ever since,
we've just been swimming in information control that's gotten increasingly sufficient.
sophisticated. And fortunately, as Americans, we also kind of have become more and more immune
to marketing and propaganda over time because we've been living with it, trying to discern what is
real and what is, you know, false. Again, this is if it's a core part of what you do for a living,
I think, is just try to, you know, have conversations to be able to get to the bottom of the
bullshit. But that we've we've been swimming in it and now we can see it. We can see the structures,
the power of artificial intelligence and influence mapping and all the things that are going
on in the internet right now that are the cutting edge technology. They're scary because they
can be weaponized against us, but they're also super cool because we can.
now see those relationships. If you want an example of that, look at the threads that are coming
out on X, illuminating the networks of affiliation associated with this latest Epstein
file release. Just mind-blowing.
Mind-blowing.
Yeah.
And it is just like, you know, we can sit here and bitch and whine saying, oh, they didn't
release that, blah, blah, blah. This is redacted. All that's true. But still,
that the impact of that information
were still getting to the bottom of it.
It's completely changed most people's narrative
of what happened.
We had this sort of vague understanding, you know,
but when you see in the email,
like clear evidence that they're talking about children
in pretty obscene ways.
Horrifying ways.
So that was the thing that, like,
even when I talked to Mike Benz about that,
And he was sort of incredulous about that.
I don't think they would use children.
It just doesn't make any sense if they got caught.
But it just seems like we were...
If Mike Benz was incredulous, that's pretty big.
Well, I just don't think we really knew until we saw those files come out.
And then you go, oh, well, there's no denying it now.
My position on it is completely shifted.
I thought there's probably some really sick people that have an appetite for that.
but I hadn't seen any real evidence for it until these files.
And now I'm like, oh, this is demonic.
This is clearly demonic.
Okay, so thank you for saying that.
I'm somebody who was raised a Christian and went to Bible school and that kind of stuff as a kid.
And youth groups.
And then growing up in Central Coast of California, let's say, beard in different ways.
But the experiences that we've encountered over the last half a dozen years, it's hard to come up with a language to express what we're observing in the world other than the language of theology.
Well, demonic by action.
So whether or not demons exist, if they did exist, that is how they would behave.
They would pray on children and torture children.
And there was the one where there was a suggestion where a child was praying to Jesus
that like there was a joke that someone should dress up like Jesus?
Do you see that one, Jay?
I'm not watching this stuff.
I don't even want to.
People send it to me and I go, okay, because I'm for the most part off social media.
But every now and then someone will send me something that I have to look at.
I'm like, oh, my God.
Yeah.
And these are emails back and forth.
There's one of them where Epstein says,
I enjoyed the torture video.
There's these references to pizza.
A lot of references to pizza that are 100% some kind of a code.
And then it brings you back to Pizza Gate.
Yeah.
And which was widely dismissed.
You know, everybody was like, oh, this is a bunch of cooks.
Here it is.
She said she felt God's presence next to her when she was in bed.
She knows that Jesus watches over her and he helped save her life.
And then he writes, whoops.
And then in response, Jeffrey Epstein says, you should dress up as him when you see her.
It is dark.
You should dress up like Jesus when you see her.
What the fuck?
And well, look at the line.
You're talking about a little kid that's blinded Jesus.
Look at the line above it.
How am I supposed to interpret I'm coming trick?
The O.H. Jesus.
I'm coming trick.
It's just the whole thing.
But so we see this darkness.
It involves leaders in academia, in science.
in industry, in politics.
Yeah.
And it just, you know, I remember a point in this arc of the last six years where a film
crew came onto my farm and wanted to shoot some segments.
And they were talking this.
And frankly, I thought it was crazy talk.
I kind of smiled and, you know, tried to be civil and nice, not contradict them.
about the New World Order.
And then along comes, you know, then my wife one day says,
hey, you ought to look at this book from Claus Schwab.
It's called The New World Order.
Like, what?
I mean, he was just saying it out loud.
Yeah.
I mean, the World Economic Forum had those ads where they were saying,
you will own nothing and you will be happy.
Yeah.
And it goes back to the current King of England was the guy that kind of launched that.
He was the first one to be really talking about that you can, if you, you can go, use your,
use your favorite AI and track it down yourself.
I prefer not to use Google these days to try to find stuff.
But it, it, it, it, we see vertical after vertical after vertical after vertical where information has been.
crafted and manipulated and the same tools of de-legitimization, of promotion of these messages that you are
a conspiracy theorist or that you are controlled opposition is another favorite one.
A lot of this was pioneered in the 60s by the FBI against the various protest movements.
And you can go back and track that.
Okay.
The narrative of being a collaborator surreptitiously is called bad jacketing.
And it has its whole language and protocols for how to do this to people to divide movements.
We're in this, I mean, in a way, it's kind of a glorious moment.
where we're having a huge amount of social pressures coming together in this moment in time that you and I happen to live in.
How fantastic is that?
To be at a point in time where there is so much change, there's so much social interaction and pressure and competition between these different philosophies.
and we're swimming in it.
As somebody writes on a daily basis these essays on Substact because that's how I make my living now because I can't do what I used to do, it's your kid in a candy shop.
There's so much corruption.
There's so much falsehood being promoted.
There's so much of this manipulation of reality.
And so if you're in the business of trying to help people to make sense out of that, which is kind of what I do now for a living.
It's, you know, I wake up every morning.
People, I get the feedback, how do you come up with all these ideas?
I'm like, how do you not?
All you got to do is keep your eyes open.
Yeah, it's not hard to search anymore.
So you talked about Ivermectin.
I mean, the Ivermectin story is still ongoing.
There was an announcement the other day from HHS.
that they are launching new initiatives to investigate the use of Ivermectin and cancer.
And there was immediate blowback along the lines of oncologists are outraged.
You know, the narrative is Bobby, you know, not saying this explicitly, but basically
Bobby Kennedy is at it once again promoting falsehoods and conspiracy theories and it's going
to, you know, we're all going to die because scientists are going to investigate the use of
Ivermectin and other drugs for cancer?
So this is the core question, and this is one of things that puzzled me to no end.
I understood that they were upset that I had gotten better without the use of the vaccine,
that I was a popular person, that I was a famous person, and I made a video about a canceled show.
Dave Chappelle and I were supposed to do a show, and I made that video to let everyone know that I couldn't do the show
because I had COVID.
I had no idea.
It was going to be even controversial.
But I listed a bunch of things that I took.
And the shit hit the fan.
I talked about IV vitamins.
Yeah.
I talked about monoclonal antibodies.
I talked about.
Which were allowed.
Prednisone.
Yeah, all these things that I talked about, Z-PAC.
I talked about all these different things that I took.
There was no mention of any of those things.
There was only Ivermectin.
And that's what really puzzled me.
I was like, this is,
fascinating because I listed a bunch of different things, but there's no demonization of monoclonal
antibodies, but they did make them much harder to get and eventually pulled them.
I have a friend and his friend was in the hospital and they wouldn't administer monoclonial
antibodies once he got into the hospital.
They wouldn't allow him to have that.
What went on in the hospital is a whole other thing.
But that's crazy.
But so the why?
The one medication.
The only two threads that I can pull on at all is that Ivermectin is a miracle drug.
I mean, Nobel Prize, right?
Right.
We don't understand completely how it works.
In this case, it doesn't seem to be working as an antiviral.
It seems to be working as an immune stimulant, pro-inflammatory or pro-immune response in some way that's subtle because it has this broad,
spectrum of activity against things that have an immune response component and controlling.
But it's off patent.
Right.
They don't understand it.
It's off patent.
And the response is as if it represents a significant threat to some business interests.
It's hard to discern that.
And you mention ZPAC.
So that's another fascinating one.
And to say that it was only ivermectin, ivermectin was the most prominent, but they were
actually effective in shutting down the Z-PAC, the use of hydroxychloroquine.
And hydroxychloroquine has a fascinating story.
When you mention ZEPAC, you're talking about Zev Zelenko.
And Zev was the one that wrote the letter to the president saying, hey, here's this data
and this information about this drug that is off-patent.
We have a huge portfolio of experience in using it.
Millions and millions of doses.
It's safe in pregnancy.
What's not to like here?
And the story of that is a fascinating microcosm because it goes back to Ralph Barrett.
