The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 518. Lawyer, Physician, Anti-Vaxxer, Jan 6th “Rioter” | Dr. Simone Gold
Episode Date: January 27, 2025Jordan Peterson sits down with physician and lawyer, Dr. Simone Gold. They discuss her personal story of becoming both a doctor and a lawyer, running an ER clinic through the Ebola scare, why she spok...e out during the COVID pandemic, how the machine attempted to destroy her public image, January 6th, being raided and imprisoned by the U.S. Government, and why she will not back down. Dr. Simone Gold, MD, JD, is America’s expert voice of common sense and scientific clarity in the information war against Medical Marxism. Dr.Gold is an emergency physician, Stanford University - educated attorney, and the visionary who led the pivotal press conference event that broke the spell of the corona virus panic in 2020. Creating the most viral moment in modern media history, Dr. Gold became the founder of America’s Frontline Doctors (AFLDS), the nation’s premier medical civil liberties organization. The mission of AFLDS is to provide independent information from the world’s top experts in medicine and law, empowering people to protect their health and exercise their inalienable and Constitutionally guaranteed rights. This episode was filmed on December 23rd, 2024 | Links | For Dr. Simone Gold: X https://x.com/drsimonegold Watch the film “What is A Doctor?” here https://americasfrontlinedoctors.org/whatisadoctor “I Do Not Consent: My Fight Against Medical Cancel Culture” (book) https://a.co/d/0k7mpnw
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's very unlikely that you went to the University of Chicago Medical School.
That's really hard.
And to follow that up with Stanford Medical School,
like is there anyone else who's done that?
All the doctors knew hydroxychloroquine was safe
until media told them otherwise.
I said to the world to stop living in fear.
There's no reason to live in fear.
I had no idea that was going to completely upend my life.
The First Amendment exists not just so you can hear what I have to say,
but humans have a need to speak truth.
Well, everybody who's watching and listening should pay careful attention to that.
Living in lies, I might as well be dead.
It's worse than death.
I'm in my apartment working, scream, banging on the door.
FBI! FBI! FBI!
Battery ram, 20 guys in tactical gear, huge weapons pointed at me as close as I am to you.
And I remember thinking, oh.
Hello everybody.
I had the opportunity today to talk to Dr. Simone Gold and she had quite
a story to tell. Interweaving medicine, she's a physician, emergency room physician for
20 years, a lawyer, a graduate of Stanford Law School, and she was one of the youngest physicians who ever graduated in the United
States and then also went to Stanford Law School.
So those are stellar accomplishments.
And I say that to establish her credentials because she has been profoundly pilloried
as a quack in her own words because of her stance on COVID, the COVID mandates on hydroxychloroquine more particularly,
but the mandates really more broadly,
and has also served time in prison
in consequence of her appearance on January 6th.
And so what did we talk about today?
Well, we talked about physician training
and its positive elements and its inadequacies.
We talked about the stunning lack of curiosity
that Dr. Gold emerged among her colleagues
when COVID made itself manifest on the public scene.
We talked about her experiences,
attempting to share her knowledge with regards to hydroxychloroquine and its effectiveness as an antiviral treatment, particularly with viruses of the sort that COVID was.
We talked about the consequencesth and the events there and the particulars of her so-called
participation and then the details of the FBI's pursuit of her.
In the aftermath of that event, 20 of them dressed in their full gear broke down her
apartment door and hauled her away.
And she was imprisoned for 60 days for plea
bargaining down to a misdemeanor, trespassing misdemeanor. And so like any
one of those stories is enough to occupy two hours and we managed to cover all of
them. And so if you want to take a trip through the labyrinth of law and medicine and the judiciary in the United States
and with a side trip into the, what would you say?
The complexities of the prison system,
then join us and we'll walk through all that.
So Dr. Gold, when you trained as a physician,
did you foresee in any way that you would be
like legally entangled and politically active?
I did not.
Well, so let's go back to when you started your academic training.
Where did you train as a physician?
I was very young when I went to medical school.
I started medical school at 19.
I was at Chicago Medical School,
and I graduated when I was 23,
and planned to be a physician.
And that was my plan.
My father was a doctor, and I was raised to believe
being a physician was the best thing
a person could do with their life.
There's a law in Judaism called Peku and Nefesh,
which means to save a life.
And to save a life, Peku and Nefesh was the highest honor a person could do, the best thing you could do with
your life. And that's what I thought I would be doing.
Now, how did you get into medical school when you were 19? That's hard. That's a good medical
school or a great medical school even. So how do you manage that?
I finished college, I finished high school at 16 and I did college in three years. It's
interesting that paperwork is so onerous these days.
I don't even think it's possible to get through school early,
at least in America.
So, but back then, if you worked really, really hard
and fast, you actually could go fast.
It was very uncommon.
You took extra courses?
I took extra courses.
And to be fair to myself,
when I was the youngest person in America at that time,
the day that I graduated,
there are other people who have done that.
I understand someone who was 22 at a later point,
but it is certainly very unusual.
Right, and so you graduated from medical school at 23,
and that's when you started your internships,
your residencies?
Yes, I did my internship.
I did that in Virginia.
I had planned at that time to go to law school.
I was super interested in health policy
and learning as much as I could,
just being as academic as I could.
And I moved to Virginia for a year, did my internship,
and then I zigzagged and I went to Stanford Law School.
Okay, so tell me about that.
You said that from a very early age,
you were inclined in the medical direction,
and why law, and that you went to Stanford Law School.
That's also very difficult.
Yes.
So where did you do your undergraduates?
So I did my undergraduate close to home.
I grew up in New York.
That was City College of New York.
I lived at home.
That was my parents' preference.
I was 16.
Right.
So I could drive into the city or take the train into the city.
So I was still very protected, I would say.
My father was Eastern European, just very protective.
And I finished that by 19, started medical school,
went to Chicago, finished my medical studies.
But to practice medicine in America at that time,
you had to do an internship.
So the MD is when you graduate,
but the internship is you get your license.
Where's the internship?
One year. One year.
One year.
So after that one year, I zigzagged
and I went to law school.
The reason was I really wanted to,
my vague idea was to fix the healthcare system in America.
Is that a hard one?
I thought, a lot of people suggested I should get an MPH.
It's very funny, we should return back to that,
but it just didn't feel right to me. I said, no, no, let me understand the law. Many of our founding fathers were lawyers. I just wanted an MPH. It's very funny, we should return back to that. But it just didn't feel right to me.
I said, no, no, let me understand the law.
Many of our founding fathers were lawyers.
I just wanted to understand it.
So that was what led me to Stanford Law School,
which is an incredibly difficult law school to get into.
Yeah, right.
Very small law school, 147 people.
Harvard is about three times the size.
So to get into Stanford was amazing.
And it was, I would say, the most
intellectually interesting years of my life was being at Stanford Law School.
So what was your undergraduate degree? What was your major?
You know, I don't even recall. It was some kind of pre-med.
So it was mostly scientifically oriented?
Yes.
Like something approximating a BSc?
Yes.
Right.
And so from there to medical school at the University of Chicago, Yes. Like something approximating a BSC? Yes, yes. Right. Yes. Right.
And so from there to medical school at the University of Chicago, and you did your internship,
what did you specialize in your internship?
So I was starting on a path towards emergency medicine, which is what I eventually started
finishing.
I was captivated, though, by law school.
It was just extremely interesting.
Medical school and law school are very, very different.
This all played into what's happened over the last few years.
But medical school was a lot of memorization,
a lot of learning material that was presented to you,
much like you would a grade school child.
Here's this material, memorize it, learn it,
ask, in a way, kind of approved questions. But law school was completely different. Law
school was really training you to think a certain way, a very critical way of thinking,
to go back and forth in different people's opinions. We would read Supreme Court opinions
a lot. One justice would say this, one justice would say that. So it was very, very different.
I think you don't see more doctor-lawyers because they are extremely different types
of intellectual abilities, night and day.
People think it's the duration of time for the schooling,
why nobody would be a doctor and a lawyer, that's too much.
But in fact, there's a lot of MD-PhDs,
there's a fair number of MD-MBAs, right?
There's very few doctor-lawyers,
and I think it's because you need a kind of
intellectual broad perspective to be comfortable in both, There's very few doctor-lawyers, and I think it's because you need a kind of intellectual,
broad perspective to be comfortable in both.
Right.
Completely comfortable in both.
I sometimes joke that I'm bilingual.
It's just one and the same to me.
One wasn't easier or better.
They were completely different, and I was very comfortable in both.
So I worked with physicians on the research front, well, and I taught physicians clinical psychology
for a while as well, but I worked with physicians on the research front and one of the discoveries
I made was that physicians and scientists were not the same creatures. And you just made allusion
to that, I think, in that when you were in medical school, you characterized
it as an extension of grade school, essentially, that there was a lot of memorization, a lot
of facts thrown at you that you needed to know and that you could ask the approved questions.
That's very unlike training to be a scientist, because you have to learn to think critically
above all.
And I trained as a clinical psychologist and the model
for clinical psychology was the Boulder model,
Boulder-Colorado model, and that was scientist practitioner,
but scientist first, and that meant critical thinking
because science is in large part an adversarial enterprise
like law in that regard. So how would you characterize the difference science is in large part an adversarial enterprise,
like law in that regard.
So how would you characterize the difference
in your experience at medical school and at law school
with regard to your ability to think critically?
Because you didn't say anything about learning
to think critically at medical school,
but you definitely said,
well, that adversarial training is,
you're always looking for like five sides to an argument, right? And learning how to make the case for every side simultaneously.
A necessary thing if you're going to think scientifically, right? So can you contrast
that and characterize also what you think now about medical education, not only given
your experience in medical school
and in law school, but also given everything else
that happened to you afterward.
Right, so I'm so glad to be able to sit here
and explain this to you.
They could not be more different.
Medical school is a lot of work.
It would be 12 hour days,-hour days, including classes,
and you were presented with material by a teacher.
You scribbled notes as fast as you could, or you typed them,
and you would memorize them, you'd learn them,
you'd regurgitate them, and you really were only being led
to ask approved questions because you had specific material.
It might be like doing a reading comprehension test.
You read a paragraph, you ask the questions on that paragraph.
So I would say there was no critical thinking.
Certainly no critical thinking in the first two years of medical school.
It's not.
So the implicit presumption there is that what you're taught is correct.
Absolutely.
And your job is to learn it and then demonstrate that you have that knowledge.
Exactly.
Right. Exactly. Right, right.
Exactly.
When you got into the third year of medical school,
we would do hospital rotations and you'd be at the bedside.
So you were expected to read up about the disease
that the patients had on your service,
and you could ask questions about that situation,
but the senior physician on rounds
would answer those questions.
So they were still in retrospect,
in comparison to law,
very circumscribed, very circumscribed.
Why this drug?
Why this treatment?
How long should the treatment be?
How's the oxygen level?
It was very, it was almost mechanical
in comparison to law.
It was never outside the box.
It was always within the box.
If what you're being taught is correct,
then learning the algorithm is the right thing. But the problem is, is, if what you're being taught is correct, then learning the algorithm is the right thing.
But the problem is, is that often what you're being taught
is not correct, either diagnostically
or with regard to treatment.
And that can be a major problem.
That is true, but it isn't,
you're even being a smidge generous
because it's always changing, even in medicine.
It's always changing the direction of new medicines,
new treatments, new tests. So, it's always changing the direction of new medicines, new treatments, new tests.
So, it's just so different.
So for example, you would be learning,
if somebody came in with a heart attack or chest pain,
you would do XYZ, but next year,
there might be a different lab test,
and you would just add that lab test
to your group of lab tests.
You never actually deleted a lab test,
you just kept adding and adding and adding.
I mention that because our healthcare expenses are out of control. So you would never think about,
well, what's the critical improvement on this test versus that test? Let's just eliminate this test.
I came up with that very directly. There was a test when I was growing up. It was called the CK,
the CK-MB. That was elevated in heart attacks, then the troponin test came out,
that was much more specific, much more sensitive.
And I would say to my instructors,
why are we not eliminating the CK test?
It's not as specific, it's not as sensitive.
Nobody knew, we just did them all.
So you were not-
That means you're also multiplying
the probability of false positives.
You multiply false positives.
That's a big problem.
You multiply the false positives,
you chase red herrings all the time.
And I think, worst of all, you are not teaching the practitioners to think and maneuver in
new times, right?
Because they should be paying attention.
Oh, the Drauponin test, it is more sensitive, it is more specific.
I will eliminate this other test.
We were never taught to think how to maneuver and grow.
I would say we would not talk to grow.
We were taught to stay here and maybe expand a little bit.
More testing, I'm not sure if this all makes sense.
Yeah, yeah, it's making sense. Okay, so with regards to...
So most of the physicians that I interacted with were psychiatrists
because there was some overlap in our research orientation.
And one of the things also I saw was that the psychiatrists
who did research tended to outsource their statistics.
And you can't do that, right?
That's not an acceptable means of doing research,
because statistics aren't algorithmic.
They're an investigative tool.
And unless you do your own statistics,
you don't know your data,
and you have no idea what you've discovered.
And so that was...
But also, it was also
the case that like learning to analyze scientific research, that's a very difficult skill to master.
And I would say it's probably something more akin to law than medicine because you have to think
extraordinarily critically. And it wasn't obvious to me at all that the physicians that I interacted
with had been trained in the least to really critically assess the relevant research literature.
So now is that too harsh or what do you think about that?
I think you're exactly right.
So first of all, I was quite weak in biostatistics, for example.
It was not a strong suit of mine and it never precluded me from becoming an excellent physician. Right?
Right.
So we would always have classes on statistics.
Nobody was very good at them.
Honestly, it was something we all dreaded.
We're not good at it.
We are not at all trained how to recognize good research from bad research.
