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ToreSaysEpisode 2021-7-7

The document discusses a class action lawsuit against major tech companies for censorship and violation of First Amendment rights, initiated by a representative alongside the America First Policy Institute. It highlights concerns about government actions related to vaccination outreach and the perceived threat of censorship and misinformation. The narrative emphasizes the importance of free speech and accountability for tech giants while critiquing public ignorance regarding political issues.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views43 pages

ToreSaysEpisode 2021-7-7

The document discusses a class action lawsuit against major tech companies for censorship and violation of First Amendment rights, initiated by a representative alongside the America First Policy Institute. It highlights concerns about government actions related to vaccination outreach and the perceived threat of censorship and misinformation. The narrative emphasizes the importance of free speech and accountability for tech giants while critiquing public ignorance regarding political issues.

Uploaded by

leslie.work.1
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 43

Wed 07 Jul: Sow and Reap - Class Standing - Info Coil -

Harm's Vessel - Graphene Sins - Vectors - Door Karens

Operations against the people have entered a more intense phase. The
President starts the legal take down of big tech. Go door to door to kick off a
war. Sticky feet are not always good. Did anyone notice that seam? Proximity
and intentions must go together. Tangles and reactions are just two
complications. Delta waves and variants add to the mix. Truth and anger
resonate much differently. This just in, MSM is a tool. The secondary effects
of vax spreaders. An army of psycho do-gooders. United we're unstoppable,
and they know it. Stick to the honest truth because it cannot be cancelled.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

To you and me, coming. All right, so that was very interesting. First I couldn't connect
to my systems, then I had to deploy two identical streams. So and then I had interference.
I was pretty interesting. So hence the confusion. There's a lot we need to talk about today.
I mean,
there's a lot of news that we should talk about today. And I think we should start with
that. Right? We should start with the news. And that's what our President said today. And
I believe, right on time, as we said, wait till he comes after tech, and lo and behold, here
we go. If he is standing, guess who
else does? So do we? And that is something that we should focus on. In contracts those
words specifically, if he has standing, so do we
today, in conjunction with the America first Policy Institute, I'm filing as the lead class
representative, a major class action lawsuit against the big tech giants including Facebook,
Google and Twitter, as well as their CEOs Mark Zuckerberg, Sunder book J. and jack
Dorsey, three real nice guy. We're
asking the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida to order and immediate
halt to social media companies illegal, shameful censorship of the American people. And
that's exactly what they're doing. We're demanding an end to the shadow banning a stop to
the silencing and a stop to the

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blacklisting, banishing and canceling that, you know, so well. Our case will prove this
censorship is unlawful, it's unconstitutional. And it's completely unAmerican. We'll know
that we know I'll know that very, very well. Our filing also seeks injunctive relief, to
allow prompt restitution and
really restoration and you can name about 20 other things and it has to be prompted
because it's destroying our country of my accounts. In addition, we are asking the court to
impose punitive damages on these social media giants. We're going to hold big tech, very
accountable. This is the first of numerous
other lawsuits I assume that would follow. But this is the lead and I think it's going to
be a very, very important game changer for our country. It will be a pivotal battle in the
defense of the First Amendment and in the end, I am confident that we will achieve a
historic victory for American freedom.
And at the same time, freedom of speech. You just watched Newsmax TV, America's
fastest growing cable news channel now.
Alright, so they are coming full speed ahead, attacking the monopolies of the internet.
Attacking the monopolies of the internet. That is exactly what They're doing now. And I
believe that all of you are pretty much happy and fascinated with, do I really sound like a
chipmunk to many, that's pretty interesting.
If the sound is a little bit off, just refresh, because I had to two feeds going at the same
time. So that's number one. So let's just check out the fires initiated. So that way we can
identify the counters. So President Trump and my loud cat are totally against censorship.
Now which censorship, the
freedom of the internet I, again, state freedom of the internet access to information,
when they silence someone's voice, that is not dangerous, that is not a threat to anyone to
cause harm, then that means that they are sequestering information that can be shared.
That's exactly what he is
stating. And it's going to be pretty interesting. The way it comes out, it's going to be
pretty interesting. Because, as I said, you will have the boot on your face, didn't I? Lo and
behold, lo and behold, how the Biden administration is now going to be knocking on every
single American door that they
may not have listed as being vaccinated. I told you that was coming. I told you that was
coming. And the thing is, people didn't, did not tell you what pain you're going to go
through. You think by them knocking on your door, that you can ignore the door, maybe
the first time. You think if you knock and shut