Ralph Barrett had published that back years ago when, you know, he's kind of the guru of coronaviruses.
and a good case can be made that he had his fingers all over the engineering of this particular virus.
So he had published that this drug was effective against coronavuses.
And Zev Zelenko, who's passed away now, got engaged in trying to find some way to help his patients in New York with recovering from COVID.
and treating COVID, and he went back, did a deep dive into Barrick's work, pulled out this
drug, a trachycloric that had been recommended, wrote to the president about it. He got
clinical experience with it. And, you know, caveat, Mickey Willis is doing a bio on Zev now,
and I'm involved in that, so conflict of interest. But
he was the one that pulled it out, sent the letter to the president with his clinical experience.
President tasked Peter Navarro was sourcing the drug for the, and Peter, an economist, went to town.
I remember the company I was working with, Elkem at the time, getting a call from Peter.
Can you come up with some way to make more of this drug here domestically?
We want to source it so we have enough doses for everybody.
And then I think it was Lancet published this paper that had totally made up data that trashed the drug, said that it's toxic, doesn't work, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
It was all fake.
Okay?
They pulled the paper when it became revealed that it was based on non-existent data, that it was more propaganda published in one of the top medical journals in the United States.
But by that time, it was completely crushed.
So they didn't have to go after Z-Stack.
They'd already killed Z-Stack.
Ivermectin, though, that was a new threat.
And one of the reasons why it was a threat was there was a meta-analysis that had been done at the Cochran.
So the Cochran Institute in the UK is like, you know, the Holy Grail for analysis of drugs and biologics.
And this process of meta-analysis.
They kind of wrote the rules for how to do it.
And they had done an analysis that showed that Ivermectin was quite effective.
And then something happened.
And there was some influence exerted.
And suddenly that meta-analysis got quenched.
It got squashed.
There were two investigators that were involved in building that.
One kind of went underground and got a big grant and carried on as an academic.
The other one got so pissed off that she created this organization called the World Council for Health.
That's Tess Lori.
And she really objected to what happened.
But Ivermectin, you know, there was a signal there.
There was a clear signal there.
There was data supporting that signal.
And then something happened to cause that meta-enacted.
analysis to be restructured and certain studies that were showing how effective it was to be thrown out.
And then the suppression of the data coming out of India.
You remember that?
Uruhrad Pradesh.
And I guess it had kind of, it's like the cat was out of the bag.
And they had trouble putting it back in.
So they just, my sense is, they turned up the amplitude on the, on the propaganda.
and the censorship in order to try to overcome this.
And I'm pretty sure, remember, who was it that held the original patent, Merck?
Now, I was involved as an observer on behalf of DITRA to the active trials that were going on under the foundation for NIH,
which is sponsored in a significant way by Merck, and which is now headed up by the former head of Merck vaccines, Julie Gerberding.
Bobby can't get her out.
It's the rules.
And they were running these clinical trials, including the clinical trial that essentially
by tweaking the dosing, et cetera, made it so that they came up with a result suggesting
that ivermectin is not effective.
There was a whole lot of manipulation in the Y part.
Still, the best explanation I've heard is that it had a lot to do with the risk that if there
was an effective countermeasure than the utilization of the PEP Act and the emergency countermeasures
to process to enable fast-tracking of these vaccines using this new technology would no longer be valid
because those are the rules is if there's an existing countermeasure, then you can't
implement those clauses. So it was all about emergency use authorization. It's the, I don't know that
that's the case. It's, it is. It only thing to make sense when you see how much profit they made.
Which was enormous. Enormous. So it was effective. And all that propaganda, regardless of how
much exposed them and exposed their methods, they made hundreds of billions of dollars.
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It well and and that that the ugliest part of all of this
I mean people the big big picture when I talk to people that are still kind of on the fence
trying to make sense out of it you know still a lot of those folks out there the thing
that kind of gets into their brain is the greatest upward transfer of wealth in modern
history occurred during COVID.
Yeah.
It wasn't just the vaccines.
It was the whole enterprise.
With the lockdowns.
Lockdowns, all the, what was done to small businesses, what was done to the economy, the stimulus packages, they're still digging out of all that fraud.
It, you know, in retrospect, for average folks that are just trying to put food on the table.
and pay their rent, to look at, in retrospect,
what was quite literally done to them.
The middle class was hollowed out on hyper speed.
This, so yeah, I'm still pissed off about this.
Oh, you should be.
The thing is not enough people are,
and so many people let it go.
And part of the reason why not enough people
are pissed off about it is because they
the vaccine and they want to justify their decision. And you will talk to a lot of people that make this blanket claim the vaccine safe millions of lives. And they'll just say that.
Yeah, because that's the propaganda along with safe and effective. That was a promoted narrative. And that was, by the way, the rationale given by the Nobel Prize Committee to award to Krikel and Weissman was that these products, which they had, the thesis is they had been playing the central role.
I disagree. I think Peter Colas is the one that should have got it. If you're going to give it for these vaccines, it was Peter Colis and his team at UBC that really was the enabling tech. But be that as it made, the decisions made. And the committee said basically, you know, millions of lives have been saved. And by giving this Nobel at this time, we are, we hope that it will promote more people to accept this product. That was explicitly.
the logic given at the time. And that reflects what was really a thrust vector. Joe, I've, you know,
it's what a bizarre world since we met. And so I've been sucked into, to call it the center
right of Europe is a little bit of a misnomer because they're all socialist as far as I'm concerned,
Georgia Maloney and everybody else. But, you know, compared to the far left, they're labeled as
neo-Nazis. But I've been traveling to Europe, interacting with these people. You think it was
bad for us. The European Union and the UK and the Canada were in order magnitude worse.
That we should be so grateful that we live in this country at this time and that we still have
something like a functioning constitution with the First and Second Amendment. Look at the poor
suckers in Australia.
New Zealand.
Yeah.
You know, it reminds yourself, it could be a heck of a lot worse here.
And it has been a heck of a lot worse in Europe.
I've got buddies in Romania in the leading alternative party, you know, calling it center
right, let's say.
But that, you know, recently, I think it was the vice president that came out and said
specifically that that last election was stolen.
It was in Romania.
Georgescu, they tried to put in jail, and the logic was that I think it was TikTok supporting his campaign had been sponsored by the Russians.
It was the same game that they played against Trump of Russian collusion.
They played that same book in Romania successfully.
But in the European Union environment under the European Council, they don't, you know, they ain't got a constitution.
And they can just step right in and throw you in jail, inactivate your candidacy, do whatever if you represent a populist threat to the existing structure.
We talk about the deep state, but it's, it doesn't, you know, yeah, it's a problem here.
But, and thank you.
Mike Benz, I defer to as a notable expert in that space.
But it's a lot worse in Europe and Australia and Canada and the UK.
And I think, you know, we're in a perilous time here in the United States where, you know, we have the midterm coming up.
But people like Bobby are making progress.
And these dissident physicians that have risked so many things,
And I'm just one.
You know, people, I hear people saying, oh, Robert, Robert, they've been so mean to you.
I'm like, come on, guys.
You think they've been mean to me.
Then look at what they did to Bobby.
And then, you know, and then look, I don't have a nick out of my ear, you know.
Look at what they did to Trump.
What they did to me is just, I'm nobody compared to that.
And they're willing to deploy that kind of capability against me.
think about what's really going on at the higher levels where the big games are being played.
And, you know, at least we can see it now.
At least we have, for those of us that have our eyes open, we have some ability to be aware.
But what I've spent the last two years mostly trying to convince people about it, I hardly ever talk about RNA.
I said, oh, Joe, I got to give a can.
caveat. Forgive me. The opinions I'm expressing here are my own and not those of the U.S.
government, the CDC, or the A.C.I.P. There, I said it. Okay. But, you know, we're in a moment
where we're seeing how the levers, the gears of how all this works. Give you an example.
tomorrow, Friday, February 13th, what could possibly go wrong?
Hopefully my plane flight out of here works okay.
And they don't have a drone attack or something, right?
So tomorrow there's a lawsuit filed on behalf of the American Academy of Pediatrics
that seeks to shut down the advisory committee on immunization practices and the changes
that Bobby is implemented there and force all of that to go back to the way things were
when it was functionally controlled by the professional societies and particularly the American
Academy of Pediatrics.
They, they, they, they, we talk about this, you know, propaganda and weaponization and
and, and, uh, lawfare and those things.