That's a problem because most research is bad.
Terrible.
You know, I vaguely remember it, but I was coming at this from the perspective, some
of the headlines at NIH-funded studies were so kind of foolish,
I didn't even understand why we were doing
these kinds of studies, funding them,
but we were not really taught how to finally
distinguish good from bad.
And Dr. Joseph Lattapoe, who I'm sure you know,
about a year or two years ago, he tweeted out
that one of the problems in medical training
is doctors simply don't know how to analyze data critically.
I would say 100%. I learned virtually nothing like that in medical training is doctors simply don't know how to analyze data critically. I would say 100%.
I learned virtually nothing like that in medical school and a little bit in my residency training.
And I never, I wouldn't have, I'm not even sure I would deserve a C-.
The problem is, is it's hard to learn to be skeptical enough.
I mean, psychology has gone through what the psychologists like to describe as a replication crisis,
which is their discovery mostly by social psychologists who dreadfully deserve their replication crisis
that, you know, at least 50% of what's published is simply not true.
Now that never shocked me because I presume fundamentally that if 5% of what we publish was actually true and original,
we'd be, that's a 5% improvement in knowledge, in the total knowledge base on
the research side per year. That's a stellar accomplishment, but it does
mean that 95% of it's chaff and not wheat, and that's a very, very hard
distinction to draw. And you can't just read the research literature and think
that because it's published, it's true,
because it's not true.
And that's not surprising, right?
Because it's actually hard to discover something new.
But I was struck by the fact that that, you know,
because the lay public,
and this is partly why I'm pursuing this line of questioning,
the lay public don't know how to distinguish
between physician and scientist. And physicians also don't know that and distinguish between physician and scientist.
And physicians also don't know that and presume that they're scientists.
But generally speaking, well, most scientists aren't scientists and damn few physicians are.
And partly it's a consequence of not being taught to think critically.
Now you learned that in law school and you enjoyed that, right?
And yeah, and you enjoyed that in a way that you didn't enjoy medical school, is that fair?
Yes, 100%.
First of all, I didn't even understand the difference
between physician and scientist.
But I'm validating that American medical schools
do not teach critical reasoning skills,
and they do not teach us how to analyze science, for sure.
That is a hundred percent.
That's also a major problem on the diagnostic front,
because part of being a good diagnostician really is thinking like a scientist.
Here's the presenting problem.
Well, maybe, have we fleshed it out enough?
What are the potential contributing factors? All of them.
If you go to diagnosis and then you have algorithmic treatment,
well, that's fine if you got the diagnosis right, but getting the diagnosis right tends to be an extraordinarily difficult
thing.
The diagnosis is all of it, and I'll just digress a little bit here just because I share
with you some of my training.
So I had a very unusual circumstance because I went to my internship, which was my first
year of residency, then I went to law school, then I went back to residency training.
In that three, four years, something had changed
in American medical training.
What years were these?
This was around 1990.
Yeah, okay.
So what happened was, perhaps you've heard
of the Libby Zion scandal.
What had happened in America was a young girl
had gone to the emergency department
and she was very sick and she was sitting
in this emergency department and she ends up dying. Turned out her father, I think was a reporter for the New York Times,
very well connected person and he decided that this happened because the medical residents
were so tired and sleep deprived and overworked. So in the years that I was away, in the years
that I was away, but I'm going to blow your mind a little bit, because in the years I
was away, they changed how resident physicians were trained.
Up until that moment, so in my internship, in my first year, we routinely did 36-hour
shifts.
It started at seven or eight in the morning, you go to seven or eight the next night, you
crash, you go to sleep, and then you have a couple more days of like eight to six or
eight to seven, and then you come back every third or fourth day to do that.
There's no question that it's brutal.
One night...
A friend of mine drove off the road and broke her arm as a consequence of that, a
Hawaiian physician that I know, radiologist.
Yeah, for sure.
There's something bordering on sadistic about that.
But I'm going to show you a different side of it.
So, because on the surface, into policy makers, that sounds brutal, that sounds terrible,
that sounds like it contributed to Libby Zinon's death or caused her death, right? That's how it sounds to all the politicians.
Okay. Whoa. I did that my first year very hard.
Went to law school, went back to residency, and the rules had changed.
The rules had now said, no, no, residents have to get enough sleep.
So the work schedule became on every fourth day, the first day was like eight to six.
The next day was maybe eight to 10 p.m.,
then the third night,
basically you worked during the day
and you had a night float.
So you could work eight or 10 hours,
then a night float would come in.
This is maybe how nurses worked,
which is you have a shift work,
graveyard shift maybe and then cross over,
but you didn't have responsibility
throughout the whole cycle.
So doctors became shift workers.
Now this was a terrible decision if you want the doctor to understand disease from the
bedside.
If we're not scientists, right, we can't analyze the data, we the data really understand
it, then our best hope of helping patients is to really understand the disease from the
bedside, right?
To be with that patient for 36 hours.
What happened when I went back to my residency
with the change in work hours was resident physicians,
young physicians were no longer following a disease
kind of from beginning to end for the progression.
They were checking in 8 a.m., checking out at 6 p.m.
The crisis would happen at 10 p.m. or midnight
on the night float.
The night float didn't care about the patient,
didn't really know about the patient.
You come back in again that next day,
it became very sluggish, you didn't see the disease
progression from beginning to end.
A person would come in with congestive heart failure
and there was never a situation anymore
where you follow the disease to see its whole natural course.
Right, right.
This-
It's very unlike clinical psychology practice
where that wouldn't necessarily be,
that wouldn't be necessary.
It wouldn't be necessary, but for physicians you want...
It's not as much of a crisis.
When you see a mid-career physician who's 50 years old, you want them to have gone through
that full cycle of seeing the disease at some point in their career.
The only way you can have that is if you're really in for uninterrupted.
When they switched it to shift work, I saw firsthand the shift in how doctors interact with patients, treated patients.
No longer did you feel such ownership over the patient. This was your patient.
It was like kind of your patient for eight or ten hours. Then it was somebody else's patient for eight or ten hours.
Then it was your patient again.
So there's diffusion of responsibility.
Diffusion of responsibility.
Yeah, that's generally a bad thing.
And you didn't follow the disease the whole time. So in my first year…
Did that increase finger pointing?
I think yes, but it was deeper than that.
Nobody was really in charge, quite frankly.
It was just a checkbox or template that was in charge.
Before that, if my patient crashed in the middle of the night, I was there and I knew
it and so I became a better doctor through those exact experiences.
That was gone once the work hours changed.
And I don't think policymakers had any idea
that there would be a downside, right?
It sounds all positive to protect the work hours.
I think it sounds like-
That's the iron law of unintended consequences.
I just wanted to share that.
Right, yeah, yeah.
Okay, okay, so let's go back to law school.
So now you really enjoyed that.
And how would you say it shaped your thinking about medicine and also about
your future as a physician lawyer?
Like you had a completely different kind of training.
So now you're looking at the medical profession from a different perspective.
Now you go back and you do another internship.
What this time is another emergency room?
I did my internship was one year.
I was rotating internal medicine,
all the disease of the internal organs,
and then I did three years of emergency medicine.
In between, I did law school.
I just kept myself very focused on the law in those three years.
I moonlighted as a doctor to support myself.
So I was working as a doctor.
This is during law school. Yeah. 20 hours a week. You moonlighted as a doctor while support myself. So I was working as a doctor. This is during law school. During law school, yeah.
20 hours a week.
You moonlighted as a doctor.
Yeah.
While you were at law school.
Yeah.
How'd you do at law school?
I did very well.
I only became a quack much later.
Oh, yes.
Okay.
Well, this is, yeah.
Well, okay.
Well, so yeah, that's very difficult what you did to go to Stanford Law School and to
do well at Stanford Law School and to work
simultaneously as a doctor. Yeah, that's hard. So, you know, kudos to you for what that's worth
from me because I know how difficult that is. So, okay, so, but now you come out of law school,
but you decide to continue as a physician. Right. So I think looking back at my life, I
looked at the two
and I didn't have a clear path in my mind
as to what a doctor lawyer would do or could do
other than politics.
I didn't have a clear path.
Why'd you do it then?
If you didn't have a destination in mind,
and those, as you said, those are very different forms
of academic pursuit.
What do you think it was that was driving you
in both of those directions simultaneously? Now, you said something earlier about a dream, a vague dream of fixing
the healthcare system, which is a very vague dream and also a very grand dream and ill-formed,
but I suspect that that ambition has something to do with what motivated you in both directions
simultaneously.
Yes. So I did two short stints in Washington.
One time I worked for the Surgeon General and one time I worked for the Senate Labor
and Human Resources Committee.
When did you do that?
One was around 1990, another was around 1993 or 94.
Place that in your academic career.
First was at the end of medical school.
I worked for the Surgeon General.
And that was before your internship?
Correct.
Okay. And how long did you work for the Surgeon General? Just three general. And that was before your internship? Correct. Okay. And how long did you work for the surgeon general?
Just three months.
And that was in D.C.?
Mm-hmm.
Okay. So you got a taste of that.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
When I went back to medicine, I missed the opportunity to make a change in health policy.
So I went to work for the Labor and Human Resources Committee, which kind of
oversaw Medicare and things like that. And that was in the middle of my training as an emergency
physician. I know this is hard to follow because this is a very unique path. Nobody really does
this sort of thing where they zigzag back and forth. Yeah, right. Right. So policy, law, and medicine,
fundamentally. I was very interested. You're intervening on three of those.
I kept looking for this, but when I went back to work for the Senate Labor and Human Resources
Committee in Washington, DC, I was working for Senator Jeffords, who's an independent
from Vermont.
And I really think the system was too dirty to fix the health care system.
That was my conclusion.
How long did you work for him?
Also, just three months.
These were just three months.
And that was, put that in your academic career?
That was during my emergency medicine training.
After law school?
After law school.
Okay, so you had two doses of being involved in the policy world.
Correct.
The second time that you got involved, you just said that you felt it was too complex,
too, you said dirty though.
I said dirty, not complex, dirty.
Okay, those are different.
Before I worked for Senator Jeffords, I thought politicians didn't get it right because they
didn't understand, they didn't know, and as soon as a smart person who's on the inside
can advise them, they would be able to fix it.
You know, it was very idealistic.
Yeah.
I thought, oh great, I'm a bedside physician.
I could help them understand this.
No, no, no.
They understood the problem and they couldn't get the job done.
So I was there and I remember they were talking about Medicare going bankrupt, by the way,
same song, different year now.
And I remember talking to my senator about that.
And the obvious solution was to raise the age.
Because when the Medicare Act was signed into law,
it was, I think, 1965, and the average life expectancy,
I think, was 67.
Fast forward in the 90s, Medicare still kicks in at age 65,
but life expectancy, I think, was 76.
Well, they never planned to have 11 years of Medicare coverage
versus two years of Medicare
coverage. People were anyway, when you looked at all the options, you know, overcharging
people.
And arguably, if you're not a coal miner, you're not necessarily old at 65.
Correct. Times have changed. And also the other options of funding Medicare were worse.
They were just, you know, make all rich people pay for it, which by the way, would never
filled in the gap.
Right.
Limit options like you do in Canada.
Rich people are pesky, but they're scarce.
But they're scarce. That's a good one.
Limit options, like much like you did in Canada.
You know, just give access.
Just let people die or help them.
But that was not with made, right?
Yeah.
That was not, that's not palatable to Americans.
So we heard from all these people, correct, yet.
We heard from all these people about ways to fix it.
And everyone, every single advocacy group
that was presenting to us was in favor
of raising the age from 65 to 67.
We had Ralph Nader's group,
we had the American Heart Association,
we had, I think the American Medical Association
was on board, everyone. We had, I think the American Medical Association was on board.
Everyone.
We heard from like 12 company organizations.
And over here, we heard from one organization.
That was called the AARP.
Right. American Association of Retired Persons?
Persons, I think.
I was unfamiliar because I was young.
And that was the only organization that spoke against raising the age limit.
Right.
And I remember walking with my senator and I said,
well, you know, obviously the solution is,
you know, of all the solutions, it's to raise the age limit.
And he looked at me and said,
Miss Gold, do I know what the most powerful organization
and lobbying organization in DC is?
AARP.
Those people vote.
And my heart kind of sunk because I knew
that's the only solution that I could see at that time was just to raise the age limit.
And nobody would have it, nobody would do it, nobody would talk about it.
And I just remember feeling pretty discouraged.
That, well, what's the point of my day care?
This is a diagnosis problem.
Again, you think you know how a system works till you actually investigate it and try to change it and then
you find out that the problems you thought were the problems aren't the problems and
the solutions that you think are solutions won't work for reasons you didn't know.
Correct.
Right, and that's actually part and parcel of starting to think like a scientist.
I read this great book years ago called Systemantics, which I would highly recommend
to anyone watching and listening.
It's a cult classic and it consists of about 100 axioms
that you have to adopt if you're going to learn
how a system works.
And one of the axioms I never forgot,
which I think is absolutely brilliant,
is the system does not do what its name says it does.
Right, and so you have to approach a complex system like you're approaching an organism that
you know nothing about and it'll have a name but that's not what it does. You can figure out quite
quickly what it actually does by looking at what it spends most of its time on or its money. So I
learned this in Alberta. I worked for Alberta Social Services
when I was like, I don't know, 18, something like that.
I had a summer job that turned into a year-long internship.
So when I got some policy experience.
And Alberta Social Services at that time
did not have sufficient data gathering capacity
to answer the question, how much of the money that we spend goes, is spent on the end user?
Well, the answer was very little because, like with most charities,
almost all the money spent by social services was spent on the administrators of the social service program.
And so, you know, your first pass diagnosis of a system like that is that,
well, it's
clearly there to employ the people on whom it spends the bulk of the money.