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it in your face, in their face, sorry, that they're just going to go away. Do you know, I
learned something the other day, I went to a friend's house and my tire had a chalk mark
on it. And they said, Oh, they marked your tire. That's what people do when they want to
see what time you parked. And if you're still
there that how they remember, well, what if I told you they're going to mark your
residence? So that way they know where to go. But you have to think where are they
going to come first? See, sometimes what people need to understand is, is that they will
be coming to the areas that they know are strongly against being
vaccinated. They told you that they are coming door to door to ensure that people are
vaccinated. And this is where you're going to see their counter operation. Elevate. They
gave us Black Lives Matter. They also gave blue Lives Matter. Do you see? Look at you
being distracted with both Arab
springs on you know, it's an Arab Spring, basically, by creating all these faction
groups. You want to see how quick things can turn really, really dangerous. This is how it
goes. They will go to the communities that are mostly what conservative, they will go to
the communities that they cannot
record if and or they've been vaccinated. I told you, they're going to be knocking on
your door boots on your face until you realize just what's going on. I did want boots on
your face. And so many people say well, what do we do now? They can't come I have
guns. Do you think that's the answer? You
think that's the answer. Remember how they triggered the next event? First the guy
burned himself, then the kids did graffiti, then they beat an old man and arrested him pay
attention. This is what they want.
See, it's not difficult to see what they want. It is not difficult at all. And the thing is, is
that the other side as one might say is just way too stupid to see it themselves. Way too
stupid. They can't see that they are the ones that have no idea who what when where like
they don't even know half the
things that Biden was capable of and or did while president here. Allow me to show
you a fantastic q&a that Mark Dice did. That was pretty incredible. Because he went and
question people that actually voted for Biden. He asked him question He, you know, ask
them how and what I you know what you have to listen to this
to believe it, because you're just gonna see how uninformed many people are. It's insane.
Take a look.
important position. Job. What was that? I don't know. The senator was any a senator
election. I did vote. Who did you vote for? I did vote. I think I voted for Biden. You're
voting for Biden. You don't remember what he did for running for president. Before Joe
Biden became president, he had another

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job title a pretty big deal. A big effing deal. What was that? I'm not into policy not
being vice president. Oh, it was Yes. We're just saying people don't know. Really? Yeah.
Does anybody know? Two people so far did not know how. Yeah, that out of touch.
Really? What do you guys document? Exactly? morons?
Moron. Yeah, he had a job for like eight years doing something. What was that? I
honestly don't know. And to be honest here. I voted for Biden, strictly because Donald
Trump is a moron. I think Biden I think that was pretty obvious. Yeah, no, I can tell he's
got things people know. Yeah. People know
these kinds of things.

Yeah, people know when you don't even know that the guy that you voted for it used to
be vice president. Of course, you're going to be brainless and working on Delta waves.
Oh, yeah. Are you an American? Yeah. Did you vote in the 2020? election? No, no, no,
just not important. Honestly, pay attention too much. You know? I don't know. I don't
know. I when he was vice president. Hey, you're cheating. What did he do before he
became president? He had another job? Honestly, I
don't know. I don't follow politics all too much. He did something for like eight years.
rule was that. I couldn't tell you. It was a pretty prestigious position. He worked alongside
brock obama. Assistant or whatever. Or assistant or whatever. More specific, was it?
wing man, ring man. He had the title. It's like officially known as something What is it?