And we talk about it as if it only happened in the last administration.
it's still ongoing all the time.
And it is going to go big time if the House turns, which I think probably will.
I mean, there's a good chance that they've already drawn up articles of impeachment against Secretary Kennedy.
They're talking about articles of impeachment against President Trump.
We're about to go into another two years of stagnation and, you know, functional.
What do we call it?
We can't call it Civil War.
War by other means is where we're heading right now.
But at this moment, I'm seeing major movement.
Kennedy is doing great stuff.
The president is doing great stuff.
We're seeing a transformation in America's global reach, totally restructuring global politics.
And in the health side, the Make America Healthy Again movement, you know, there's some pushback against that and heck of a lot of propaganda being deployed against it.
Well, it's this old quote that seems sort of abstract for most people most of the time, but rings kind of true.
But you're finding it true more and more.
Money is the root of all evil.
Profound.
But it is.
But it is.
Yeah.
I mean, this is the COVID thing with Ivermectin and all.
alternative medications, off-label medications. Why? Money.
I think it also has to do with control. Right. Which means money. Fair enough.
Yeah. It's money and power in my mind. But power, they don't want power without money.
They want to benefit from that power. I believe for the likes of Larry Fink and Bill Gates, I mean, they can't spend all that they have.
Right.
It's a marker. It's like chips. You're stacking up. Exactly. Right. They're scoring in a video game.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And. But also captured by their past actions and constantly trying to obfuscate from all the things that they have done in the past that could be. Like if you just went into Bill Gates' stuff that he did in Africa.
Oh.
Giving children polio with the polio vaccine that was from the AP news.
Africa and India.
Yeah.
I mean, he's kind of banned from India.
So I don't get it.
I don't get where these people live.
I'm happy.
As far as I'm concerned, I could walk away from all this stuff.
It's just kind of a sense of obligation of what are you going to do when you're 66.
I have this opportunity to impact in a positive way on the world on my way out the door.
Who wouldn't take it?
Well, I guess a lot of people wouldn't.
But I don't have a need to have power.
I have, thank God for my substack subscribers.
I have all that I need.
My wife is happy.
My horses are fed.
My farm is paid off.
It's, you know, it's, and I have the luxury of doing good works.
And that's enough.
I don't get this global power thrust and hunger.
Not what you do. That's not your thing. But if you were a politician or you were some megalomaniacal
billionaire sort of business character that just wants to dominate and it was involved in a bunch of
antitrust lawsuits in the past, that would be what you... Not that we're naming any names.
Not that we're naming any names that bribed off multimedia corporations to the tune of $300 plus
million so that they wouldn't write bad stories about him.
Or owns, you know, functionally owns the World Health Organization.
Right. And a giant chunk of American farmland was for a while trying to push that fake meat shit on everybody until that dropped off a cliff.
Yeah. And yeah, so this, the business models aren't working out so good for the globalists, are they?
I think a lot of it is because of information that's available now. Yeah. And you can't control. Like, one of the things that did happen during COVID is these places like CNN people stopped going to for information. They don't believe them anymore.
There's just too much bullshit and no one got in trouble for spreading that bullshit.
There was no corrections, no redactions, no apologies.
No acknowledgement.
People now more than ever in my lifetime mistrust mainstream media.
And polls show that.
The polls show that the trust of mainstream media is at an all-time low for a good reason.
They did it to themselves.
They prostituted themselves out to the pharmaceutical drug companies.
They had to say what they had to say on television.
people knew what they were saying was incorrect, and now no one trusts them.
So to this thread, about four years ago, I read a report from the Trusted News Initiative.
You remember the TNI?
Yeah.
It was launched by the BBC to counter Russian disinformation and then repurposed to counter vaccine disinformation.
And they, and I read this report about, I'd gone on your show.
So I was a little bit of a fan.
Forgive me.
And so I'm reading this report, and they're talking about threats to the industry.
Because TNI is basically another trade organization.
It's another guild.
It's a global major media guild.
And so they're doing this internal analysis and reporting,
and they're talking about the risk vectors that they face.
And they had a whole great big section on Joe Rogan.
Joe Rogan represents that that was their threat.
That was the major threat to their business model is you and what you represent.
You as a metaphor for this new information economy.
And by God, they called it right.
And when I, again, this has been part of my journey.
when I realized what I was experiencing and what it meant to come on your show and have that event occur,
which, by the way, blew up my subscribers on Substact.
Thank you so much.
I still get a wave every year about in the month following, so January, I get a big bump in revenue.
Well, it blew up our subscribers on Spotify, too.
During the heat of it, we gained in one month, we gained two million subscribers.
I had, I had, oh, yeah, please.
What is the, what's the Spotify subscribers?
I never know.
I know YouTube is over 20, 20 million.
What is Spotify at?
So while he's looking that up, I had this bizarre experience.
You know, I'm just an old gray-haired guy with a, with, you know, I'm about to have my 47th wedding anniversary.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
I'm proud of it.
I would have 20-year-olds kind of.
up in the street and fist bump me.
I'm like, what the hell?
Yeah, well, they don't have a representative.
I mean, they don't see anyone.
All males.
All males.
Yes, males.
Those males don't have anybody in mainstream news that represents anything that
resembles them.
I mean, I know I'm much older than them, but I never went down this path of decay and
weirdness that a lot of adult males go into corporate business and industry.
and they become something unrecognizable to these young men who have freedom in life.
And they're being suppressed and they're being told that they're toxic.
That was a singer right there.
Yeah.
Young men that have freedom in life.
Yeah.
And then they compromise themselves.
They don't want to be what their dad is.
They don't want to be what their uncle is.
They don't want to be these people that they work for.
They're like, what is this fucking bullshit life?
I don't want that.
I know I'm being lied to.
I know the news is full of shit.
And I know that this one guy who is,
is also a cage fighting commentator and a comedian and doesn't have to lie.
Like, I'm not being, I don't have a boss, really.
I mean, Spotify promotes the show, and they put the show out.
We're in partnership with them.
But there's no one telling me what to do, which is why you're here right now.
Because there's no one, I don't have a conversation with no one.
I literally, like, reach out to my guy and say, hey, contact Mr. Malone.
and let's get him back on.
All I know is I got a message through X saying Joe Rogan, do you want to come on?
That was actually me.
That message is me, which I rarely use those things, but I was trying to figure out how to contact you.
So I reached out to you there, and then I sent it to my guy, and he takes care of it.
Like, that's it.
There's no one else.
There's no one involved in all that, which you could still be you that way.
As soon as you get involved in enormous groups of humans and a board, you have to sit down at a table with other executives, you have to make decisions based on the profitability of the company and shareholders and stuff. I have none of that. It's a skeleton crew.
So as I look back, you know, the question, why were you able to do this, Malone?
why were you able to you know oh you were so brave dr malone i could
well robert malone that name became like a majority of yeah it became like oh yeah that malone
guy yeah it's it's all webnized yeah but but then on the other side i you know i tour i do these rallies
and stuff like this and uh you know my wife it really makes my wife nervous i i'm
middle aged women come up to me and they want to
to have selfies. And I get this, oh, Dr. Malone, you were so brave. You're such a hero kind of stuff,
which I frankly find a little embarrassing. I mean, it's sweet, but yeah, there's a lot of heroes.
Really? Why was that? Yeah, yeah, the guys that, you know, defend the nation. Right.
But why was able to speak? I think a big part of it was I had no debt. I wasn't beholden to
anybody. Right. And like you say, I'd been about a decade being a consultant, a free living consultant,
and it had gotten under my skin. I've always been independent, you know, farmer, carpenter kind of stuff.
And that's, I guess, been part of my problem is I just don't fit in in corporate life. I can't
suck up to people and it's just not in me. Well, it's a very unhealthy environment for anybody to get sucked into that.
bizarre group think. It's just good word. Yeah. So, yeah. So, so, so, this decentralized subscriber-based
model, the epiphany was, and I'm being quite sincere, you know, it was one of those moments,
my wife and I looked at each other, and we said, what the hell are we going to do now? Our consulting
business is shot. Nobody wants to talk to me. I've been delegitimized. They say, I don't know what I know.
I haven't done what I've done.
And this has been promoted by all the top liberal publications in the world.
Yeah.
And so I said, okay, Rogan built this thing day after day, week after week for years.