Now, a side effect might be the delivery of some services, maybe, but if they're not even
collecting data about whether those services are administered, you know exactly how low
on the priority list that service actually is. And so you were trying to, you were looking at a system purely from the perspective of
logic, I suppose, something like that, and very unidimensionally, not understanding,
for example, that the AARP is not to be messed with no matter what.
Right, right.
So, right.
Why don't they just raise the age a month a year?
Like does that cause too much, is that too administratively complex?
No, no, no, I don't think so. I think it's just that the AARP was telling the politicians what to do, and so they did it.
They weren't even messing with it. And that was a huge life lesson.
And I learned for me in my life, I don't need to spend my time doing that.
At least practicing medicine is honorable.
And so I shifted just back to practicing medicine.
Because at least-
Well, see, that's a problem too, isn't it?
You chase out the good people.
Well, yeah.
Yeah.
Well, and to say something on the side of the politicians here, just momentarily, like congressmen in the United States, they spend a
tremendous amount of their time traveling back and
forth between DC and their home constituency.
They are running for election almost all the
time, right?
So it's like, that's hard, that's hard, right?
Because what, they're on a two-year cycle.
I mean, they're just campaigning all the time. And then they spend, if I remember correctly, they spend 28 hours a week fundraising, right,
and they can't do that in their offices because that's illegal. So they have these ratty, horrible
offices instead with drop ceilings and fluorescent lights and they're full of mold and that doesn't
help them out at all. And they're on the bloody phone for 28 hours a week,
basically acting as telemarketers for the parties.
Well, God, how demoralizing is that?
And then, so you have that 28 hours a week,
you have your travel, you have your...
Well, and that's completely independent of the fact
that you have way too much to learn
about absolutely everything.
So now you're entirely dependent on your staff.
All of that's demoralizing.
And the consequence of that demoralization is, particularly because they're campaigning
all the time, they can't take a long-term view.
And everybody who can leaves.
Well, so then what the hell do you do about that?
I mean, that's, that's, you can throw up your hands and leave and you said, well, you'll go back to medicine
because it's honorable, but you know,
it is a real problem when the most competent people
can't involve themselves in the government
because it would mean, it would mean,
looks like it's the sacrifice of something
potentially more productive and useful.
Okay, so that is why you decided,
you decided to go back to medicine. Okay, so that is what you decided. You decided to go back to medicine.
Okay, so you left the policy field
and what was your conclusion at that point?
You were just, you were gonna stay away from the political?
That didn't work out, by the way.
You can't avoid your destiny.
Well, yeah, right.
You really can't.
If you asked me-
You can kick and scream about it.
You're going in that direction.
I wanted to fix the healthcare system. I mean, that was my childhood dream.
Yeah, why?
And what do you mean childhood?
How early?
I think, first of all, my dad was a doctor.
I was raised to be a doctor.
I always knew I would be a doctor.
But the system was so dysfunctional
that I think I just always wanted to make it better.
Just it was so disf-
There are things that are wonderful.
The doctor-patient relationship with a caring doctor
and a patient that they know with modern
medicine could be beautiful, could be amazing.
You have a smart advocate who's on your side.
That part's amazing.
The actual practice of medicine is terrible.
That's why so many good doctors go on free mission trips.
They donate their time and their money to practice medicine in third world countries
so they can actually do some good.
I mean, it's a beautiful thing to be a doctor.
That's the truth.
But the practice of medicine in America,
and probably Canada as well, is, you know, it's not great.
So I've always known that.
Is that a consequence of bureaucratic complexification?
I mean, what's the essential problem?
You know, I mean, I love being a clinical psychologist
when you could still do that and tell the truth,
which wasn't that long ago.
But there were no intermediaries.
So I'll tell you exactly the moment it started changing.
Yeah.
I learned this in my health policy law class
from Professor Hank Greeley in Health Law and Policy
in Stanford.
Lyndon Johnson Medicare Act of 1965,
the preamble paragraph says,
nothing in this Medicare Act should be construed
to interfere with the practice of medicine.
And I was sitting there as a young doctor,
law student, and I raised my hand and I said,
every single thing Medicare has done
has interfered with the practice of medicine, 100%.
That's what I learned.
That's why they put that preamble there to begin with.
Nothing in this, everything came from interfering
with the doctor-patient relationship.
Everything, there's intermediaries.
There is no more doctor-patient relationship
for most patients.
It's in a big insurance company right in the middle,
or a big hospital corporation right in the middle.
Or in Canada, you just can't get a physician.
One in five now with no physician in Canada.
What's happening in your country, we could talk about for days.
Yes, it's a series of catastrophic miracles.
It couldn't be worse.
Yeah, well, we've substituted dying for pain,
which is not a great substitution.
We write a lot about the maid. It's horrific. Yeah
It's horrific. Yeah. Yeah. Well, it's gonna get worse before it gets better
So so I just I think I just always kind of I think my dad as was a brilliant man
He was a Holocaust survivor comes to America does extremely well smart amazing guy wanted to be a doctor
I was a doctor. we were all doctors.
But we also saw patients in our house,
that was something my dad did,
he would do hospitals and nursing homes all day,
and then we'd have patient hours at night.
So I saw the care between a doctor and a patient,
so I know what it can be, I know what it can be.
And I'm holding onto that and saying,
I don't understand how in modern times,
why can't we also have that?
Right. Well, yeah, right. That's what you want. But you've entered you have so many that's a relationship, right? I mean you should have a relationship with your patients, right? Basically a doctor like another educated consultant when you pay a lawyer
I'm sure you have a lot of lawyers
You are they're working for you. They're not working for the government, they're not working for a big corporation,
they're working for you to serve your interests.
If they're not good enough,
you move on, you get a different lawyer, right?
Why do we not have that in medicine?
Because the world has told us medicine is too complicated.
Medicine needs an intermediary.
The patient can't understand medicine.
Even Trump during COVID couldn't understand,
he sort of left it to the experts.
I am done with that. A person can make their own medical decisions with the advice of a
smart consultant exactly like they do when they buy a house, when they fill out their
tax forms, when they see a lawyer or an accountant. There's nothing magical and so black box that
a patient can't understand. I'm an emergency physician. I could explain any disease to
a person, either the two or three minute version or the 15
minute version.
Right, right.
100% of diseases can be explained in three minutes or 15 minutes.
Well, if the patient isn't in charge of their own decisions, they're not going to comply
with the recommendations of the physicians anyways.
Compliance is a big problem and you don't get compliance from patients unless they trust
you.
Unless they trust you.
Yeah, and that's a hard thing to build, especially when people are in crisis.
So one of the last things I did in preparing for this discussion was read your Wikipedia
page.
Oh, gosh.
Yeah, I know.
It's really something.
But this is worth highlighting because I've noticed this before.
It's very easy to damage someone's reputation.
It's very easy to damage someone's reputation. It's very, very easy. And I think the reason for that is that each of us can in potential interact with a very
wide range of people, very large number of people.
And so if you ever read anything or hear anything about someone that isn't above board, the
apparent cost of writing that person off is basically zero because there's so many other people you can turn to.
The downside of that is that it's unbelievably easy to destroy someone's reputation.
Now, when I read your Wikipedia page, it's just like a never-ending stream of assaults on your character, essentially.
And there's a reason I'm highlighting that. It's because, and it's also partly why I took the route into talking to you today the way I did, because even though I know that people's
reputations are savaged continually, I've seen that firsthand, I know dozens of people
who are qualified to whom that's happened, I know that as well as anyone could know it,
I would say, it's still effective.
It's still effective, you know, because I thought when I read it, I would say it's still effective. It's still effective,
you know, because I thought when I read that, I thought, well, just who is this woman? And like,
why are all these terrible things being written about her? And does she know what she's talking
about? And so part of the reason I wanted to inquire into your academic history was to find out,
well, you know, what's your base level of qualification? And so it's very interesting
to note that your base level of qualification is extremely
high, right?
It's very unlikely that you went to the University of Chicago Medical School.
That's really hard, particularly given how young you were.
And to follow that up with Stanford Medical School, like is there anyone else who's done
that?
Right.
But that also makes you unique in another way.
Like one of the things that marks people out for peculiar destinies
is that they operate at the intersection of two rare skill sets.
Right. Because you're rare as a physician,
because there are not that many physicians,
and you're rare as a lawyer because there aren't that many lawyers.
But physician lawyers, it's like, how many of them are there?
Well, when I graduated, I actually, there were about 3,000 to 5,000 in all of America.
Right, right, right. So that's a very rare intersection, and then you have the public policy experience as well.
Right, so at some point, this is intersectionality on the academic side, you get enough intersections, so there's like one of you, right? Then you're poised if you're competent to make a real qualitatively distinct contribution
because there isn't anyone else who knows what you know.
Okay, so let's move from your background
which we've delved into in some depth to,
well, let's tell us what happens next
and let's move towards COVID
and everything that transpired around that.
So you spent three years in an internship in emergency, internal medicine?
A residency in emergency medicine.
Right, that was three years.
Okay, okay.
And then now you're an ER physician.
Correct.
Okay.
And so how long are you and where, where are you?
I moved from New York and then I moved to California and I spent the next 20 years working as an emergency physician full time.
Where?
Oh, various hospitals.
Okay. But it's all in California.
Correct.
Why do you make the fateful decision to move to California?
Oh.
You were at Stanford.
Yeah, I knew California.
I had some family personal reasons to be there.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay. And you spent 20 years.
Okay. And how does that go?
I had a perfect reputation. Okay. So detail that. Let's talk about that. What does that mean? So among your patients, any complaints?
There were no, there has never been any complaints. Lawsuits?
Nope. And by the way, to be in a practicing emergency physician and have no malpractice lawsuits. Yes, I know. Very uncomfortable.
Yes, that's exactly why I'm investigating that because the default is that you're going
to get nailed by, well, you'll come across a nice psychopath at least once during your
practice who will take you to task and make your life miserable.
Especially in emergency medicine because there is no deep doctor-patient relationship.
Patients do not have loyalty towards you.
Well, things can go very wrong.
Things can go very wrong.
No doubt often do, since it's an emergency and all that.
20 years.
20 years, and I would say I was very well respected.
Many people loved working with me.
I don't think that any of you.
So your patients didn't complain?
Nope.
Your colleagues?
Loved me.
Nurses?
Loved me.
That's particularly telling, right?
And it's a challenge.
As a female physician to have the nurse, there's a whole dynamic going on there.
And I know that I was very well respected and well loved because when I was attacked,
many of them stood up for me.
So it's not my fantasy wish.
Not only were there no complaints, there's no paper trail against me.
You can't find anything negative said about me prior to 2020.
It doesn't exist.
Right, right.
I had the same experience in university.
Yeah.
Right.
And, and so it's useful to have that kind of background, although it's not
necessarily enough to defend you, but it's a start.
It's a good start.
I remind people of that.
I said, just try to find something nasty that someone said about me prior to 2020.
It isn't there.
Right.
Prior to 2020.
Okay.
And out of that, prior to July 27th, 2020. Right. Right. prior to 2020. And out of that prior to July 27, 2020. Right, right. Okay,
well, okay. Well, so let's move to July. So you have a perfectly and are you happy? Are
you happy? So I got married, I had two children. I was working as an emergency physician. I'm
Jewish, I was exploring Judaism more. It was great. I was living in Beverly Hills. Doing
anything with your legal training? I was not. I did a little bit of writing, a little bit of policy writing for some independent
people on the side, and I was always very interested, but I was in the years of raising
kids and working.
Right, right. Any pull toward the political during those times apart from the policy investigations?
So I'm super, obviously, as it turns out, as a human,
I'm super interested in fixing systems.
I'm super interested in efficiencies.
But politics, no.
So I never even considered going to politics.
Did you do any work at
the systemic level when you were an ER physician,
or were you mostly concentrated on patient care?
Thank you for the question because everywhere I worked,
I was always pulled in to do something, to fix how the ER was running. on patient care. So thank you for the question, because everywhere I worked,
I was always pulled in to do something,
to fix how the ER was running.
For example, an efficiency that you
could have in emergency rooms where
I don't know how it is in Canada, but in America,
there's long lines.
It's very inefficient.
And I said, well, we should put a doctor up front,
right in triage.
So because at least a third of our patients
could go home immediately.
Right, right, right. So it's called PIT, physician in triage. So because at least a third of our patients could go home immediately. Right, right, right.
So it's called PIT, physician in triage.
So physician in triage is super efficient.
So I was a big proponent of that, for example,
and everywhere I worked would pull me in
to organize the systems.
And that's also when I learned
nothing really ever gets done typically.
You know, I write up these big plans,
I do tons of volunteer hours.
I'm like, this is how you have to do it.
I was like that eager bee, like, this is how you do it.
It'll be so much better, be so much more efficient.
And then, you know, it would fall flat.
There's...
Yeah, I don't know.
So tell me if it works the same way in large hospitals, I suspect.
So when I first went to the University of Toronto, the first year I was there, the chair
asked me to serve on the psychology departments.
We had a position on the planning committee for
the faculty and they were making a five-year plan.
I thought they wanted to make a five-year plan,
so I actually worked on it a lot.
I consulted with a lot of my colleagues and we came up with
a list of recommendations that were appropriate and implementable and well-designed.
And they, not only did they ignore all of them
in their final report, which was quite remarkable
to actually ignore all of them,
despite asking for input, continually input.
As soon as you hear that word, you should be wary.
It's like, we want input.
That's like
content in the legacy media. And then they put forward their own plan. And then the plan they
implemented bore no relationship whatsoever to the plan they produced. And then, but there was
more to it too, because part of the reason for that was that many administrative positions change hands quickly.
And so even if you have established an arrangement with someone that's genuine,
the probability that it'll be implemented over, say, a three-year period or a four-year period is very low because,
well, if they're competent, they're going to be promoted upward.