He was the vice pres vice president. There we go. Before he became president. He did
something for like eight years. At a job. Working doing something. What was that? I have
no idea. He was somebody it's kind of like right hand man. Oh, he was a vice president.
Are you sure you guess i'm not i'm
guessing you.
Guys, I really love Mark Dice. I mean, I don't know how he keeps a straight face. I
would have been my eyebrows would have been furrowed narrowing. And I'd be like
Dwight, and you voted. This is a big problem.
We're just talking to Biden voters to you know, just kind of see what's going on with the
news here. The Real News, real news. Not the fake news. Fake, not the fake news. That's
good. That's a good start. We need more real news in America. We do. Hey, before Joe
Biden became the supposedly President Bush
was he best known for his dementia?
Wait a minute, look at his microphone. And just as the news I freakin love him. His
microphone says the news.

4 of 43
I don't know man. No, no, no, no idea. He had a job a pretty pretty big job before he
became president. What was that?
I don't know. Darley care about politics pull out dude. He asked them they don't know
either. He was the he was all about he was Obama's vice president I saw Yeah. Okay. So
he did do some Okay, we'll go. Well,
he did anything but he did have a well, that's how I was cuz you can't remember how
impactful he was on America. Nobody remember. Oh,
yeah, Americans don't remember him except for the BFF bracelet and the fact that he
was busy doing the work for Barack Hussein Obama. Not in America, not for America.
But for the house. Head of the house, head of the house. I don't know Senator, can some
politician I don't get it. I don't know. I
don't follow politics. No, don't really care about politics. They don't care about politics,
but when a soldier comes into your face, puts a boot on your face and says you're going to
take it, I guess you're going to care, then maybe you're going to care when you suddenly
have to give half your paycheck to the
government. Maybe you're going to care when they cut your power in your electric
because you use the wrong digital currency. Or maybe when your digital currency runs
out, maybe then you'll care about politics.
He was like somebody, Assistant. In a sense. What was that? Like somebody his right
hand, man. Oh, Obama. Yeah. Okay. He was VP? Yeah. Did you vote? I did. We did.
Who did you vote for? What do you think I voted for? Joe Biden? No, no. Bernie, oh, you
voted for Bernie. I always vote for Bernie. But he dropped
out, though. We're talking about the 2020 election, not 2016. election? Oh, yeah.

I didn't vote now. What did Joe Biden do before he became the president? He's working
with Obama was specifically what was he doing? His job? Not Jenny. Thank you. He was
Yes. Yeah. Who's vice president? Barack Obama.
Hey, good for you. You're, you know, there's hope. Maybe for generations. After all,
subscribing, like,
yeah, people, should I support Mark Dice like, no, nobody's business? Like this guy. I
don't know how he does it. I cannot have a straight face doing those questions. I get really
irate. And it's, um, it's quite fascinating how, how dumb people are. And it's not because
they lack brain power. It's not
because they can't read or write. It's not because the deaf blind or mute, right? It's
because they choose ignorance, you have a choice. In life, you always have a choice.
Always have a choice. That's what sucks that you have a choice. And their choice is to
just simply exist? And what does that mean

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to them when they simply just exist? Now, we're going to talk about a lot of things
today. But we did talk about reeducation camps, and how Facebook has deployed those
now, working with NGOs and nonprofits. We've been talking about this time coming.
Okay. We've really been talking about it. And I think before we
get into what everyone is talking about, now, suddenly, everyone's interested in
graphene, they're telling you it's toxic. It's not, it's not toxic. It's scaffolding. And it's
actually quite beneficial if used correctly. But on its own, it's not toxic. And like I told
you, they've been using
graphene in your food, graphene oxide in your food for a very long time. I've told you
that they use graphene oxide in order to do what track you to see who buys coffee. I've
told you this before. But you know, it's news now. Because they've run out of things, they
now suddenly have to provide you the news. That's
the problem. See, when, when good happens. when things start in good, initiate
something. It begins to flourish. It's fantastic. It moves along. It's so incredible. And then,
unfortunately, there's a human component to that. The human component is the demand
for the control. And then you have the
others that are there to profit, they will use any means possible so that they can elevate
themselves. Rather than seek to elevate the collective. They will try everything. They will
use deceit, they will use threats, they will steal information, they will sequester
information, and they will block
out every other narrative that may pop in. Now, while some of those block outs are
done in good faith, of course, considering that it might be a counter intelligence operation.
The mistake that many make is that they fight it. There have been many times in the past
Ah, I'll just say the past six
months, where I have completely walked into something that is a complete setup. And I
know it is. In the past years, I have been not refusing to connect, or come into proximity
with actual agents against the good of the people. I've embraced them. Because in order to
understand what they're doing, you have to
listen, you have to see what they want from you, you have to see how they want it from
you. Now, when something that is good, has been taken, put under control, and
maintained, because humans always have that component of arrogance. Now, while many
can sit there and claim I'm arrogant, I'm just
angry.
And that arrogance comes out when I'm angry, only because I get super frustrated. But
arrogance in the sense of the whole operation in itself comes because humans are
executing it. That component of ego, that component of self preservation. And I've said
this before, is the ugliest quality. Humans have