He just stayed on it and doing it, and we can do that too.
We can bring that kind of work ethic into our world.
Steve Kirsch had told me you ought to get on Spotify.
And we took it on seriously.
We published thousands of essays now, almost every day.
It's, you know, four.
You mean substack.
You said substack.
What did I say?
Substack.
I apologize.
And so we just work at it again and again and again trying to put out content.
And we're shadow banned and small roomed on X in a serious way.
You know, we got 1.3 million subscribers of which, you know, you know,
You know, all the time I get feedback.
I never see your stuff.
Well, it's algorithmic.
Whatever it is.
You know, and you can ask GROC about Robert Malone, and, you know, you get back, you know, I'm a controversial figure.
But, you know, not whining.
And so we have a lot of subscribers, but we just have this core paid subscribers.
And they send in their five bucks a month.
And it's all we need.
And it totally sets us free.
We can talk about whatever we want.
And yeah, now that I'm a pseudo-government employee, I'm a special government employee
without pay.
Boy, that's like the worst of both worlds.
Because there's, I have, the truth is, I have guardrails that constrain me in a way that I didn't
used to be constrained for talking about some things. You know, I have to live in this world. I
interface with the secretary and with the deputy chief of staff and other people, and now I'm
working with the State Department more. And so, you know, I have to be more mindful.
What is your function? Like, what do you do over there? At state or both? When you're working for
the government. Like, how do they use your?
your services. So the special government employee category is a designation from the executive branch. It's the
one that Elon had. I like to say, I'm in the same category as Elon was, only without all the money.
So he was an SGE without pay. I'm an SGE without pay. And because I serve on the advisory committee
on immunization practices of the CDC, which is this, they call it, it's a FACA committee, federal advisory
committee act that advises the director of the CDC.
That's its only job on vaccine policy.
Okay.
So I'm the vice chair, which is largely honorary.
What that means is that if the chair isn't there, I draw the short straw and I have to chair
those bloody meetings, like the last one for hepatitis B, birth dose, which was just a slugfest.
ugly, the worst meeting I've ever had to adjudicate my entire life.
But for the most part, I sit on the subcommittees.
I sit on the COVID Working Group subcommittee.
I'm not supposed to talk about the next meeting.
I was told two days ago.
So that's one of my guardrails.
But stay tuned for what is going to come down if the AAP lawsuit does.
doesn't prevail and we're allowed to actually have the meeting.
So that's that.
I'm also the chair of the influenza working group.
Stay tuned for that.
And now I am, so, and I, from time to time, the secretary asked me to help him sort out
some issue.
You know, I'll get a phone call.
I once got a phone call on the Big Island.
I did this recent series of rallies to try to, you know, you know, I'm going to, you know,
to recap the whole reason why that we did that first hit was to try to publicize the stop the mandates rally in D.C.
That was the subtext for that, as you recall, and I forgot to even mention it.
We had to go back in to do another shoot for that. Remember?
I'm still fighting that same battle of trying to stop these mandated vaccines.
So I'm sitting there in Hawaii.
I'm going to another one of these rallies.
I got a call out of the blue from one of Bobby's people, and they want some advice.
about a topic having to do with the decision he has to make about spending money on another
biodefence initiative.
So I get that kind of stuff.
He called me soon after he was confirmed to get my opinion about what was going on in
the chicken industry and all the slaughter that was happening for bird flu.
I told him this doesn't make sense.
It's not good policy.
There's no way you can get rid of bird flu doing this.
It's in the wild bird populations.
and this is just nonsensical what they're doing.
Why do you think they did that?
Okay, so that's interesting.
Now we drive into a kind of public health and vaccinology.
You're asking the why.
And it's been a longstanding policy.
They killed millions of chickens, right?
They do it every time.
Every time there's a bird flu.
Yeah.
It's in any other outbreak.
So right now in Spain, I just wrote an essay about
this. It was maybe the biggest reveal on what's going on in Spain right now. There's a Spanish
research lab that's been collaborating with the USDA that is investigating swine fever virus.
And they're actually doing gain of function research on swine fever virus. African swine
fever virus kills pigs like crazy. And already China has locked down and will not accept
Spanish pork. And it is a lab leak.
And there was a bunch of dead hogs last November around this facility.
And now it's the Spanish and the European Union are, you know, blowing a circuit over this.
Because it's really compromised the Spanish pork industry.
So this kind of stuff, when this happens, the reaction is we just have to kill all of them.
We have to kill all the potential carriers.
And this has been the wisdom, quote, of in this kind of agrarian animal husbandry world for a long time in the context in particular of factory farming.
So the logic is that if you were to vaccinate these birds with a leaky vaccine, which, you know, COVID was a leaky vaccine, influenza is a leaky vaccine.
If you give the birds a leaky vaccine, what you'll get out of that is precisely vaccine-resistant flu.
Okay.
And so we have no choice.
There's been the logic.
But to exterminate, you know, like the ostriches in Canada.
that story? That was shocking. There was no logic behind that. It's gone. It's become entrenched as
policy, as kind of this reflexive, knee-jerk thing that if we have an outbreak, what we do is we kill
because we can't control the virus. And the things that we could do to control the virus aren't really
going to control it and it's actually going to make things worse. Is there any logic to that?
We can argue with the margins. We can argue at the margins. But when you got something,
that if you had something that didn't have a natural reservoir, then you can make the case
that you could eliminate it in that geographic population and keep it from spreading outside.
But when you have a natural reservoir, like...
Explain that?
Explain the natural reservoir.
Okay.
In the case of avian influenza, waterfowl and migratory birds,
are amazing vectors for carrying and propagating influenza.
And influenza survives in water for a very long period of time.
And so you've got ducks and geese traveling north to south all over every continent
that are susceptible to infection by avian influenza and all the other migratory birds.
But in particular, the waterfell of Galeform.
my wife would wrap me on the head if I didn't use the right term.
So she's an avian specialist.
So these birds carry the flu, and a number of them are relatively resistant.
They've been subjected to avian influence for centuries or millennia.
And sometimes you'll get a variant come out that will wipe out a whole bunch of birds.
West Nile virus in crows is a great example.
And now you have crow populations coming back that are resistant to West Nile.
We haven't gotten rid of West Nile.
We've just bred more resistant birds.
That's kind of, you know, that's Brett Weinstein space, right?
That's evolution.
It's magical.
And so if you have a natural animal reservoir like the ticks and lime and deer.
What are you going to do?
Exterminate all the deer?
No, that's not practical.
Bow tried to exterminate the birds because of the thesis that they were eating up all the spare grain
and compromising availability of food to the populace, right?
And what happened?
Major ecological catastrophe.
You can't eliminate the birds.
You can't go and kill all the waterfowl.
That would just be ecologically insane.
But, you know, sometimes we do insane things.
And in the case of avian influenza, it's there.
It's endemic.
It's in all that migratory waterfowl.
They poop an amazing amount of influenza.
It gets in the water supply.
The water supply goes everywhere.
They, you know, small birds are interacting with, I don't know if you ever been around a chicken barn or turkey barn.
Okay.
Yeah.
There's chickens.
and then there's commercial chicken production, right?
Right.
So these operations are like petri dishes for bad stuff happening.
And the only way you can interfere with that,
and by the way, the Amish is starting to do it,
is put something in the water supply.
And what the Amish are using is a compound called hypochloris acid.
And it's stopping these things,
and it's stopping the E. coli and a lot of other stuff.
But that's another problem is, you know,
when you have these, the momentum of these large government agencies with their consensus about the way things are done, you know, there's a saying that the only time the FDA ever changes is if somebody in a key position retires or passes away.
They kind of get entrenched in this is how we do things.
We kill chickens.
If we have avian influenza come out, we kill chicken barns.
And this is the beauty of Secretary Kennedy coming in being kind of not invested in the way things are and the way we do things.
And being willing to ask the questions, does this really make sense?
And that has been heresy.
It obviously is still heresy to do that, to ask those questions, to have the president say, we need to restructure the vaccine schedule.
Oh, my God, the sky is falling.
Kids are going to die left and right.
There's going to be death on the street because we ended the thimerosol in multidose and influenza vials.
This kind of catastrophic thinking, but Kennedy and the president have the courage to question these narratives, these long-held standing beliefs.
And in the case of the bird flu, you know, he called me up.
I said, Bobby, I don't think this makes sense.