And if they're incompetent, it's not going to be implemented anyways.
And so you get to a point where you can't plan over more than a certain time range
because the system itself is so fluid that nothing can, nothing's going to happen.
And people also, this is something else I learned very painfully.
It took me a long time to understand this, even psychologically,
is the typical person is far more risk averse than opportunity hungry.
And so the general attitude, especially for a career
bureaucrat or a middle manager, is not,
will this do any good?
It's, is there any way my name could be associated
with this under any conditions if anything ever went wrong?
Right, right.
Risk minimization.
So that is so disappointing about human nature.
That took me forever to realize people didn't want to actually fix the problem.
I got a tip from a colleague of mine when I was so disappointed that the plans, much
like you had, nobody's implementing them, nobody's doing these better plans.
And a friend of mine, a colleague said, don't you know why they have hospital committees?
Why?
That's to delay things.
He goes, I successfully delayed this policy
that I didn't want to have happen for two years.
And when I could delay it no longer, I quit the committee.
That was advice from a colleague.
So I was a little bit, well, you know what?
I'm not going to, one thing I won't do is waste my time.
So I was kind of done.
That was the last planning committee I ever sat on.
That was correct.
Oh, okay, I see. This was a colossal kind of done. That was the last planning committee. That was correct. Oh, okay, I see.
This was a colossal waste of time.
That's not going to happen again.
I'm not wasting my time.
My time's up.
But then you can see what happens there too,
is it means the committees get occupied by people
who have nothing else they would rather be doing
than wasting time.
So that's exactly it.
But I want to share with you because it's interesting
and became relevant later.
I was working, I always had a heart
for working with minority communities, poor,
underserved communities.
So really, that's what I did all of my career.
I was working in just super hardcore.
You might have heard of The Boys in the Hood, the movie took
place in Inglewood.
It's like super hardcore.
Like I was the only white face there.
And I liked that kind of work, I gravitated towards that kind of work.
So I was working at Centenella Hospital for a lot of years in the heart of Inglewood, California.
Happens to be about 15 minutes or so, 20 minutes from LA International Airport.
Now UCLA is five to 10 minutes further, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center is five to ten minutes further. Those are both world-class research institutions.
2014 rolls around and we get the Ebola scare and the powers that be decide that my hospital
should be the receiving hospital for any potential Ebola patients that somehow flew
from West Africa to LAX.
So they're landing here now.
This is a foreshadow of what came during COVID.
This is 2014.
And I'm puzzling over this thing, wondering why you would be bringing Ebola patients to
this poor inner city hospital that has no resources.
I'm saying that you could probably be in central Mexico and it would be about the same.
And I was stunned by it.
Now my peers, not thinking, thought this was sort of exciting.
And I, as an ER doctor, love the excitement of emergencies, but this made no sense.
So we start the Ebola training that we're going through, and they break out these hazmat
suits that we were seeing done covered, the blue, right?
And I was like, well, this doesn't stop the Ebola virus.
Like, why are we doing this?
Like, why are we putting on paper, blue paper, like, over our body?
Like, what do you...
And nobody was asking those foundational questions.
And I was the highest-ranking person at the time there.
And so people listened to me.
And I said, you know what I'm doing if a potential Ebola patient comes here from LAX?
What are you doing, Dr. Gold?
Yeah.
I'm leaving.
And people were so shocked to hear me say that, right? patient comes here from LAX, what are you doing Dr. Gold? Yeah, I'm leaving.
And people were so shocked to hear me say that, right?
Because I'm compassionate and I'm kind.
I said, no, no, no, no, no, no.
It's not even about me.
I said, who's being put at risk?
My poor inner city black nurse who just shows up
for work that day, she's supposed to be exposed to Ebola.
I don't even know, I'm the doctor.
I can like stand back and just be thinking.
She's the one who has to draw blood.
She's the one who has to get close to the the patient and you're saying because somehow the CDC is failing to capture someone 7,000 miles
You know way they're on a flight and they're coming to the port inner city hospital and they're not going to UCLA and they're not going
To Cedar signing that's okay. I said this is not okay, and I put my foot down and I completely refused and it was very stunning
This is 2014.
This was 2014 and people were stunned
because I'd never reacted like that before.
But let me tell you what the problems were.
One, it was irrational what they were trying to teach us.
Blue paper, not gonna stop the Ebola virus.
Two, don't bring me someone who managed to fly 7,000 miles
and somebody in Washington is going to say,
but that's okay, we'll just bring him to this like
poor hospital that has no resources.
If she gets stuck with a needle
and dies from Ebola two days later, that's no big deal.
I had a huge problem with that and it taught me that whoever's making these decisions either
was totally incompetent or completely compromised.
How come they weren't going to Cedars-Sinai or UCLA?
Why?
Like, did they lobby better?
Did they say, we don't want the Ebola?
It made no sense.
It made no sense whatsoever. I hope I'm being clear. It made no sense. It made no sense whatsoever.
I hope I'm being clear.
It's just that I couldn't live with it.
So I stopped that policy.
And fortunately, no potential Ebola patients came.
But I was horrified that my nurses were expendable.
That was the only calculation that could have been.
I mean, anybody with any resources didn't go to my hospital.
You went to Cedars-Sinai, you went to UCLA.
Why was the choice made in Washington, D.C.,
that we'll send it to the poorest, worst, least provided,
least equipped hospital in the area?
Yeah, well, it seems kind of self-evident
when you put it that way.
Well, I was on the grounds.
Okay, so you objected to that,
and what happened as a consequence of you objecting?
You know, if a potential Ebola patient had landed,
I would have walked out.
It didn't happen.
I was a beloved doctor, so I stayed.
Did that do anything to your reputation?
I'm not even sure people understood what I was saying.
Yeah, okay, okay.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Okay, so, okay.
And they had a very hard time finding doctors in these poor, innocent hospitals, so I was saying. Yeah, okay, okay. You know what I'm saying? Okay, so okay. And they had a very hard time finding doctors
in these poor inner city hospitals, so I was fine.
But that was a foreshadowing of things to come.
I forgot about it until years later.
Uh-huh, okay.
Okay, well let's fast forward to July 27th, 2020.
Okay, tell us about July 27th.
So all through 2020, as we started hearing
about this China virus, which is how it was referred for five months or so,
until China threw a hissy fit,
I was researching everything.
And honestly, I was excited.
I'm an ER doctor. I like emergencies.
For me, this is exciting stuff.
I read every journal article that came out,
and I'm talking about it with my peers,
and I was discovering that my peers were completely incurious.
I was shocked. I don't incurious. I was shocked.
I don't even know.
I was devastated.
I was devastated.
I didn't know that my peers were not curious about diseases
and emergencies.
I still don't want to talk about it.
How did you know that by that point?
I mean, what was revealed to you with that new information that you hadn't seen before?
I think up until that point, you would talk to your peers.
A person would come with a hip fracture, they'd come with an pneumonia or an asthma or a heart
attack.
And so you're all doing kind of the same thing, right?
Because it's kind of the right thing to do.
It's local as well.
And so you just, you know, you maybe ask a question here or there, but it was never outside
the box.
None of us were outside the box at all.
But all of a sudden we had a brand new disease,
brand new thing, and nobody knew what to do.
The whole world doesn't know what to do.
But I was reading all the literature
and it was patently obvious that hydroxychloroquine worked.
Now it wasn't a coincidence.
Justify that, Cleve.
The reason we knew it worked is because SARS-2 virus,
which caused COVID-19, was 78% identical to SARS-1 virus.
SARS-1 virus was 15 or 18 years earlier, and chloroquine fixed it.
Chloroquine treated it.
So very early on, scientists doing research in the labs
discovered that hydroxychloroquine also stopped the SARS-2 virus.
Not a surprise.
They're like, oh.
Draw the connection between those viruses again.
Okay, so COVID-19 was caused by the SARS-2 virus.
Everyone kept calling this the novel coronavirus.
I have no idea to this day.
Talk about misnomers, which you're an expert at.
What was novel about it?
That's a good question.
It was 78% identical to SARS-1.
So there was a SARS-1 18 years earlier.
And it was a coronavirus. How much overlap between...
78% identical.
Yeah, and with the typical coronavirus because corns are coronaviruses.
Oh, I'm not sure. I don't have it precise.
But they're in the same cat class. So they must be, they must overlap substantively.
So the SARS-1 respiratory virus, also from Asia, chloroquine was very helpful and it worked and there you go.
So when SARS-2 came around, scientists in China,
scientist DDA Raoul in France,
started studying hydroxychloroquine,
which by the way is mechanism of action,
it's like the same as chloroquine but safer.
So if you see a chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine study,
they're equally good.
So they start studying it, and lo and behold,
unsurprisingly, completely unsurprisingly,
of course it worked against SARS-2,
it worked against SARS-1.
Not a shock, 78% identical.
So I'm reading on this.
And this is in 2020?
This is in, yes, February of 2020
was when the first studies came out.
I don't think in January 2020, but this is very, very early.
This is when you would start,
there wasn't any Coronavirus Task Force Committee,
I think until February or March of 2020.
So the studies that show-
So this is well before the lockdowns,
before the general panic.
Oh, absolutely, yes.
15 days.
So why were you on this so quickly?
Because I'm interested,
because I'm an ER doctor.
So for me, this was fun.
Don't mean to sound like crazy people.
Well, that's how scientists think. Right, it's like, oh my God, there's an emergency. I'm an emergency doctor, this was fun. Don't mean to sound like crazy people. Well, that's how scientists think.
Right. It's like, oh my God, there's an emergency. I'm an emergency doctor. This is coming to
me. Let me read about it. I was so curious about the whole thing. Every free minute I
was reading about it. I mean, this is, I can't even describe it. You're like, if you were
an emergency, if you loved cars and you're a car mechanic and there's a new car that
comes out, you'd be so excited to like check it out. Right? Okay. I'm an emergency doctor.
There's an emergency all across the world, nobody knows what it is,
let me die, I'm getting all excited, prepared,
and I know that they're going to be my future patients.
Like it wasn't just my ego satisfaction,
it's like I'm going to be on the line.
And everybody was panicked, which I don't panic,
so I was even more excited, I'm like,
let me just be calm and read everything.
I read everything, there were studies in China.
So is that a marked characteristic of yours not to panic?
Yes.
So are, so I'm curious about that psychological,
like low to low anxiety?
I'm probably a little bit neurotic.
I would say.
Okay, but you don't panic.
I don't panic.
Why not?
Why not?
Yeah.
I just think you can figure it out. Yeah, okay. That's a good answer. I just think you can figure it out.
Yeah, okay.
That's a good answer.
So you think you can figure it out.
That's your presumption.
That's my basic presumption.
Yeah.
Your father had everything to do with that?
I mean, I think you grow up as a daughter of a Holocaust survivor.
Maybe you're, you put things in perspective.
I mean, I wouldn't panic over things most Americans would panic over just because I
knew what my father went through.
Yeah, I'm more curious about your implicit presumption that if a problem comes your way, I wouldn't panic over things most Americans would panic over just because I knew what my father went through. Yeah
I'm more curious about your implicit presumption that if a problem comes your way you can figure it out because that's not a presumption that
Most people share it's relatively rare now
It's that's a very effective presumption if you also happen to be the sort of person who can figure things out
But most people can do more of that than they think okay, so you're excited excited about this, you're on the, you're keeping up with the cutting edge research,
you conclude, and you're not even doubtful about it, that hydroxychloroquine works, and there's
reason to presume that, the literature shows it, but there's also more compelling reason, which is,
well, we've seen this before. There've been many, many respiratory viruses
and pandemics throughout human history
and also even in America.
Like every year.
Like all the time.
So I was a little, I mean, I'm a human too
and living in America who pummeled all the time with this,
it became the subject,
it was the only subject people were talking about.
So I would say I considered the possibility that I was wrong. So I would say I considered the possibility
that I was wrong. So I would say for the month of March, I was cautious, like I
would come home from the ER and I would strip my clothes off and change my clothes
outside and I'd wash up before I'd go in. So I thought there's always
possibilities. There's something I didn't know. Like maybe this is the only virus
in the history of the world to act a certain way.
And so I was humble about it.
You know, I said, well, maybe there's something.
But everything that people were saying
was contradictory to everything.
It contradicted Public Health 101,
it contradicted how viruses worked.
Everything was off.
So in March, when our country,
I don't remember exactly when Trump said,
we'll do 15 days to stop the spread.
It was March, I think, March of 2020.
And that's also when March 15th or something is when he spoke out in
favor of hydroxychloroquine and the world turned upside down for me right then.
So that's a really critical moment.
Up until the day Trump mentioned-
Because he was pilloried for that.
Yes.
I think it was March 17th. He said it so on March 17th
Donald Trump spoke in favor of hydroxychloroquine now. I had been talking to my peers for the previous two months
What do you think about hydroxychloroquine? Yeah, the response was
And I said well don't aren't you don't you aren't you gonna use it when you get your first Colvin patient and people like?
Yeah, probably, I guess.
I don't know.
Incurious.
Like, nobody was reading, which I found weird.
Okay, all right.
March 17th, he gets Pillar Reed for hydroxychloroquine.
My next ER shift?
Oh my gosh.
Nobody – oh no, I'm never going to use that.
That's terrible.
That's dangerous.
Terrible stuff.
And I looked at my peers, but they're my peers still.
I didn't know what was coming. I was like, huh, why?
Like what, like last week you didn't care. Oh no, it's very bad, very dangerous. I'm
like, why is it? And they start saying whatever they heard on the news or on Facebook. And
that was my lesson number two. Wow. You're just in curious. You're, you're literally
like a Facebook. Like why do people pay you as a doctor? Like I didn't get it. Like you
were literally just saying what, what they said at a press conference. I thought it was weird that they went from not caring
about hydroxy, no problem, to saying, oh, verboten. Now, a couple months-
Yeah, well, that's that sensitivity to, what would you say, reputation savaging. It's contagious,
right? If you associate with someone whose reputation is being damaged, then it affects you.