6 of 43
self preservation. How will I survive? I'm only doing this because my kids said one
person to me. I've got to look after my kids. So I don't care if I throw people under the
bus. You know, that was a realization time for me back in September, when I confronted
someone and said, why would you do something like
this? Well, I got to look after my kids and be able to and I was like, so you're just going
to trash? Other people? And, you know, well, I don't know, like everybody else like, nope,
well, you know, obviously, whatever house, whatever car, whatever anything you got, by
throwing someone under the bus, because
you had to will never sit, you will lose the house, you will lose the car, you will lose
your your brand, you will lose everything. Everything that you have gained, he will take
away when it is done in the wrong direction. And we are going to be seeing that in this
chaos. Hence why someone had to step in
and say, all right, moles. I, I'll take it. Right. There's always that person that walks in
and is like, Look, you messed up, you messed up, you messed up, you let it get out of
control. Now, I'm not even related to you. But I'm going to step in, you know, like that
fight you see on a bus or, you
know, this wrongful doing in a supermarket line, right? It's always the random person
that has nothing to do with it that, that that was like, Look, man, I've been sitting here
watching this whole shit show from the beginning. And I have been sitting there
contemplating the argument of this person, the
argument of that person, and I'm watching and you both suck. So here I go. This is
what we are seeing a lot of and this is when good steps in real, unconditional good steps
and they want to civil war. They hate you. And they and that includes people with good
intentions want to control you,
because they all think you're that stupid. There are many times that I have found a
recently in the past, throughout my life, where I really do think people are dumb. And I
agree with the conversations, but then I'm like, No, there's something different. You
know, if they're, you know, there's, there's good
there, you can separate the good from the, you know, I'm jumping into the crowd in the
mosh pit. There's some good in there, there is always and this is why I am telling you,
there are no wars, there are no national secrets. There's nothing, it's all facade. You're not
only the spectator, but you participate.
And as you saw from Mark dices, you know, clip where he's questioning Biden voters,
there's those that are partaking in this that are completely mindless operating on Delta
waves alone. They're just completely separated from reality. others that are there, but
they're looking to see well,

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how can I benefit to make sure my ass is covered? They will fail to they should have
just been on the Delta waves of mindless idiots. You know, at least there they would have
been like, Well, I didn't do anything so right then they Just the people that want to join the
side that look like it's
winning. I mean, look at all of their Talking Heads, where are they going to go?
Someone yesterday, pretty much realized when I migrated to this platform, because of
what was coming with Twitter that my symbolism that I use the picture for the group was
specific, no one ever really looked into it.
Right?

how and what it meant. And it was pretty incredible, that someone actually took a look
and paid attention to it. Because there is technology. And there are things that you have
never heard of before. You can't even fathom like, maybe you've watched it in a movie,
maybe you thought of it. But there are
things that if if the, if the public actually knew a small percentage of the truth, lots of
them would be jumping off roofs they wouldn't believe in. And advice, I said this, so many
times, there will be so many people that are going to be hanging their heads in shame, for
attacking the good guys.
Because they thought they were the good, you're no longer the good guy. When you're
silencing speech, you're no longer the good guy. When you enjoy others pain, you're no
longer the good guy. When you think of you instead of all, this is how it is. So where do I
want to go with this? I want to introduce
you to a guy. We're only going to listen to a bit of him. He's a noble otter, and his name
is Sir Paul, Nurse. I want you to listen to him for a second. Because here, he's going to tell
you what life is. And now we're only going to see some what we hear some of it here
some of that. But it's really important
to hear what he has to say. And he tells you who he is.