I think that what we really need to do is we need to breed resistant chickens.
And the way we breed resistant chickens, and by the way, we've written about this also in our substack, there are in the domain of chicken cultivars.
You have chickens.
You know, there are people that are just freaks about chickens.
Yeah.
And all of these.
But because of that, we have this huge repository of different cultivars of chickens.
We could say they were all generated through gain of function research, the old school way.
And a number of those are relatively resistant to bird flu.
Well, in a logical world, you would have Tyson's.
You know, maybe the government has to incentivize this.
It shouldn't have to.
You would have Tyson's in there saying, well, guys, what we need is a bird flu resistant chicken.
Let's get on it.
Okay.
And that is essentially the position that the secretary took is this policy of just extremely aggressive mass culling is not producing the outcome that we want.
It has never produced the outcome that we want.
It will never eliminate bird flu because it has an endemic reservoir.
And we've got to think different.
And now that's starting to percolate through the system.
and there is more research into alternative strategies, including the possibility of various prophylactic interventions in feed and in water.
That's, you know, and a lot of these chicken houses mist.
As you recall, they have the misters because they've got to control the temperatures.
So they are set up with misters.
And that can also be a way to deliver things that are non-toxic like HOCL that can knock out these viruses.
and e-coli and other things that cause reduced growth and loss of weight in chickens,
which is the metric that Tyson's and those guys is food conversion.
That's the metric they all pray to.
You know, there's different, we can think differently,
and we have been locked into, you know, consensus that has emerged over decades based on old ways,
of thinking.
And the same people are in charge, so they don't want to change.
And they kind of often kind of have these lineages where they're passing power onto the
people that they've mentored.
So that's my HHS world.
And then the State Department world is a new thing that's come in.
I'm starting to support the group under Secretary Rubio that's responsible for the
the various treaties having to do with arms containment, and in particular the Bio Weapons Convention.
So this morning, I got up early.
And, you know, there was, so I'm honest to God, I don't want to pump you up too much.
I mean, you might get an ego or something.
But so I say to the state, they say, Robert, we want you to go to Geneva to give this talk on the use of AI for monitoring bio-weapons threats.
because we have no way of monitoring compliance with the bio-weapons convention right now.
And it's been a historic problem.
And the president has said that we're going to, we think that we can apply artificial intelligence to this problem set of monitoring and verifying compliance with the bio-weapons convention, which is heresy.
It's another one of these thinking outside of the box things.
So they say, we want you to go to Geneva and give this talk and be the key key.
you know, and I say, and what's the date?
Oh, it's February 12th.
And I say, I don't talk about this because, you know, it's the general thing.
You don't tell people that you're going to be on Rogan.
You let Rogan say that when Rogan's ready.
And so I said, but I'm scheduled for Rogan that day.
And they're like, oh, Rogan, well, okay, absolutely.
You got to go on that one.
That's way more important than.
And going and speaking at the UN, so the State Department thinks you're more important than me talking about bio-weapons.
And they let me web exit.
So that's what happened this morning.
And it is a, so I'm supporting that group now and maybe increasingly over time.
And I don't know where that goes.
So you were talking about these pigs that it's a lab leak that's giving.
these people? Yeah, in Spain. And what is it another gain of function laboratory?
So this is truly a breaking news thing. Our media is not covering it. And shocker. Yeah. It is being
covered in Europe. It, and particularly in Spain, this is a major economic threat because
they're, I think, the number two pork producer in the world. And, you know, in the hogs that are
feeding on acorns, et cetera. That's a big specialty market space.
Yeah.
So last November, this laboratory that is ostensibly working, this is, I mean, it's
Wuhan 2.0. Only the good news is that this is not swine flu. People get that confused.
I'm not talking about swine flu. This is African swine fever.
It's been around for millennia.
It's never crossed into humans.
It's a very different virus.
So just make sure we got that clear.
Okay.
So this highly lethal African swine fever virus is a threat to the global pork industry.
And so this laboratory in Spain is cooperating with the USDA to try to develop a new vaccine for.
African swine fever. And in doing so, that our government, once again, was unaware that this even
existed. There's a cooperative agreement between USDA and this laboratory to engage in, if you
read, they don't call it gain of function research. They call it building recombinant viruses
and experimenting in different virus structures
to allow them to build a better vaccine,
exactly the same logic that was used in Wuhan.
Okay.
Now, then last November, so this is ongoing,
in this little laboratory,
and what this relates to, Joe,
is the idea that is being promoted
that for justice and equity and sharing,
we need to enable there being distribution of highly infectious pathogens all over the world in separate laboratories so that we in the Big Bad West are not imposing and enabling our industries to prey on name your emerging economy by taking biological resources from them, in other words, new viruses, and using them to build stuff.
We have to cooperate and they have to have access to these regions.
So the logic right now that's in play and being promoted by the WHO is that we should have high pathogen repositories and research programs all over the world, decentralized in these emerging economy states.
Spain is not Germany.
So there's a Spanish lab.
USDA is cooperating with them.
They're going to build an African swine fever virus.
vaccine, they're doing gain of function research, and then, and by the way, just like in
Wuhan, there's some construction going on related to that, and then suddenly, and it's an area
that is very dense in wild hogs. Now, somehow we've got to get this through our brain, okay?
You don't put the facility in a place that's proximal to the thing that might get infected if you
have a lab leak. I mean, that ought to be like rule number.
one stamped on everybody's brain. You don't do it. Like the Rocky Mountain Labs make a lot of sense.
If you're going to be working with nasty stuff and you've got to do it, put it somewhere obscure,
not in Boston, right? So they're doing it. They're surrounded by dense wildhog population.
And suddenly last November people detect there is wild hogs dead all over around this facility.
What could possibly have happened? So they start investigating. The police have been in.
grab the records, grab the digital information, et cetera, because the entire Spanish pork
industry is now compromised.
Their major client, China, has already pulled their trade barriers.
No more Spanish pork going into China.
I advocate that President Trump ought to drop the curtain right now because when I looked
at the distribution of wild hogs, I mean, you've traveled enough, you know how important
wild feral hogs are in the economy in Italy.
The wild hogs are all over in Europe.
And this place in Catalonia is right near the French border.
I don't, and then like right on the other side, a couple hundred miles, is Italy.
And the band of high density wild hogs spreads like that up through the mountains and then down into Italy.
And I think that if I was sitting in the White House right now, I think to protect, you know, both for the president core constituency is ag.
Voted for him, you know, three times.
And he's that he holds that near and dear.
And I think that it's good politics and it's good public health.
It's good health agricultural decision to raise the barriers now until we can see that Europe has resolved the risk associated with this.
How are they going to resolve that?
So once again, what's wild hogs.
This is not like it's anything that's contained.
And to your point, I don't know the answer.
I mean, right now what they're doing is they're using drones to try to find.
You know how hard it is to hunt wild hog.
Yeah.
They hunt them out of helicopters here in Texas.
Yeah.
And they still can't even get them.
And the hogs are winning.
It's like the emu wars in Australia, right?
My friend Monty Franklin is from Australia.
Actually, has a joke about that.
We fought a war with the emoes and we lost.
It's true.
We have emos on our farm.
And they are weird animals, man.
It's like living with dinosaurs.
They're dumb as shit, too.
They are weird.
My wife says they don't have two brain cells to rub together.
I talked to a lady who's a falconer, and she said the dumbest birds by far, emus.
Second dumbest are owls, she said.
Oh, really?
I didn't know the owls.
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah, I didn't know that.
I thought they were so smart.
Give a hoot.
Don't pollute.
They're always wearing a monocle.
They're always the wise professor.
Well, right.
It goes back to Athens, the symbol of learning has been now.
Very weird.
Yeah, so e-moos are weird.
So they have to try use drones.
I don't know what they're going to do.
What they did to control in Europe.
So the former assistant director general of the WHO, who I knew, this was her claim to fame,
was she had led the development of rabies baits.
And they would bait with a rabies vaccine.
to try to control the incidence of rabies in, particularly foxes was the problem throughout Europe.
And a lot of the foxes were crossing from the less developed part of the European Union into France, which was not acceptable.
She was French.
And so what they did is they developed these bates with the vaccine, and they would distribute them out of helicopters.
There's a whole science about how dense the baits have to be to get immunity against rabies in fox populations.
A whole science around it.
But they was successful.