So I hear what you're saying.
That is a good point.
I happened, that ER job where I do most of my work was in a politically kind of conservative
area.
It's where Kevin McCarthy is the congressman.
So I don't, it wasn't like a hatred of Trump in that area, but the world had come down
against hydroxychloroquine.
Right.
And my doctors. And why was that? I... Why was the, why did the world come down against hydroxychloroquine. And my doctors...
And why was that?
Why did the world come down against hydroxychloroquine?
Well, we know the answer now.
We know the answer now.
Well, let's lay that out just briefly and then we'll return to the story.
Right.
First of all, in real time, it was bizarre people coming out against it.
It's 70 years approved by the FDA.
It's completely denied across the world.
It's over the counter.
Oh yeah, so those are the reasons.
Well it turns out in America to release the vaccine on an EUA, an emergency use authorization
schedule, the prerequisite is that there's no other treatment available.
Oh yeah, so that's the damning clause right there.
If anything else worked that had been pre-approved, you couldn't do it.
By law, you would not be able to release the flies for derma shots.
So what's the campaign then from the pharmaceutical companies?
What orders go out to make hydroxychloroquine verboten?
Everything happened to hydroxychloroquine. So starting the middle of March 2020, you were, I mean, it was like poison.
People were scared, people were rejected, specific policies that I know you wouldn't
know, CVS, the chain pharmaceuticals were instructing their pharmacists not to prescribe
it.
Like if a patient came in, the pharmacist would get a red box flashing on their screen to double, triple, quadruple check
hydroxychloroquine safety.
So pharmacists at the drugstore were being empowered to
interfere with the practice of medicine, which in America is
illegal.
In America, pharmacists is only allowed to dispense and to
clarify mistakes or dosage, some kind of error.
So they can clarify.
They're not there specifically by law, not allowed to interfereense and to clarify mistakes or dosage, some kind of error. So they can clarify it.
They're not there specifically by law,
not allowed to interfere with a doctor's decision.
All day long, that's all they did.
So if you found yourself a doctor who would prescribe it,
the pharmacist blocked it.
The hatred on hydroxychloroquine was huge.
The World Health Organization came out.
It was unbelievable.
This is when I really learned how bad the science was.
I'm sure you're familiar with the Lancet article
that was retracted, or maybe not, we have different worlds.
Lay it out.
So, Lancet is one of the three most famous
medical journals in the world, and so if you say
you're published in the Lancet, that is just career.
JAMA and British Medical Journal?
I would say, yeah, I would say those are the exact,
or New England Journal of Medicine,
and then maybe JAMA before.
But it's like number one, number two in the world,
you don't get published in JAMA by accident.
It's utterly impossible.
There's committees, there's layers of finance.
It's very hard.
It's very hard.
And it takes a long time.
Years, and you have to be,
coming from a prestigious university,
and there's a team of people,
and so I just wanna be crystal clear,
you cannot be published by accident in the Lancet.
You have a team of researchers,
you have a team of researchers who are approving it,
you have an editorial board that's doing it.
There's a bunch of stuff.
And those are career-making publications.
Totally, you got published in the Lancet,
you could then go off and be a professor,
associate professor, et cetera.
So this Lancet article comes out
saying that hydroxychloroquine was unsafe
and ineffective for COVID.
And the headlines from this Lancet study went all around the world.
Everybody who was paying attention at the time
read that study, and all of a sudden,
it was considered poison and terrible and awful.
But independent researchers looked at the study
and cried, fell.
It didn't make sense.
The numbers of people they had in the study
were in the tens of thousands.
I think they said they had 60 or 70,000 people in the study. I'm not certain of the number.
It crossed like five continents, hundreds of hospitals, and everyone's scratching their
heads. They're like, how did we not hear about this study? And how did they compile data
from all over these geographic locations in different languages, in different countries,
like so rapidly? So the independent physicians who became America's frontline doctors raised their hands, published online, they said this doesn't make sense
and they complained. And so the Lancet got a little embarrassed. The Lancet goes to the
authors and they said show us the data, show us the proof. They could not prove it was
authentic. They had no way to prove it. And the Lancet had to publish a retraction.
I think it was only about three weeks.
So kudos to the independent doctors who called foul.
The Lancet had to retract it.
I've never in my career seen that.
When the Lancet retracted, it never happened.
Now, do you think that the headlines
from its retraction made worldwide news?
They did not.
Let me tell you what happened from the original Lancet study. The World Health Organization and studies all across the world on hydroxychloroquine's
effectiveness in COVID were halted. They said, oh, you've got to stop doing them. It's very
dangerous, ineffective. It was almost impossible to restart those studies again. It interfered.
So, and the other thing is that the damage was done. The reputational damaged hydroxychloroquine
was complete forever more to this daychloroquine was complete.
Forevermore to this day, people think it's unsafe.
And that was what it was.
And I witnessed this in real time.
I'm watching this.
So what's the effect on you?
So, well, I was the most, just on a personal level, I couldn't believe that my peers,
who were more than capable of learning all of this, I was no more sophisticated than
they were, were not, they were not paying
any attention and they simply followed the headline du jour. That's it. Oh, today when
the EEW for hydroxy was authorized, oh, we can use it today. And again, I said to my
peers, what changed today? And they'll literally quote Facebook or a press conference. And
so I learned that doctors were not curious and I didn't understand why patients are paying
most doctors
because you could get this stuff right off of Google
or right off a committee hearing.
And it was very demoralizing.
The good part about the internet was I found many,
many other independent doctors online.
Yeah.
And we all came together and we said,
we've got to like speak up about this.
This is just terrible.
We didn't know how because we were very censored.
Anybody who put anything about hydroxychloroquine,
like if you had the word hydroxychloroquine in a tweet,
you were taken out.
So you'd find creative ways of writing.
You'd write initials, like people would get it.
But you couldn't do it.
But one by one we found each other.
That was Twitter, Facebook, same problem?
All 100%.
It was worse on Facebook than even Twitter.
It was everywhere.
But we all had like a burning passion to say the truth,
the independent doctors.
So we found each other.
And I would say maybe there was a hundred that we found
just all over, just people who just like me
could not be silenced, couldn't stand it.
And so I said, you know,
we've got to speak to the American people.
And I also know America is the world.
And so I just started reaching out to people
and I started doing interviews
and started getting my reputation attacked. And then I decided, you know what, I'm going
to do something that was just going to put doctors in front of the world. I said, let's
stand in front of the Supreme Court because actually it was supposed to be the Capitol,
but there was, it couldn't. So we weren't in front of the Supreme Court. And I said,
let me just bring YouTube influencers. That's what I called social media influencers.
Said, let's bring some YouTube influencers and doctors,
and we're just gonna stand there.
Who'd you bring?
Who were the YouTube influencers?
I randomly called people.
So the biggest name was actually was Breitbart News,
which was an individual.
And then I think everybody else was just random influencers
who just showed up.
These are people who are upset.
Right, but with Breitbart, you're going to get the right-wing tag instantly too.
Right, but you know, so we're just doing our thing.
We doctors were giving education.
We spoke for hours on the science, you know, it's 78% identical and hydroxychloroquine
is safe and all these things and policy.
And then we did that in a room, but then we walked over to the Supreme Court.
And I remember the Breitbart guy videotaping it, looked at his peer and he said,
we have 178,000 concurrent viewers.
I have no idea what that means. And so I say to him, is that good?
Is that bad? Like, I have no idea. He's like, we've never had anything even 10% of that.
I'm like, whoa, that's interesting. Your life's over.
So I had no idea. We stand in front of the Supreme Court.
I don't know if you ever saw it because it was taken down very quickly.
But I said to the world, you just stop living in fear.
There's no reason to live in fear. There's early treatment available if you should want it.
Masks don't stop. Inspiratory viruses.
And, you know, this is going to be fine. Like, let's not have lockdowns.
We had about 12 doctors up there,
Dr. Joseph Lattapoe, a future Surgeon General.
We had pediatricians, we had internists,
we had orthopedists, a bunch of us.
White coats, all that.
I had no idea that was going to completely upend my life.
We were just speaking truth, and that was July 27, 2020.
Uh-huh.
And I didn't sleep again, about 36 hours or 48 hours,
because the world, my world just was lit on fire.
After that, or?
Yes.
Yeah, okay, so I walked through that.
So I was a completely private citizen.
I had perhaps 100 people on Twitter, friends and family.
That's it.
And one week later, I had 101,000 followers on Twitter. And one week later, I had a hundred and one thousand followers on Twitter
in one week. When they talk about overnight, it was literally overnight. Coincidentally,
two days after the White Coat Summit, there happened coincidentally to be a big tech hearing
in Congress and Zuckerberg was in the hot seat. And congress Congressman asked Zuckerberg, why did you take down this video of doctors?
And he says something like,
well, it's dangerous disinformation
and you're looking out for people.
And I remember being shocked.
Zuckerberg knows my name and is talking about me.
It was very surreal.
And everybody asked me to be on media
and I did a lot of TV shows.
And I also got fired from my jobs.
I was working two ER jobs.
One was in this more conservative area.
The other was, which I don't talk about too much, I was working for Native American Hospital.
I would go down once a month or once a week and I would live on the Native site and work
with the Native population. And I told you earlier on that that's kind of where my heart is, just to help people.
They were very appreciative people and they both summarily fired me.
And what was the reason?
It was very clear.
I got a text message from one, which I still have, which says,
they loved me, by the way, loved me.
And they said, I appeared in an embarrassing video, so I couldn't work there anymore. That was
the exact wording. I appeared in an embarrassing video. Wow. Wow. I just and so on a human level
as a psychologist I had trained a long time to be you know well paid and have a job that I enjoyed.
And you had a reputation, a good reputation. I had a good reputation. I started being called a quack everywhere.
Everyone called me a quack.
I collected 87 pages of media that had attacked me.
Huffington Post was the most clever
because what they did, they clearly had expected.
They still exist?
They do.
They still have experience.
Barely.
Right, but they must have experience
with defamation lawsuits because what they wrote
was a group of people in white jackets
claiming to be doctors.
Oh yeah.
Right, like death by like, right?
I thought, oh, I can't really sue them
because that's true.
Oh man, that's so psychopathic.
We had CBS, we had CNN, everyone defamed me.
Everyone called me quack.
The other thing, everyone quoted each other.
People didn't even look what I said.
It was gone, it was off the internet.
You couldn't even find it. So I- Right, so people couldn't even look what I said. It was gone. It was off the internet. You couldn't even find it.
Right. Right. So people couldn't even refer to it. I wonder if Zuckerberg had been instructed
specifically by the Biden White House to dispense with that.
We know that now.
Oh, and?
We do know that now.
Is that a direct order?
I don't have proof of that. But Fauci has been asked under oath about my organization. He said, I don't recall what she said with everything.
But later on, there was a lawsuit, Missouri versus Biden.
And it came out that the Biden White House was censoring like crazy.
But if you remember, this was during the Trump White House when I was getting massively censored.
So, media was just defaming me.
So, in that time, but just on a human level,
it's a very frightening thing to be fired
and also to know that I would not really be employable again
as an emergency physician,
which is a very high paying profession in America.
But if these hospitals weren't going to have me,
other hospitals were not.
And I will tell you, I was scared.
Now, I was always frugal, so I had enough money
to live on for a while, but that was my career
as an emergency physician.
And then-
Oh, and your reputation.
And my reputation.
I think in retrospect, I was very, very hurt
by the reputational damage, but I was much too busy
to focus on it.
Everyone told me to bring defamation lawsuits
and I had a choice to make how I'm using my time.
Like, I collected the data
because it's evanescent, you know, it disappears.
Defamation lawsuits, they're very difficult
and they take forever.
They take forever, so I, how am I gonna spend my time?
So I put it in a pile over here, but I was busy.
The whole world was contacting me.
So a week later, I had 101,000 people on Twitter, and I started
getting so much support by the world that I realized, oh, people might want to hear
what I have to say. So I just stepped into a new lane, a new role. But it was scary,
like, especially in that week, I didn't know how I'd support myself. You know, you can't
go to work as a—
So how did you end up— Okay, so talk to me about that transition, okay?
So now you have 100,000 followers on Twitter.
And so, and you're, you observe in that massive opportunity.
So tell me how you negotiated your way forward and how you put yourself back on like relatively
stable financial footing, assuming that you did.
Like how did you, and how long did it take you to
to make the shift?
Yes, so when I realized that I was fired, it was scary.
I didn't know how I'd support myself, but I was very busy.
The whole world descended on me.
Everyone in the conservative side wanted to interview me.
So I made a decision.
Did you think you were a conservative at that point?
No.
Well, how would have you classified yourself politically?
The ironies, I had taken, like a year before, I had taken one of those little tests that
show you where you are politically.
Quadrants, yeah.
I was dead center.
Uh-huh, okay.
So you were a centrist.
Isn't that right?
I would say I'm a, I believe strongly in the Bill of Rights, which nowadays is being maligned
as being right wing.
But the Bill of Rights, I believe, is really the center between anarchy and tyranny and I'm probably slightly towards anarchy than tyranny
And that's where I would put myself which is I believe in free speech
I believe in the ability to defend yourself. I believe in the government minimal government
So these things are now considered very conservative and did you believe that at that point as well? Yeah, okay, okay
I if you asked me I might have said libertarian, not really fully understanding, but I voted
Democrat much of my career.
I would have said I was pro-choice.
I would have said, you know, my children had all their shots.
I had shots.