Take a listen. 35 years ago or so, yeah, no. But how are you? How are you doing
through this, this period of strangeness in the world?
Well, it is a bit strange. But I have to say, I'm sitting in the institute now. And we have
been very lucky because we could had a PCR testing from March onwards. And we've
tested our colleagues and staff every week, now twice a week. And so that's allowed us to
be largely open for the entire period. Sometimes
we've reduced numbers, the infection rate too high in London at the moment. So we
reduced it to maybe, but it's and I mean, have you had any problems because of that, in
fact, from nine months, so we knew that yes. And right. I mean, no, we've got a real
positive. So that leads within

8 of 43
12 hours, sometimes it might take a day for taking some time out to speak with us. I
want to let everybody see you, Brian.
For some time, really good to see you. Yeah, no, I remember those times, we would
join you in your office at Rockefeller University and just have a tea and hang out though.
Those are the offices much smaller now. I didn't notice. Yeah, I wasn't gonna say
anything. But I did notice, you know, that's what
happens. But you have this new book, beautiful new book. Let me make sure I get in
front of the screen here. What is What is life? And we're going to spend some time talking
about that. But before Do you mind if we just have a little it's often nice for the audience
here to get a sense of your own personal
journey not to go into fantastic detail. But you know, where you were born, what your
interests were early on, just to get the ball rolling with that?
Yeah, I'm very happy to do that. Well, I'm Would you believe from my accent I come
from the UK. I mean, really, and I was brought up in London. And I was brought up in a
non academic family working class family as the only one in my family to stay on at
school after age 15. got really interested in science quite
early on mainly through you, would you believe astronomy, physics and also biology
and natural history and managed to get into university took me some time I wasn't graded
examinations and I had some difficulty getting in, I managed to fail a rather basic
examination, which was required
for all entrance to university which was a basic qualification in a foreign language and I
managed to fail it fringe, six times it was a record, I think, a world record. But anyway, I
went to university
on that, so So do you think this is a pet peeve of mine? Do you think it's important that
graduate students have a second language? how vital Do you think that requirement is?
I would love to have a second language. Yes, I agree. But honestly, if it was demanded
of me, I'd be sweeping the streets. Right. Right. Right. So, you know, let's put it in
context. So, yes, I'd love it. And yes, of course, it's right to expect that type of brick, but
I'm quite good at other things. So
it's not that I'm completely hopeless and everything else, but not foreign languages.
Presumably, you failed it because you didn't stay hard, right? I mean, no, no, I studied so
hard, Brian, you've got it all wrong. I really, really tried. And it and for two of those
failures, I didn't have
any other I was working as a technician, in Guinness brewery, actually a brewery that
made beer. And that's my only task academically for the entire year was to sit this
examination and still managed to fail, it was complete, no hoper, but they let you in
obviously, at some point, yes, they let me in I, I made a

9 of 43
case. And but they they gave me one condition. And the condition was, I had to do
French for one year at the university. And this is quite entertaining, I ended up being
allocated one person in the class with the most junior French as assistant professor. And I
remember sitting down in front of him, and he said, Paul,
you don't want to be here. And I don't want to be here. So we're going to do a deal. And
the deal is this. At the end of this, I have to give you an examination, I'm going to give
you 500 words of scientific French to translate into English. About a third of the words
are in English in the first place.
Because it's sign to brain, I'm allowed you to take I'm allowed the examiner to let you
take any book into the into the examination. And I'm going to allow you to take a
dictionary. And I am going to guarantee that if you just look up every word and put it in
approximately the right order, I will pass you not
well, but I will pass you and I don't think we need to meet again in the rest of this year.
It's been I don't think it would happen today, though.
That is fantastic. Well, look, it's been it's humanity that benefited from that French
teachers generosity of spirit. So we can't we can't fault him or her for that. So then you go
into university and and when did biology sort of grab you as? Yeah, it grabbed me
really science grabbed me. And then I wasn't sure whether to go to physics or or
biology. My daughter, one of my daughters is a professor in physics or in Geneva in the
Large Hadron Collider. And I could have perhaps gone in that direction. But what I
thought was working at physics, the problem seemed
so big. And in biology, somehow the problems were smaller. And as a consequence of
that, what I thought is, maybe even if I wasn't great, I could make some contribution to
knowledge. Whereas I wasn't sure I could do that in physics. So I went for biology. And
maybe that's even true, because, you know, we play
around biologists with smaller things. And you discover more about the smaller things
and it builds up with when I look at my daughter and the year, this big problem of the,
you know, the basic nature of matter. You do feel a bit uncomfortable in your stomach,
maybe you don't, Brian, but
you are well, that's the that's the allure of it all. But then when you're actually in the
field, you realize that most of the work you do is smaller, even though it kind of slots into
those big questions. So maybe there's more similarity than than difference from a day to
day perspective. You know, it's
hard to it's hard to write maybe you're right.