They controlled fox and wolf population rabies in Europe largely eradicated it through the use of baits distributed by helicopters.
Do they have a vaccine for this?
No, they don't.
That's what they were supposed to be developing.
That was the whole purpose.
They were supposed to be developing, but really what they were developing,
is a more transmissible strain.
Whatever, yeah, in order to prove that they could, I don't know.
It's the same story over and over again.
Exactly.
And how are we not going to see this as an increasing trend?
And there's the whole dark side that, you know, when I, you know, I read my comments.
Maybe I shouldn't sometimes, but I do.
Don't do it after this show.
Yeah.
So, you know, you get the blowback.
Well, this is all by intention because they're building market for whatever it is that they want to market, right?
That's the, there's one of the dark themes about COVID was that they wanted to promote the spread of COVID in order to sell the vaccines and blah, blah, blah, blah, you know, so that's the narrative.
And so in this case, well, they want to spread African swine fever because somehow they're going to profit from that while destroying their pork industry.
But this is the armchair strategists on the Internet.
But has it gotten into the domestic pork market?
Interesting question.
Not to my knowledge yet, but I have this interesting colleague that I work with closely at the ACIP
named Retzif Levy, who's the chair of the COVID Working Group and has giving the pharmaceutical
industry a run for their money right now.
And it's, of course, being vilified by the press, et cetera.
And Retzif is a full professor at MIT.
And his core competence is risk analysis and mitigation.
And he reads my substack because we're friends.
He doesn't subscribe, I'm pretty sure, but he reads it.
And so he were talking and he says, yeah, I read that thing that you put out about that virus.
And he said, I wrote a proposal years ago about risk mitigation and the need to do something about that because of the ease by which it can enter the domestic pork population.
So I infer from that that there is a whole body of science and logic about, and he said it's very readily transmitted into commercial pork, which is why the Chinese have already dropped the curtain and said,
We're not going to allow any of that into China because of the risk.
I mean, what we're talking about – so I wrote an essay about low-risk, high-impact events, which is what we're talking about.
Another example of a low-risk, high-impact event is gene drive technology that Gates is promoting to exterminate the mosquitoes, for example.
You know, gene drive technology can be used to exterminate a species, particularly ones that have a high reproductive rate.
And, you know, it's another one that is a CRISPR application.
But there's a whole school of thought that gene drive tech should never be let out of the box into the environment.
Because, and that what's, you know, there are those that are actively promoting its use.
and to eliminate bad stuff.
And, you know, we're all for eliminating bad stuff.
You know, organisms, insects, worms, flies, stuff.
And yet, and we can do experiments where we say,
oh, we'll cultivate this kind of fly together with that kind of fly,
and only these flies are going to have gene driving.
And we're going to look for whether or not it gets over to these flies.
And if it doesn't, then we can conclude that it's unlikely.
But as Brett would tell you, we're dealing with ecosystems here, really complex ecosystems.
And the risk environment now that I think grown-ups have to acknowledge coming out of COVID, you know, the big lessons, we can talk about these egregious things that we've all experienced that have been put on us.
But the big picture is this thing came out, and I'm convinced it was engineered.
I believe the most likely hypothesis is not that it was intentionally released.
I still think that's a possibility, but that it was an unintentional release, an infection of a lab worker or something like that, let it get out, because that's what happens again and again in these facilities.
these low probability events can have extremely high impacts, as we've seen, global impacts.
And we have to rethink how we're managing risk, which is, as I mentioned, Redsiff's kind of core competence.
And that logic runs up against this belief that, well, it hasn't happened so far, and I'm an ex-exam.
and I have the right to play around in this sandbox that I've helped develop.
I know more than you do.
How can you tell me that I shouldn't be doing that?
You don't have the right to tell me.
I'm the expert in this space.
And to come into that environment and say, look, guys, you're playing around with stuff
that could have a very high impact, even though it hasn't happened yet.
And you've got to rethink what is.
acceptable. And I think that, you know, we were talking a moment about the State Department
and weapon control. We're now in an environment where the speed of growth of the power of
biotechnology is accelerating. It's going exponential just like what we saw with semiconductors.
and our bioethics, our regulatory structures, our way of thinking about those risks is completely unable
to keep up with the pace of the advance.
And that is creating a whole new threat scene, not to scare people.
I mean, as I was thinking about coming on here, I was saying,
myself, okay, Robert, just take a deep breath. It's only Joe Rogan. He's a human. And you want to
stay positive. And I don't want to go dark and just scare people. But we've got to take,
we've got to recognize that this is a different world now. We have all of this digital tech
and in what it means and information control and suppression.
and manipulation psychologically, basically programming, customized programming through avatars and all of this power.
But we also have in parallel this world of rapidly advancing biotechnology that is, you know, for the likes of Yuval Harari and those that are imagining a future of transhumanism.
And all of that means, we are moving very rapidly into a world that we can hardly even process.
One of the big thrust vectors in Silicon Valley right now relating to reproductive rights
has to do with the development of artificial wounds.
you know these these wealthy privileged people don't want to carry their own babies and I guess
surrogates are too cumbersome or risky so they're really talking about it's not talking
it's not talking they're there we're going to run an essay about this soon they already have a lamb
that they have grown de novo in an artificial womb we're there
And these people see it as freeing.
This is more women's rights.
You know, we don't need to have the organic process of carrying a baby.
And that's a good thing, they believe.
You know, completely disregarding that there is a whole lot of subtle, complex interactions
that occur between mother and fetus in the womb.
Okay, that gives rise to...
Right, who knows what kind of humans you're going to develop with no interaction with the mother at all, the entire nine months where they're developing?
But that...
The exchange of hormones.
But for the sake of convenience, we want to do that.
Oh, God.
Okay.
And that, what that, you know, zoom in on that.
Okay, that has all kinds of implications.
It has implications for organ transplantation.
My friend Jan Yon Yacallick, I don't know if you know Yon, if you've ever.
Barbara had him on, if you might want to sometime.
Interesting character.
He is the Washington Bureau Chief for this newspaper that is defamed all the time, ridiculed Epic Times.
Which I think is like the only print newspaper left in the United States that's worth reading that ascribes to classical journalism.
But he's just come out with a book about organ harvesting in China.
And organ harvesting on demand, documenting that they are using.
live prisoners and keeping them in compounds and testing them for their genetic background
and characteristics and then harvesting them when necessary to provide organs for transplantation
largely to Westerners because it is enormously profitable and also to leaders in the CCP.
This is what all this brouhaha was about the open mic event with Putin, about we can use
transplantation to let us live another 100 years.
Remember that little clip?
So in a world in which we can have artificial wounds, we can grow around clones to provide donor tissue, to provide an insurance policy.
We are right at the doorstep of that.
Again, demonic.
It sounds demonic.
I mean, is a soul a real thing just because it can't be quantified by science?
you can't measure it.
I mean, the concept of the soul is always existed.
If that's a real thing, who knows what you're doing, creating a human being from an
artificial womb?
Who knows what kind of processes are happening?
We know that stress on the mother imparts all sorts of unwanted characteristics in children.
We know that.
We know like all kinds of interactions.
Yes.
The playing of music, that's real.
Yes.
Okay?
Yeah, soothing playing of music.
Yeah.
So that's happening.
That vector is proceeding.
And once you have that in a world of CRISPR, okay, you can do genetic modification of a very small number of cells and then grow a fetus from that.
Okay?
So that opens the door to, did you watch the movie Gattaca?
Yeah.
Gattaca absolutely recommended.
if you want to understand our brave new world, the one that's really coming at us,
and the ethical conundrums associated with that, watch Gattega.
And by the way, it has great production value too, doesn't it?
It's a well made movie.
Great movie.
And totally underappreciated.
And terrifying.
Yeah.
If that's really what our future is.
And the title G-A-T-A-G-A refers to a DNA sequence, by the way.
That's why the name Gattiga.
Oh.
Okay.
So watch the movie.
you've already seen it, you get it.
We're moving to that space where we have custom-built humans.
Now it's being, you know, what's driving that?
Convenience.
Who doesn't want to have a child that's better than, it's like you, but better, stronger, bigger,
you know, smarter, better vision.
Get rid of all the problems that I've got, right?
Or you've got, or whomever, you know, and in your next offspring.
And all you got to do, because here's another fun fact, at bulk, whole genome sequencing is now about 300 bucks.