I didn't, you know, I thought the government was irresponsible a lot of the times doing
dumb policies.
But I voted Democrat.
But mostly you were working as an emergency.
Mostly I was just working.
Right, right.
I was just working.
Am I conservative?
I say the things that we now call conservative values were not solely conservative values
in the past.
I mean, now in America being patriotic was considered conservative.
Not wanting to kill babies, you know, like in the sixth month of pregnancy, that's considered
a hardcore
conservative value now.
I don't process it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, as-
No, I was thinking back then, I know things have shifted so bizarrely now that there's
no telling.
I would have said I was kind of centrist.
Maybe a little right of center, maybe a little left of center.
I always appreciated Dennis Prager, I liked what he had to say. But I was not particularly political.
I voted.
Right.
I didn't...
Okay, so now you see an opportunity.
Do you see an opportunity that quickly?
Well, I admit...
Or is that desperation as well?
No, no, no.
I was almost like a crazy person.
I was possessed by having to spread the truth.
I mean, I was possessed.
Like, I can't stand lies.
Lies are what led to my father's reality of the heart.
That's for sure.
I stand on truth.
So I couldn't believe the doctors were lying, the media was lying, the government was lying.
Journals were lying.
Journals were lying.
That's the worst, I think.
It was so painful that the journals were lying.
Oh yeah, it's so bad.
And then when you start looking, you're like, oh, a lot of other people do know, like the
former New England Journal of Medicine author, Marcia Angel, I think, who wrote a whole book
on the journals not telling the truth.
And then I start discovering that a lot of people are not telling the truth.
But in my personal life...
What's the book?
I have to get back to you on that.
What's her name?
I think it's Marcia Angel.
She wrote a book many years ago about how the journals are not telling the truth.
And she was a former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine.
So you'll be able to find it.
Yes.
And I had made a decision though at that time to spread my message.
And so I in my mind, I said, I will speak to any large group that will have me.
That was my decision.
And about two weeks later, somebody called, I had many calls, I did as many as I could.
Daystar called me, I don't know if you know them, but they are a Christian television network.
And I said, am I free that day? Yeah, I am. I'll go.
And it turns out they would fly me down there and put me up in the hotel.
And I was like, wow, that's so nice.
You know, I wasn't even used to that.
And I show up and I discover
it's a very big Christian organization.
They would laugh if they heard me say this,
but I'm Jewish, I didn't know, I never heard of them.
But I had made a decision,
I'll go to anybody who'll have me if I can.
Right, I'll talk to people who will listen.
So I'm sitting there and I'm being interviewed by them.
And in the middle of it, something clicked
and the stars of Daystar, the lambs,
turned into their camera and Marcus Lambs said,
we want you to donate to Dr. Gold something like,
she said something very nice about me
and goes, and we are gonna match every dollar
that you donate.
And I went like this.
I mean, you could see on the air, I was like,
I was like really stunned.
And his wife, who's co-hosting, said,
no, no, he doesn't do this for everybody.
Like, I had no experience.
I was like, huh.
And then I went about my life.
And I'm doing this, that, and that talk.
And about a month later, I got a check
for something like $179,000.
And I remember thinking, first of all, I could exhale.
Probably people want to hear what I have to say, and I'm probably, I'll be able to keep
saying it.
So I didn't think past that.
I knew I could eventually do something in life.
Like, I wasn't worried about me, eventually, but I was worried I couldn't keep talking.
And now I realize I could keep talking.
So why was that more important?
You kind of alluded to it. You made some allusion to, well, your father's circumstance.
And you said something that we bounced over very quickly.
You said that the catastrophe that enveloped the people
around your father was a consequence of lying.
See, that isn't something that everybody knows, right?
Because people think, well, the really naive people think
that if you see a dictatorship,
you have a dictator and his henchmen,
and they're oppressing a whole mass of freedom-loving people.
And if you just take out the dictator,
well, then democracy will bloom.
What they don't understand is that, what would you say?
The dictator is just the biggest devil in hell, and in a really totalitarian state,
every single person is lying about absolutely everything they say and do, all the time to
themselves and everyone.
And the totalitarian state is actually the grip of the lie.
The dictator is just the, he's the face of the lie, that's all.
But every time someone in that totalitarian state lies, they're participating in their
own demise.
In Solzhenitsyn detailed out, I thought this was so remarkable, that there were nowhere
near enough committed communists to run the Gulags.
The prisoners had to run them.
Right, right.
There's a totalitarian state for you. It's an inmate run prison and the
prison is lies. Right. So why did you know that?
That is a great question. I couldn't, I found it more difficult to live with lies than anything
else. Nothing else mattered.
Why? But speaking the truth. I think living in lies sucks your soul,
sucks your energy, you're depressed,
you can't wake up, you wake up,
but you don't really wanna get out of bed.
There's no reason, there's nothing to do.
For me, living in lies, I might as well be dead.
No, it's worse.
It's worse than death.
That's hell, eh? Hell is worse than death. Right, it's worse. It's worse than death. That's hell.
Hell is worse than death.
Right.
That's a hard thing to understand.
I had to.
But I'm very curious about why you knew this.
It's very telling because that makes your willingness
to seek opportunity and your desire
to be able to keep speaking.
That explains why that's paramount.
Now the reason I'm making a case of that is because,
well, I don't know how many physicians leapt to your side,
but I've seen how many psychologists in Canada
have leapt to mine, and it's basically zero.
Right, zero is a very low number.
And so even though what has been done to me,
although not particularly successfully yet, could has been done to me, although not particularly successfully yet,
could easily be done to psychologists, and they're all being compelled to lie in Canada,
as are the physicians, but people won't speak up. So now you did, and you wanted to, and you put that
before even your concern about what you were going to do economically after your jobs disappeared. Okay, so that's weird, right?
And I don't...
You tied it a bit to what had happened to your father.
But I don't understand how you knew this.
I just can't imagine why you would want to live
in a perpetual lie.
I can't even think of anything harder.
Short-term gain.
Well, I will tell you, maybe this will help you as a psychologist. Once a psychologist, always a psychologist.
I was never particularly interested in things that were faddish.
So, for example, I didn't care about fashion, which is something girls usually care deeply about,
because I always knew it was just a form of peer pressure, not saying it in even a negative way.
I'm just saying I wasn't moved by it.
It didn't influence me.
So all of those things that made me different, doctor, lawyer, Holocaust daughter, curious,
not susceptible to the whims of fashion, it never...
And I also wasn't a person who lived very grandly.
So would I be able to get by?
I mean, my income was really good. My plans for myself when this happened, the reason I was working two ER lived very grandly. So would I be able to get by? I mean, my income was really good.
My plans for myself when this happened,
the reason I was working two ER jobs
was I was going to work really hard for two years,
then I was really gonna back off.
I was saving a lot of money.
It's not like I'm immune to earning money.
But all of that went by the wayside
if I had to live in a lie.
There's just no, it's not even a close call.
Right, right, right.
No, I'm quite-
And I do, it's probably somewhat of my nature,
but the nurture element, you can teach as a parent
how dangerous it is to live in lies.
I mean, it's true, my background was Jewish,
but people think, you know, Hitler just happened
and it just, you know, just happened.
No, no, no, no, no.
There were a lot of lies to support people.
Yeah, like hundreds of thousands of them.
Yeah, but I remember, one that I remember as a little girl
is a lot of scientists were in, back I remember, one that I remember as a little girl is a lot of scientists were
in back in Germany were measuring Jews' heads and they determined they were different size
and different shape than Aaron heads.
And I remember saying to my dad, well, that's weird.
Like, why didn't the scientists, they couldn't have found that because it's not true.
And I remember thinking, that's so odd.
I think I learned that when I was 10 years old.
I'm like, well, that's so odd.
Like, why didn't the scientists say anything?
Like, were they just writing false numbers in their papers?
What were they doing that they allowed them
to conclude that the circumference of the head
was different amongst Aryans and Jews?
I remember thinking that's hell.
You're right, it is hell.
It's not death.
It is hell to live in a world where you can't speak.
The First Amendment exists not just so you can hear
what I have to say, but humans have a need to speak truth. They have that need inside of them. So it's both
machi.
Yeah, if they haven't corrupted their soul.
Right. But a baby growing up until you've, I mean, a North Korean child learns very quickly
she can't speak. But if you grow up in relative freedom like we did in Canada and America,
you have, I think, an inborn human need to speak and be heard,
and all of a sudden, nobody was speaking truth.
I know you didn't know hydroxychloroquine is safe, but if somebody said to you, water
isn't wet, you'd say, and that you had to say that, you'd be like, I'm not saying that.
I'm like, that's what they said when they said hydroxychloroquine wasn't safe.
They were telling me to say water is not wet.
How am I supposed to say that?
And wake up every day with excitement.
I felt the same way about Bill C-16 in Canada.
Exactly.
I have to call a woman a man.
Well, maybe I would just to be polite, but I have to?
It's like, no, I don't think so.
What do you mean have to?
Exactly.
And then for me, mine was slightly different
in the sense that mine was just like a specific fact
that I knew that maybe not everybody knew,
but all the doctors knew hydroxychloroquine was safe
until media told them otherwise.
So let me, this nifty trick they did,
they're safe and effective.
So if the media and the journals had just said,
oh, it's not effective against,
maybe I would have fallen for it, I don't think so,
but maybe, but when they started saying it wasn't safe, when we've had it for 70 years,
when there's a government database called FAERS, the FDA Adverse Events Reporting System,
which keeps track of all side effects of drugs, and hydroxychloroquine is much safer than Tylenol in that database,
they started saying it's not safe. I knew that this is a big lie, and I just knew that it's soul crushing.
I didn't want to live with a lie.
Yeah, okay, okay.
Okay, so now you're developing a career
as a public speaker.
Now you have some financial backing,
so you're a little more solid.
What happened?
So we formed a formal non-profit,
and people started flooding me.
I couldn't keep up.
I had to start hiring people, but I had not enough money to hire people.
I was having tons of volunteers.
And then-
And this is happening over what span of time?
Oh my gosh.
Months?
I'm telling you instantly.
Yeah, I know.
I spoke July 27th, I was fired.
August, I spoke at Daystar.
I'm saying by November,
I had that foundational check of $170-something-thousand, but I didn't
really have enough money.
I had one person work for me, two people, and I had a bunch of volunteers.
And then they started coming out with the shots.
And I knew my lane.
Kicking and screaming was dragging into my lane, which is my lane was to stop mandates.
I didn't even care so much about the average person
who wanted to take medicine or didn't want to take medicine,
or even the average person that wanted to take the shots
or didn't want to take the shots.
I cared about everyone being lied to
so they're making bad decisions,
but I really cared about making sure mandates
never became the law of the land,
because mandates would have survived COVID.
Mandates would have become, show me your passport, stopping a passport, a social credit score system in America,
or I will die trying.
That was my mission.
So I, and I say that because everyone wanted me
to provide hydroxychloroquine to the world.
I mean, we got thousands and thousands of emails
to my non-profit, and I was like,
I'm not gonna do that.
I'm not gonna do that.
I'm not gonna do that.
I'm not gonna do that.
I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do that. I'm not gonna do that. And I say that because everyone wanted me to provide hydroxychloroquine to the world.
I mean, we got thousands and thousands of emails to my nonprofit asking how they can
get the medicine.
So for two years, that was the question.
So at that moment, around December or November 21, I had to decide, would I go and find a
way to give medicines to people, because I only have 24 hours in a day,
or would I work to prevent mandates from becoming the law?
And it wasn't even a question for me.
This was my lane.
It wasn't the medicine and the science.
Whatever how bad this was, this was temporary.
This was permanent.
Are we losing our constitutional freedoms?
So I went down this road and starting in 21,
I started bringing lawsuits against everybody,
against mandates.
And that was my mission.
Explain that.
Yes, so they started bringing out the shots for kids,
and we sued to stop that.
Sued who?
That specific lawsuit was probably the CDC.
I've brought so many, it's hard to recall.
That was our very first one in May of 21.
Yeah, and what possible justification was there for that?
There was none. And that's just-
That's just better.
Well, one of the, like, part of the reason I presume that you were so terrified of the
mandates apart from the sociological effects that you described is that enforced medical
treatment, well, first of all, that violates the Geneva Convention in a major way and for
good reason. But it's worse than that. And we haven't seen this all play out yet.
Like typical people whose eyes are open, no longer trust physicians for public
health, that's a catastrophe because it means to the degree that that was a
viable enterprise, which was quite substantive for quite a long time.
That's all that trust has to be reestablished.
And I suspect it probably won't be because, and so I have no idea what the consequence
of that's going to be.
I'm so glad you mentioned that.
So there's so much to say here.
Public Health 101 says you don't inoculate in the middle of a respiratory pandemic.
Public Health 101 never held that you inoculate everybody. It was always the high risk group and you let it kind of
travel through the society and the lower risk group like the kids kind of
spread it and then grandma maybe you inoculate grandma. Like everything was
thrown out the window and so the trust should be lost from the public health
because they completely sold out the public.
Right. They completely sold out the public. Wow, we don't even know how bad yet. Oh it's
I think trust in doctors went from 70 or 80 percent to 40 percent, and I think that that's
completely appropriate.
So in May of 21, they start saying that they want to bring the shots out to the kids.
Now this is horrific.
Why?
Because kids were not dying from SARS.
In fact, by the CDC's own numbers, children...
Well, it still says in your Wikipedia page that you're spreading misinformation about
the fact that children don't die from COVID.
And yet they don't.
And that's very well established.
Very well established.
What?
It's as risky for a child as the typical cold, I presume.
Those are basically the numbers.
And what the average person who died from COVID had like five major comorbidities and was
older than the average age of death.
Life expectancy.
Right, Jesus.
Right.
The average of four comorbidities and it was like 77, the age of death, longevity was like
76.