Whole genome sequencing is the portal for selective engineering with Cas9 CRISPR systems.
So we're now, we're right on the threshold of that entire spectrum of capability of manipulating animals.
life, fundamentals of life in every species and humans.
And concurrently, we have the incoming vector of robotics technology
and modern computational advanced.
You know, we're moving rapidly.
You know, people say, oh, it's going to be next month.
We're going to have general artificial intelligence.
Well, they keep saying that month after month.
What are we got here?
This video made about the artificial wounds.
Yeah.
Oh, boy.
I don't know who made this.
I don't think the company who's doing it made it, but they might have.
I'm not BSing.
I mean, doesn't this look like it's something straight out of the matrix?
100%.
This is all 3D.
Obviously, it's not real.
But oh, my God, this is terrifying.
This is a business model.
Like, what kind of psychology does this child have with no exposure to its mother?
Hey, but for the nine months in this thing.
For mom, it's a lot more convenient.
And she can get the perfect baby that she wants.
What's not to like here, Joe?
Until it becomes a fucking serial killer.
Yeah.
And you put it on SSRIs.
Well, this is the thing about, do you know the story about Ted Kaczynski?
One of the stories, one of the things that happened to him.
In the Netflix documentary, they go into this.
He was very sick when he was a boy, when he was a baby.
And they kept him in this nursery with no contact with human beings for a long time.
For a long time.
No one picked him up when he cried.
He just sat in this crib with no.
No contact with his mother, nothing.
Yeah.
And he, from then on, I mean, his brother always described him as just like off.
Yeah.
Just off.
Yeah.
He never had that early stage neural development is amazing and profound.
By the way, this looks back to the vaccine story.
When we're doing all these jabs and these little tiny kids like the hepatitis B.
Berthos, they are at a stage where this thing is just growing like crazy.
And so is their liver and everything else.
And you're injecting toxic chemicals into their body.
Which you really haven't characterized well, and you're stacking them.
Yeah.
And no one's done the studies.
And you're doing it for profit.
This is another thing that the secretary is adamant about and that the president has led on.
Well, having them exempt from any legal ramifications of the adverse side effects of vaccines, what they did during the Reagan administration, it gave them this free license.
Yeah, free license. Just go crazy.
To just go crazy.
And jack up the vaccine schedule as high as they could justify.
And then along with it, corresponding profits rise.
That's what's fucking scary.
So if you want to go down that rabbit hole, it's even worse.
Once, functionally, because of how difficult it is to prove an endpoint and get a vaccine licensed,
once you get it licensed, you basically have a cash cow in perpetuity.
and if you get it down on the pediatric schedule, in other words, you manage to jam it through the ACIP,
because the ACIP, the wisdom of Congress, is vested with the authority of authorizing the vaccines for children program acquisitions.
So if there's no other program in the entire United States government that is outside of congressional oversight,
The ACIP can decide that this vaccine needs to be purchased for the vaccines for children program.
And historically, because the ACIP has been captured by pharma and by the CDC itself and by academia,
those decisions, they never go backwards.
Right.
And so you get the product down onto the VFC, the Vaccine for Children program, and the pediatric schedule.
And then that triggers the indemnification clause that you're talking about, which by the
way is different from the one that kicked in with the COVID situation, with the PEP Act. That's even
worse. But what you end up with, Joe, is a situation where, as the vaccine manufacturer, think it,
you now have no legal liability. You have guaranteed purchasing, distribution, and marketing,
because the CDC does all the propaganda. Vaccines are safe and effective. You must take this, right?
And then you end up with, and it's in many cases it's school district level.
It's not even state level.
The states have the right to regulate the practice of medicine.
The federal government doesn't.
That means the CDC can advise that this is the vaccine schedule.
And many states, because they don't have the infrastructure to actually process what's going on, they say, well, if the CDC advises it, then we're going to mandate it.
Or school districts do.
And so you end up in this situation where you as the manufacturer, get your product on the
market. You get it down into this special program. You got guaranteed purchase, guaranteed
profit, full indemnification, marketing, purchase, distribution, all paid for by the taxpayer.
And no liability.
It's perfect as a business model. What's not to like?
It's so scary how many people just go along with it, too.
Oh, they don't just go along with it. They are propagandized into believing it as a
promoting it because of the theology.
They've administered to, exactly.
I was going to say it's religious dogma.
They've administered it to their children.
They believe it in wholeheartedly.
And when someone says something like vaccines don't cause autism, the whole audience will applaud.
And you're like, how do you know?
How do you know that?
Well, you're so confident that you're applauding.
Well, it's because what I've heard.
I've heard it so many times.
Of course I believe it.
That's what's twisted about it.
It's just, well, it, and it illustrates the power of what we're dealing with.
Yeah.
And once you get it by thinking through the vaccine story, I mean, you've, you're ruined now, my friend.
Because once you get it about vaccines, then you see it everywhere.
Well, I had Suzanne Humphreys on who wrote that book, Dissolving Illusions.
And, you know, that book is a must read for anybody who wants to really understand the history of vaccines.
And what really happened in terms of the end of pandemics and the end of pandemics and the,
introduction of these vaccines?
Like what actually took place?
Yes.
Yes.
Oh, that, that.
And, you know, there's a whole thread of how prevalent lead was in the population, in the powdered
wigs and so many things that we had.
And then when they got rid of the lead, that was concurrent with the onset of widespread
vaccination.
And so the loss of life associated or the improvement in loss of life and birth outcomes
associated with getting the lead out of the population.
Well, that's ascribed to the vaccines by the people that are busy marketing vaccines.
And likewise, all the work associated with water sanitation and all of that.
No, that's all true.
The first time I, to credit what credits do as a vaccinologist, the first time I really encountered that logic was Candace Owens had me on years ago.
And she said, you know, we've done this deep dive.
And we've looked at this thing and these infectious diseases go down before the vaccines come up.
And yet we're told this narrative.
Right.
And of course we're told this narrative.
Yeah.
The polio ones, the nuttier one.
Because when people are so concerned about polio and polio vaccines and we cure polio, they're going to bring back polio if they stop the vaccines, when I tell them what percentage of polio do you think is asymptomatic?
And that most people think, like, none, right?
It's 95 to 99% of polio is asymptomatic.
And then you find out through Suzanne Humphrey's work that they were spraying DDT ubiquitously all over the country at the same time.
Absolutely.
Silent spring.
And it gives you the same exact symptoms of paralytic polio.
And then subsequently, the actual first infections that started occurring in this country were occurring in rural areas where they sprays.
DDT everywhere.
Yeah, so one of, so there's, if I can kind of throw another log in the fire on that narrative.
One of the cool things that I'm getting to see from my perch at the ACIP is people working at the cutting edge of modern genetic technology investigations about cause and effect and genomic effects.
and one of the things you talk about this rare incidence of paralytic polio or
myocarditis.
Okay, myocarditis is rare with the vaccine.
And yet it happens at a significant rate.
It happens more in certain populations and other populations.
This was heresy at first, and now they were forced to admit it and stay tuned later in February.
But there's a group.
that had a big grant to look at genetic links associated with risk factors for this.
And strangely, halfway through their program during the Biden administration, all their funding got caught.
But they still made a lot of progress and they kind of limped along with volunteer stuff.
I mentioned the genome cost, 300 bucks a genome.
These guys have gone through and they've identified seven genes that represent high risk factors for myocarditis after vaccination.
Myocarditis after vaccination, by the way, was a major side effect associated with the smallpox vaccines, or one of them.
It's been associated with vaccines for quite a while.
We just kind of haven't heard about it and it's particularly bad with these.
But we, one of the, you know, trying to continue my theme of it's not all dark.
Right.
One of the things that's coming out is that if we commit to it and do the research like Team Kennedy is committed to doing, we may well be able to detect those people that the character, genetic characteristics of those people that might have been at higher risk for, say, paralytic polio or myocarditis.
so that we can have genetic tests, and you can have that test, and determine whether you actually
have that risk factor.
It looks like because of the dynamics of clinical research and epidemiology in infectious
disease that this kind of application of genetic diagnostic technology may give us whole
new insights into those small populations that had those rare events.
You know, we know the big picture in COVID and the COVID vaccination post-vaccination syndromes of the high-risk individuals with obesity and elderly and basically people with a high inflammatory set point.