Yeah.
It was criminal and it was very criminal to do to the kids.
And we were worried.
Yeah, that was inexcusable.
Why are they doing it to the kids?
So that, there was a whole financial motive, which is if you put it on the vaccine schedule,
there's a lot of money involved, etc. But we fought that very hard.
And I'm pretty proud because we brought that lawsuit in May of 21, and we had been told that they were probably going to release it right around May or June.
So we worked really hard to get it out.
And in fact, they didn't release the kids, the shots to the kids until a few months later.
So I know we delayed it by a few months.
Nonetheless, the moment they rolled it out,
you asked why they did it.
As soon as the shots were legally able to be given to kids,
you then in America saw local jurisdictions
that took the power from the parents
and gave it to the kids.
So if a kid wanted to get a shot,
but the parents were awake
and didn't want to get the shot, them to have the shot,
the kid was able to get the shot themselves.
I think the age was 14 in certain local jurisdictions.
That became very clear that this was Marxism, which is to take away the parental rights
and give them to the state.
The state was subbing in for the parents.
Now that's never happened in America before.
In America, you know, the parent has a shine.
So why would you leap to Marxism?
There's an explanation for that, because that's a big leap.
I'm not disputing it.
It's a very big leap.
Big well, fascism.
Maybe not.
I think of Marxism and fascism as the same.
I would say that that I was influenced a little bit by my father growing up in a communist
nation.
So in Russia, a child who went to school, they're 13 years old, might come home from
school one day and tell their mom, oh, the dentist pulled two teeth today.
In other words, the parent wasn't involved in the decision.
Well, the kids there were invited to inform on their parents too. And it's part of classic Marxist doctrine that
the familial structure should be decimated and that it's fine for the Russians made heroes of children who informed on their parents.
So how...
But to see that playing out in the United States and to attribute that...
Well, it's obvious. You asked me how I thought, because it only took two weeks. So in other
words, the CDC said you could give it to 14-year-old kids. And then two weeks later, San Francisco
and I think Baltimore, but there's a few jurisdictions that allowed 14-year-olds to do it. And I
was like, well, isn't that nifty?
Parents are expendable now.
That's why I said it's Marxist, because you're separating parents from each other.
On the ground, it was obviously being prepared for moves like that.
Yeah.
So I felt that, and then I kept, even though we couldn't stop the shots,
I was very heck-hell hell bent on stopping mandates.
So we sued the Department of Defense, we sued UCLA,
we sued on behalf of the COVID recovered soldier,
the COVID recovered college kid.
They were saying ludicrous things like natural immunity
didn't work, all this was good.
So we had these like really robust arguments.
That's when I learned that judges were really just
also quite incurious and judges were very afraid, I think, to even
look at what we were writing.
I know that because one of our best lawsuits…
Well, they're not accustomed to having to adjudicate disputes between, like, profound
disputes between credible physicians, right?
I mean, you can't expect judges to be able to…
You know what I mean?
The judgements are going to stay intact as long as the physicians are basically playing
a straight game.
And all of a sudden now everything's thrown up in the air.
You can't even trust the damn journals.
But from a status quo perspective, a judge's natural tendency is to keep the status quo.
Yes.
Well, depends on the judge.
Depends on how progressive they are.
Or in medicine, it's to be risk averse.
Most doctors were telling, and they were telling pregnant women,
you know, don't take a bite of sushi, don't have a smoke,
don't drink a glass of wine.
But all of a sudden, roll up your sleeves and take the new stuff.
I'd never seen that in my career.
You didn't have doctors saying that.
It was bizarre.
I thought it was like, you know, invasion of the body snatchers.
It made no sense.
It was completely the opposite of how doctors usually acted.
And then when we went to judges and we said, judges, look at these,
we've got these world-class experts saying, whoa, halt.
They were just not doing their job, in my opinion,
and said they couldn't decide, they couldn't figure it out.
So they deferred to the executive branch agencies.
This is all relevant to being a doctor and a lawyer
because last summer, the Supreme Court has pulled away from the
executive branch agency
deferrals the judges acquiesced to there was a very important case called in Loper-Brite where the Supreme Court reversed 40 or 50 years of
Judges just deferring to the executive branch agencies wasn't the NIH or the CDC but other executive branch agencies
executive branch agencies. Wasn't the NIH or the CDC,
but other executive branch agencies,
judges had been given permission in their mind,
oh, you know, the executive branch agency,
unelected bureaucrat, said to do this,
I'm just gonna do that.
Well, that's what we were coming up against in COVID.
We were asking the judges in retrospect,
here's these world-class, amazing physicians saying,
whoa, Haltz, but over here is the NIH and the CDC saying, give it.
And the judges were just deferring to the agencies.
Okay, but we have some hope in America
because a few months ago in June of 24,
in Loper-Brite Enterprises, the Supreme Court held
that judges were giving too much deference
to executive branch agencies, and that's unconstitutional,
and they have to adjudicate fairly.
They can't just say the unelected bureaucrats are correct.
They can't pass the buck.
It's a very important legal decision.
Okay, okay.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, do you think that will have an effect?
I think it will change the landscape slowly going forward.
I didn't understand that so much legally
when I was bringing lawsuits in 21 and 22,
that part of the reason judges were so reluctant
to believe independent physicians is that the judges
had been trained, lulled into thinking their job
was to just go with what the executive branch agency said.
That was ripped up this summer.
Well, that'd be convenient if it was possible.
Exactly.
But that's not our system.
The judges are supposed to be independent.
So that actually, it was called the Chevron Doctrine
and it was thrown out.
And thank God it's been 50 years and it's been thrown out. So going forward bringing
lawsuits the judges can no longer hide behind the FDA said this or for example
the EPA said that. Oh yeah so that'll have effect there too environmental
protection agency. Any agency the judge has to adjudicate looking at the evidence not just give
the... Well that's well timed for the new administration. Undue deference. He said they were giving undue deference.
Okay, so we're nearing the normal closing time,
but I still want to talk to you about J6,
so we'll go a little longer.
And then I think on the daily wire side,
for all of you who are watching and listening,
I think we'll talk about your vision,
your opinion of the new administration
and what's going to happen when Trump takes office and what your hopes are and what should happen,
what role you might play there, at least I don't know how associated you are with the new people who are coming in.
So we'll do that on the daily wear side, but I would like to, well, there's still places we haven't gone and I'd like to hear about January 6th as well,
because there's a huge story there that we haven't even delved into.
So is it reasonable to leap to that?
Pretty much.
Okay, let's do that.
Yeah.
Okay.
In the middle of all these lawsuits, I have this burning passion for two to three years
just to keep speaking publicly.
And one of those days of speaking publicly happened to be January 6th in Washington,
DC.
My perspective was it was another speaking engagement.
I spoke January 5th in Washington, DC.
I spoke January 3rd in Florida, January 10th in Florida,
but the 5th and 6th I was scheduled in Washington, D.C.
Where were you supposed to speak?
January 5th, no problem, Freedom Plaza.
January 6th, scheduled to speak
on the east side of the Capitol with a permit.
There you go.
With a permit.
People don't know that.
So I was there to speak.
When I-
Who were you speaking with or to?
I don't know who organized it. I had a team at that point and there were about 20 speakers,
including incoming representative Marjorie Taylor Greene and Paul Gosar, another representative.
There was a pretty high profile speaking opportunity. People were of course speaking about their
concerns that the election was stolen. My lane was to speak about medical freedom. I had a prepared medical freedom speech that I did the day before, no problem, Freedom Plaza.
And I was intending to do the same thing on January 6th.
The east side of the Capitol building is called Section 8, and I had a permit.
And when we, speakers, presented ourselves at the location,
we were told by whoever was there that we couldn't speak.
Now-
That you couldn't speak.
They wouldn't allow, there was a stage set up,
but they weren't allowing anybody to speak.
Everyone asks me why, I don't know, still don't know.
I think because the crowds were so large.
I don't know.
If you have a large crowd, it seems to me,
you ought to let people speak.
So there's a positive energy source
for the crowd to pay attention to. But for whatever reason they would not let the speakers speak. So I was there on
the Capitol basically ready to give a speech. So I said, well, I'm speaking and
so I scampered up to the top of the steps and I start speaking, but I have zero
microphones or anything and of course within a minute or two I stop because no one can hear me.
There's a lot of people and I'm standing at the top of the Capitol steps and microphones or anything. And of course within a minute or two I stop because no one can hear me.
There's a lot of people and I'm standing at the top
of the Capitol steps and people are pouring in
by the second because Trump had finished speaking
and everyone was walking over.
And I'm telling you every minute had another thousand people
showing up there.
Because that was the time Trump had stopped.
And so I'm just standing there and I'm kind of smushed
against the wall and all of a sudden the doors open from the inside and
I was swept into the building. This is all on video
I can't imagine what they would say about me if there was no video
because you can actually see on the video that I kind of tumble and I almost fall into the building because there's a surge behind me and
I find myself in the Capitol.
And it's hard to remember what life was like before J6,
but we have a long history in our nation
of political protests.
Now when conservatives landed in the Capitol,
standing there, everywhere I was was very peaceful,
completely peaceful.
I find myself in the rotunda, It's beautiful. And I'm walking.
I'm walking between the ropes. I'm looking up here because it turns out there was video everywhere.
I didn't know. And you can see me walking peacefully in between the ropes, looking around.
And I've got my speech in my hand. And I think to myself, it is a fine idea that I should give my
speech because this is a political day and let's give a speech. And there's a lot of people here.
speech because this is a political day and let's give a speech.
And there's a lot of people here.
So I give my speech and that is also seen on video.
And it's kind of funny when I'm thinking back on it, but that was my mission.
And then a little bit later, I give my speech again.
And then an officer taps me on my shoulder and says, I have to move along.
And I am startled and look at him and then I move along and then I exit the building And that was my sojourn into the Capitol on January 6th, 2021.
And I had no idea what was being said about the day as an eyewitness on the east side of the Capitol.
No violence, kumbaya, literally grandmas singing kumbaya, moms with strollers.
And that's what it was.
It was very large.
It seemed more like the energy of a sporting event
or a concert, large.
And that was it.
And then we leave, and we got dinner,
and I didn't have any news on it.
Did you think anything of it after that?
No.
So I didn't.
And I was in DC another day, and I'm always working,
and I'm just typing away.
And people are saying it's something. And I'm like, no, no, it was nothing. And I'm in D.C. another day, and I'm always working, and I'm just typing away, and people are saying it's something,
and I'm like, no, no, it was nothing, and I'm just typing,
and I meet friends that night for dinner,
and the friends are very, very, very alarmed.
When I said we were at the Capitol,
and they said, oh my God, it was an insurrection,
it was an insurrection.
I'm like, and I start laughing, like,
what are you talking about?
Like, I just thought, I was like, no, I was there, no, no, what are you talking about? Like, I just thought, I was like, no, I was there.
No, what are you talking about?
And they were very, very worried for me.
And I'm sitting at dinner and I get a message on my phone
and there's a picture of me on the FBI's most wanted list
with my picture.
Oh, oh, that's a problem.
And I look at it.
Wow.
And my first reaction was, well, this was Photoshopped.
This is like a joke. Right, right, right.
I mean, I just, I still can't believe it.
You can't just be, I'm like, I'm on the FBI's
most wanted list.
Right, wow.
And so they have a picture of me.
Somebody handed me a megaphone and I was giving my speech.
And that was the picture of me on the FBI's most wanted list.
And I was like, no.
And I just couldn't believe it.
And then the next day I started getting a little bit worried.
But I went off four days later and I gave another speech in Florida.
And I went back years later and I watched that speech, and I never even mentioned January 6th,
just to give you perspective that I didn't think.
And then 12 days later I'm in my apartment working,
and the most horrific, loudest, I can't do it justice,
scream banging on the door, FBI, FBI, FBI, so loud
that I immediately thought, well, I can't possibly
be the FBI because this must be a Columbia cartel
coming to murder me.
Of course, this couldn't be the FBI.
Like, I remember thinking, couldn't possibly be the FBI.
Like, they would have called me, like, and they're screaming, and I'm thinking, couldn't possibly be the FBI. They would have called me.
And they're screaming.
And I'm looking and I'm looking at the person
I'm working with, I'm like, is that real?
And he says, no, no, that's not real.
I mean, it just couldn't process it.
About 30, 40 seconds go by and I stand up
and I turn to come and they break the door down
with a battering ram.
This is at your home?
Yep, two bedroom apartment and battery ram, And I turned to kind of come and they break the door down with a battering ram. This is at your home? Yep.
Two bedroom apartment and battering ram, 20 guys in tactical gear, bullet pre- vest and
tactical gear, huge weapons pointed at me, the laser sight beams as close as I am to
you.
And I'm looking at them, I'm like, that's weird.
And you asked me if I panic. And I remember thinking, oh.
And I got really calm.
And as soon as I realized that, oh, before that,
he had said to me, turn around, turn around,
turn around, turn around, turn around, like screaming.
And I was disoriented.
And I took a step forward.
Oh, yeah.
And I thought later, oh, he definitely could have been
justifiable homicide.
Right.
And then I saw the sight beams. I'm like, oh. And I got really calm. And I thought later, oh, he definitely could have been justifiable homicide. I was, and then I saw the sight beams, like, oh,
and I got really calm and I was fine, and I put this,
and they are coming to arrest me.
So the emergency room training came in handy then.
And you know what else kicked in about the ER?
So they're taking us off of handcuffs and shackles.
It was crazy.
And I said, I was very calm.
I said, hey, you took my phone, you took computers,
you took everything, could I take some cash with me?
Because at some point you're going to release me
and I'm going to need a way home.
Nope, can't do that.
I'm like, okay, I say that not incidentally.