But now we're getting down into some of the nuances.
And I think that that's, you know, I talked about some of the dark sides of biotechnology, but there's some real, you know, bright sides that.
offer hope.
And what will happen as that kind of starts to roll out is that manufacturers and academic
surrogates and others are kind of not going to be able to continue to hide behind these
narratives that they have promoted now for decades.
Because the True True is going to come out.
It is going to come out.
Is it going to come out during this administration?
No, to do long-term follow-up studies are going to take a decade.
That's the unfortunate truth.
And then we're going to have a lot of grief around that.
How come you haven't already fill in the blank?
Right.
But it's going to happen.
And that is another big plus of what's going on right now, kind of behind the scenes at HHS.
Hopefully they get a chance to still do it after the midterm,
and they don't get hog-tied.
But I'm optimistic that these narratives that have been promoted,
these false narratives, we're going to be able to break them
through doing actual science if we're allowed to do it.
And this new technology is particularly with sequence analysis
and identification of risk correlates.
The intersection between sequence analysis
in epidemiology is going to really open up new understandings about what's going on in human
disease.
I'm absolutely convinced what we do about it is that's a whole other kettle of fish.
I mean, we can do the science until the cows come home.
The public policy part is wicked hard.
Yeah.
But at least there's some positive developments.
Yeah, that's what I want to say is.
Some bright light at the end.
There is all this dark stuff.
Yeah.
And we have to allow ourselves to see it.
You see it and you get the reaction like you did.
I don't want to see that.
That's too much.
It's too overwhelming.
It's too scary.
But we look away at our own risk.
And we have this tendency to say it's all dark.
You know, we have these.
individuals, I mentioned Yuval Harari, you know, believing that man is God now.
We no longer need God.
We have become gods.
We have become as God.
Does he actually say that?
Yeah.
Really?
Well, isn't he talking sort of metaphorically about our technological potential?
I don't know how to discern the meaning of.
He's a very demonized guy online.
He says a lot of dark stuff.
And I think, so you probably read the book.
Did you interview the author of, you know, the Sapiens.
Do you read the author of Dark Aon?
No, no, I've never read that.
So that's talking, this is talking more about kind of the Silicon Valley culture that's pushing transhumanism and how, how integrally it's become involved in this space.
I mean, what I don't have, I don't pal around with Elon and not to say he is or whomever you want to talk about in that space.
That's those, I mean, that's not my pay grade.
But my understanding and I read these things, maybe they're also, maybe that's also propaganda, that a lot of these people of, let's say the Bill Gates cast and the younger ones associated with that, would our advocates for a world in.
which they are able to upload their avatar consciousness in a digital space and live forever.
That's Ray Kurzweil, right?
Sounds like you know more.
You're the UAP guy here, which, by the way, is another fascinating domain that I'm learning more about.
It's bizarre.
That's a rabbit hole.
You go down and like, oh, this isn't empty.
This is not an empty rabbit hole.
There's a lot of money behind this.
and it seems like there's been a lot of black funding and...
Business.
Yeah.
A lot of business.
Defense contractors involved.
Yeah.
It seems like there's some inventions that sort of emerged out of nowhere
that supposedly are connected to back engineering programs.
So I'm now of the belief that there exists a capability that transcends a,
Physics as we know it, let's say Einsteinian physics, and is more aligned with Hawking's physics,
that we can't, we don't comprehend right now.
And it has to do with extremely high energy systems.
And I, I mean, I've had some of these guys because I'm now known worldwide as a nutcase, I guess,
and conspiracy theorist.
I've had them on my farm, you know, staying in our guest house and shooting the bull and me trying to understand their world and what they're seeing and what they've experienced and observed and the information.
And I'm of the – there's a lot of different models for what the hell is going on here.
And maybe it's all us, right?
That's one model.
It's all us with...
Secret technology.
Yeah, that's one model for the, what do they call it, Tic Tacs?
I'm increasingly convinced by the logic that there is a physics beyond the physics that we know that is the physics of extremely high energy systems.
And in high energy systems, a lot of the rules about motion and
transportation and matter and the ability to cross between matter states that is repeatedly observed
and reported by responsible people, military folks that have strong disincentives for saying this stuff
and yet still they're saying, that's what I saw.
Okay.
Transmedium devices that can fly and then go under water as fast as they're flying.
No ripples.
Yeah.
So one of the models of that is that this has to do with having some extremely high energy source in a very small package.
And is that possible?
We're now moving into a new fusion world.
Right? We're talking about these microfusion reactors that are going to be powering our data centers all over the world, transforming the whole energy, right? I mean, there's this logic crossing over into the economics, Bitcoin, or kind of space. There's this logic that it all comes down to energy.
Energy is the one thing that fuels economic development and everything around us.
And I'm not a physicist, but I listen and learn.
And it sounds to me like these microreactors and the technology that was involved strangely in this assassination.
Remember that bizarre assassination?
in Boston that happened.
There was two competing companies.
Yes. Okay.
There's something going on there that's really transformational.
And if it matures, remember Trump is invested in this in a big way that had to do with him kind of leveraging truth social in a strange way.
Remember?
if we emerge into a future within my lifetime, probably, of these micro-nukes as energy sources,
decentralized, first driven by the tech pros because they want to have their data centers,
but then suddenly we have, as that matures and the patents come off, we have, we have,
have the ability to put power generation in very small packages wherever we want in the world,
suddenly the entire landscape of economic activity and the future of humanity is transformed
like that.
And that's just the beginning.
If we push that technology, we may find ourselves in some space where we have the ability
to produce extremely large amounts of energy in a very small package.
and use that, you know, of course it'll be weaponized.
Use that for a variety of things.
But I think the guys that are speculating about these phenomena being driven by the existence of almost point sources of unlimited energy functionally may make sense out of things that otherwise are really hard to wrap your head around.
Well, we're in for a very interesting future, one way or another.
Yes.
Yeah.
And it doesn't have to be dark and demonic.
Hopefully not.
If we let these bastards have their way.
What is this, Jamie?
Make a small correction.
That video I showed you apparently isn't real, not a real company made by a Berlin filmmaker in 2022.
Went viral.
I found it in a New York Post article that kind of said it was real.
But.
But there were.
our plans to do something along those slides. It says at the bottom, this is getting confused with
a pregnancy robot that was announced in China in 2025. This, though, apparently also is not real.
The pregnancy robot is not real? Yeah. It was a, they named a scientist that was working on it.
It's not a real person. Look at that. That's a really. Yeah, but, but, but company work on it,
nonetheless, nonetheless, they are working on artificial. Yeah. We're, we're going to come out. So,
So see if you can find the, since you're so good at Googling or whatever you're doing, see if you can find the images of this artificial womb and I believe it's a lamb.
Yeah, no, we've seen the lamb before, but I'm just saying that the people thing is.
The factory thing with people.
Oh, well, that was obviously AI.
I mean, that was transpental.
It wasn't even a real company that was doing it.
It's synthetic images.
I don't want to give out fake news.
Yeah, good.
Well, God forbid.
All right.
We might get banned.
Well, Robert, thank you so much for being here.
I really appreciate it.
And it was nice for you to come back and under less hostile terms in the world.
Well, it wasn't hostile then.
Yeah, the world was.
No, but I think your message was a lot more hostile and it's the way it was received, you know.
Like you were received in a hostile way.
I don't think this one's going to be hostile.
I think pretty much everything that you said, most people are aware of now.
and then the other things that you're saying,
they're not far-fetched at all.
And I think there's a lot more people
that are more open to receiving information like that now
than ever before.
And some of it can be attributed to you.
That's kind.
Let's say to the community.
Yeah.
Sure.
And of which I'm a vehicle have been at times.
A lot of the stuff that I shared with you back then
was the consequence of a consequence
of a community that I was embedded in, of other physicians and scientists, many of whom were
primary care practitioners. And I was attending weekly meetings with these people. And I had
frontline knowledge of what they were seeing and experiencing. And I had frontline knowledge of the
physicians that I was collaborating with at DITRA of what they were experiencing. I was never
managing COVID patients except myself.
I knew what others were experiencing, and you gave me an opportunity to share their voice through me.
And I thank you for that.
It was a moment in time, and I think we did good.
But by God, they came at us.
It was wild.
Well, thank you, sir.
Thank you very much.
I really appreciate you being.
It was a lot of fun.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