So they whisk us off, we go to jail,
perp walk in front of the neighbors, handcuffs, shackles.
Oh yeah, so that's the point of the theater.
Yeah, the theater is, I think the whole thing was to intimidate and scare me and others.
Did it work?
You know, it backfires is what it does. Oh, at the time, yes, but now I don't think there's
anything I'm afraid of now. I mean, if you had said to me beforehand, would you be afraid
of being in prison? Would you be afraid of being in isolation? What is worse? What is
worse than that? And now I'm like, I don't like it, it's unpleasant.
But okay, like you can't scare me with it.
Like you could probably still scare you with that.
You can't scare me with that.
Like it's terrible, granted, but okay.
So, no, it totally backfires on people like me.
I mean, it's literally, it's a foolish move
if you're trying to silence people like me.
It's just backfires.
Now they don't know ahead of time who's strong and who's not strong.
But handcuffed, shackled, walking right good
in front of the neighbors, doors broken.
I happen to have had a gun in the house.
They asked me where it was, I told them where it was.
We get taken off, et cetera, all this stuff.
I mentioned just two small things
because they're trying to be as dehumanizing as possible.
One is when they release me,
I go from being like this hardened criminal
to being released in a matter of one minute, basically.
The judge is like, you can be released,
and then they shackles off,
and they literally kick me out on the street,
downtown Los Angeles.
I have no shoes, because they didn't let me take shoes,
and I said, how am I going to get home?
And the officer says, you should have thought of that.
And I just got so snippy.
I said, you know, I am an ER doctor. I know exactly what it's like to show up somewhere unprepared, and I am I going to get home? And the officer says, you should have thought of that. And I just got so snippy.
I said, you know, I am an ER doctor.
I know exactly what it's like to show up somewhere unprepared
and I wasn't going to.
And I wanted to bring money.
You didn't let me.
How am I going to get home?
I had no phone.
It was insane.
So I'm just sharing that it's done to break you.
And the other thing that they did that was very effective,
they took all of our computers and phones.
And so my piece of advice for anyone listening is have backups and not to worry too much
about what you're writing, assuming you're doing lawful activities, just have lots of
backups everywhere.
Right, right. Okay, now you went to trial for this.
Yes. So this is very funny. You will enjoy this story. So for, there's no right to a
speedy trial, even though that's in our constitution. They delayed, delayed, delayed, until the government was ready to go
and then my judge couldn't have been faster.
So I found out, I had been charged with-
Where were you tried?
All J-6 defendants were being tried
in the District of Columbia.
Nobody- Oh yeah.
That was intentional.
And none of us are from the District of Columbia.
And the District of Columbia voted 96% for Biden.
And this was a political issue.
So it's not, and it's a company town,
the largest employer, I think 30% of people,
20 or 30% of people that live in D.C.
work for the federal government.
So by definition, it's a company town,
plus it's a political trial.
So not moving was really unfair to J-6 defendants.
So I had an intention of fighting and pleading, not guilty, until I saw the charges.
So the charges included a bizarre 1512 C2 felony that's 20-year felony.
It's bizarre.
It's an accounting kind of firm.
Remember the Enron scandal?
The theory was that Arthur Anderson, their accounting firm, shredded documents.
So to close that loophole, it's called closing the Arthur Anderson loophole,
somebody 20 years ago came up with this 1512 C2 statute,
which is witness tampering and evidence shredding.
That is what they charged me and hundreds of J6-ers with.
You might ask why, because it's wholly irrelevant,
has nothing to do with us.
20 years, that was why.
This is how they got J Sixters to take
a plea.
Oh, I see. So that was the biggest club they could wield.
And we had no, and I'm a lawyer too, and I'm looking at this and I'm saying, what does
this 1512 witness tampering and evidence shredding statute have to do with me? I was literally
walking through crowds and gave a speech. I understood trespass. I understood parading.
Then we could talk about selective
prosecution like why you're prosecuting me and not
Everybody from the summer of love. You know conservatives don't get to protest. That's really the rule But this was weird this 20-year felony was weird
It had no relation at all to us and I couldn't as 20-year penalty
So this is how they got virtually everybody to roll over
They were very very eager for Jay6ers to just take a plea.
So the narrative is, oh, we all pled guilty.
It's just a terrible thing.
So when I discovered it was a 20-year felony,
I did take the plea.
I couldn't afford a felony as a doctor and a lawyer.
There was no way I could keep my life.
I mean, as a practical matter,
I would have lost my licenses.
And I had an organization to run.
I couldn't be put away for years.
It was out of the question.
And on a personal level, it's pretty scary.
So for all of those reasons, I accepted the plea.
And I plead to a misdemeanor trespass.
Now, exactly how many misdemeanors
do you find going to prison?
Low number, that's zero number that you like.
No misdemeanors in America go to prison.
So I was expecting when I showed up at trial to...
Right, and that would be an expected part of the plea too.
That would have been your presumption.
I mean, you go through the person's past.
Does she have a violent past?
Has she ever been convicted of anything?
Is this a gang offense?
Is there violence here?
Does she have a way to employ herself?
There's a lot of risks I go into
when you put someone into prison or not. Of course I didn't think I was going to prison. Now we don't have a way to employ herself? There's a lot of risks I go into when you put someone into prison or not.
Of course I didn't think I was going to prison.
Now we don't have a ton of time,
but I will share with you a very cute little story,
which is that my judge was a fellow named
the Honorable Christopher Cooper.
Now, I didn't recognize the name,
except when I showed up in court, that was Casey.
Casey was my classmate at Stanford Law School.
Class of 147 of us.
147.
Of course we knew each other.
We kind of lightly dated.
Wow.
OK?
Wow.
And I thought that if anything, he
would have been nicer to me.
Like, certainly we had nothing negative, really, but he should have recused
himself. Right, right.
Because the stand for recusal is not just conflict, it's the appearance of impropriety.
It's not the actual impropriety. It's the appearance of impropriety. I mention this
little interesting aside because the District of Columbia judges, almost to a man, are so
smug that they don't even think they're going to be overruled.
If you've been to school and dated a defendant, they're like, oh, no, that's no problem.
And I am sad as a lawyer to know that's the standard.
So the appearance of impropriety, which of course this is,
and I bring it up because when I stood before him, I felt this heat of hatred and anger emanating from him.
All the other hearings every month were on Zoom.
But for sentencing, I had to show up in person.
And there was so much hatred from him towards me
that I will never know if it was personal
or just his beliefs on J6.
And he should never have been in that situation.
That is why judges who have an appearance of impropriety
are to recuse them.
And I just want everyone to be cognizant of how the
infrastructure of fascism is kind of already there in
America.
No one's checking him.
Anyone responsible would have said, you know, get off this
case, it's crazy, there's other judges.
You didn't.
So that exists.
Anyway, he sentences me to 60 days, which was
insanely harsh. And then the Bureau of Prison puts their thumb on the scale and instead of sending
me to a camp, they sent me to a maximum.
Really?
Yeah.
So you ask me...
So you got 60 days in prison for a misdemeanor?
Yeah.
Despite your record?
Right.
Yeah, well everybody who's watching and listening should pay careful attention to that.
It's really scary.
So like, what was going on in your mind when you heard that?
I mean, were you in a state of disbelief again?
I was utterly, utterly shocked.
It's one of the few times over the past four years that when I got outside I started to
cry.
I couldn't believe it, in my whole life.
What was the shock?
Was it the sentence or the fact that this had happened?
I mean, obviously both.
No, you have the greatest questions.
Standing in a courtroom, and I heard them say
the United States of America versus Simone Melissa Gould.
This is my country.
I'm an enemy of the country.
It was so awful that moment.
But when he sentenced me to prison, it was like I couldn't even process that.
Again, I'm a person who's not prone to panic.
It was such an overwhelming moment.
It was such an overwhelming moment. It was such an overwhelming moment.
So you've talked about a couple of things that have happened to you that you couldn't believe.
Has that left you with any post-traumatic stress disorder?
Do you know? Because that derealization, you know, that sense of this can't possibly be happening,
that's a good predictor of post-traumatic stress, right?
Because that means you've been affected
at a level that's so fundamental
that it's easier to believe that things aren't real
than to assume that what's happening is happening, right?
Yes, I think so.
It hasn't changed my actions and it won't,
but it is extremely traumatic.
Nightmares or anything like that?
I did not.
I don't.
I think, I thank God for my upbringing, my personality.
No, but I have become,
I've become more cynical, suspicious.
Realistic.
Yeah, well it's a tough one, right?
To watch the judicial system do wrong.
Yeah.
I watch the judge not recuse himself.
I watched the prosecutor's lie.
Remember, I read all the evidence as a lawyer.
I know the prosecutor's lied.
So I watched the doctors and the medical industrial complex collapse.
I watched the legal system collapse.
But in a paradoxical way, I think it energizes me.
I know that there's a chance in America.
I know that we're not living in China, North Korea.
Yeah, yeah.
Right?
There's so much going on.
Well, we'll turn to that on the daily wire side.
So one final question to close this off is like, how do you do in prison?
So my advice to anyone going to prison, which could be a lot of people going forward, a
lot of people who might know, right, is have a plan.
That's the truth.
So I said, if I'm in there for 60 days,
what's my plan?
Okay, I'm going to talk to every woman who will talk to me. I'm going to interview every single woman and get their backstories.
That was how I spent my time.
And so, oh, well, tell me about that. How did that work for you? First, they put me in isolation for eight days because that's normal.
That was terrible. And so what did isolation mean? Did that mean solitary?
Solitary was a six by 10 cell
with a sliver of a window
and a sliver in the door where they passed you your food.
Oh yeah, and why'd they do that?
No explanation.
As it turns out, that was how,
I didn't get an explanation until after.
That was what they did at this prison
for women coming in for COVID.
Now this is July or August of 22, there was no COVID at all.
I was in Miami, there was no COVID.
So it was a pretext.
So they put the women there because they didn't want to staff up and put women separate.
I guess I understand the prison being slow and to get with the policy, but you could
have had women in a separate wing if they were incoming women, right?
And they're high risk.
But that's what they did for the men.
For the women, they just shoved us into isolation cells.
It was insane.
It was ludicrous.
And I didn't know how long I'd be there for.
All I knew I'd be there all 60 days.
It is the single worst thing you can do.
Well, there's that worst things probably, but it's, it's fair.
Well, solitary is bad enough so that you can punish the most anti-social people with it.
Right?
I mean, that's how social human beings are, is that you can take the most anti-social
people there are and punish them by isolating them, right?
Yeah.
Right?
So, it was terrible.
Okay, so let's just close this with an ending to the story, although we're going to continue
it on the Daily Wire side.
When did you serve the full 60 days?
You did.
They kept you in the full 60 days.
Okay.
When were you released?
September 22.
Okay.
And in a relatively brief period of time, what have you been doing since then, and what are you planning to do?
Right, so America's Frontline Doctors
was never a COVID organization.
We are Medical Civil Liberties.
So COVID mandates, you know,
we were against the vaccine mandates, et cetera,
but we put our eye and our attention and our expertise
towards Medical Civil Liberties issues.
How big is the organization now?
We have almost a million subscribers,
and we probably have about 2,000 doctors or allied
health professionals.
It's just a volunteer, it's free, it's a charity, it's a non-profit.
And the donations go really towards two things.
They go towards us submitting amicus briefs on important medical civil liberties cases.
You might know the USA v. Scrumetti case that just went to the Supreme Court.
So physician licensure.
Yes, I know that case.
The transgender is the biggest issue these days.
And then also the other lane I speak up a lot on,
America's Frontline Doctors, is on physician licensure
and making sure physicians aren't losing the license
for First Amendment speech violations.
So I fight that heavily and I fought
the California Medical Board aggressively and I won. And that was an almost three year battle. We just won at the appellate
level and there's a federal case pending that I expect we will win as well. This then becomes
precedent for future physicians that hopefully the government won't be able to pull their
licenses for speaking words that the government doesn't like.
How come you're not beaten down? Or are you? Like you don't appear to be at all. Like you, your your demeanor is very positive. I don't really see any signs of anything like
depression. Like, yeah, well, that's a lot, right? I mean, your life was thrown up in
a variety of different ways and then you were hit hard after that. It's like my
experience with people who've been hurt is the best way to hurt someone is to
hurt them and then just when they hurt someone is to hurt them,
and then just when they're getting up, hurt them again.
And then if you can do that twice,
that often finishes people.
But you're like, you seem to be cruising along quite-
So by the way, it's interesting you said that there's,
that I was hit again.
When I got out of prison, I was immediately hit
with a board member who lied about me and defamed me
and said that I stole money from my organization. So as soon as I was getting hit with a board member who lied about me and defamed me and said that I stole money for my organization
So as soon as I was getting out yeah
There's something inside of me that refuses to give in and I am grateful that we still have a chance
If I lived in China or North Korea, I would have folded up shop
You can't right so your fundamental belief has remained right, at the lowest or the most profound
possible level.
Right, great.
Well, that's a good segue to the next part of this conversation, which will continue
on the Daily Wire side, because I'll talk to you about your, well, your future plans
and your feelings about your thoughts about this new administration and what you can see
and why you remain hopeful in the face of, that's a lot, in the face of all of that,
right? So, for everybody watching and listening, join us on the Daily Wire side.
And so thank you very much for coming to Toronto and, well, telling that story, which is quite
the story.
Is it rare?
It's a lot less rare than it was 20 years ago, unfortunately.
Right, right.
And you know, maybe things will turn around and I guess we'll talk about that on The Daily
Wire side.
Very nice to talk.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, you bet.
And to the film crew here in Toronto, thanks very much for arranging this, and to The Daily
Wire for making this possible.
Well, and to all of you watching and listening for your support, it's much appreciated your
time and attention.
Yeah.
Ciao. Yeah, ciao.