10 of 43
But you know, what I was doing, I was wandering around the garden looking at where
spider's webs were. And your I'd make a little map and then I could think why is a spider's
web here or there. And it's a bit difficult to think about both songs in one's back garden in
terms of experiments. So yeah,
there's that difference, too. There's,
there's no question about that, for sure. And then you you started to work on research
projects. Oh, yes,
yes, sorry. We're back at university. I decided that I wanted to work. I was interested in
what life Is and we're going to talk a bit more about it because I eventually wrote a book.
And I thought, if I was interested in life, I should try and focus on the simplest entity
which unambiguously, you could
say was alive. And that is the cell. And I I'm sure we'll discuss a little bit about that.
And so I decided I wanted to be a cell biologist, I decided I would use genetics to take it
apart. And then the question was during my PhD, what should I study, I studied something
really rather down. Like if I
can be perfectly honest with you, it was amino acid metabolism. And in fungi, I did a
first degree in plant sciences. And that taught me how to do experiments. And it sounds a
bit mundane. But knowing what a good experiment is, knowing what a control is, knowing
when you can interpret data in
particular ways. All of this is actually really important. Yeah. Significant lessons. And
though you're not discovering something great about the universe, you're discovering how
to investigate the universe. And with that background, when I did that, in in Norwich, it's
in East of England, where I was born,
actually, it wasn't brought up there. But when I was born, and I then decided, what is an
important question in biology, and it was thinking about, you know, what is the difference
between something that's living and not living? And one of the characteristics is the
ability to reproduce? And here I am I
interested in the cell and reproduction. And then I thought, how do cells reproduce?
How do they control it? And I decided that in 2122, and I stuck with it on Yeah, and here
I am, half a century nearly later. And I'm still working at that same problem. Yeah.
I mean, it's great. I mean, you know, I mean, Einstein wanted to know, the unified
theory, and he stuck with it for 30 years. He didn't get anywhere. And so you've gotten
somewhere. So yeah, rather bigger problem, though, if I may, well, you know, different
problem, a different problem. Yeah. So

11 of 43
that, um, that does take us to sort of the, the main, the main issues here of what is life,
what can life accomplish? And, you know, the one thing I have to say quickly is I noticed
that so here's, here's your book, and it's beautiful, skinny book. Yeah, about three weeks
ago, we spoke to your Nobel laureate
colleague in physics, Frank wilczek, who himself has another skinny book and I'm
starting to get pattern that all you Nobel guys have these really skinny books, except then
I realized that Kip Thorne wrote a book and no gravitation and it's not so skinny. So so
maybe that's not the key. I'm starting to think
that may be.

And Roger Penrose if you get that pretty bad, too.


Yeah, road to reality is about that thick. Yeah, absolutely. Now, the other thing, you
know, I noticed, obviously, and you mentioned it, of course, in the book is that the title is
one that has been used before. Or in Schrodinger wrote, what is life in the 1940s or so?
Haldane jazz Haldane wrote a version of what
is life at a later time? In fact, I think we may even have their their book covers here. So
we can sort of see the progression there's, I have, I have not run the desk and and then
how Danes version, and then your version. So do you see this book falling in a recurring
attempt by scientists to try to
answer this deep question like, is this a moment where we now have learned enough to
reconsider this deep question?
Well, I tell you what I was trying to aim at. I read a lot of popular science books. And
what I began to notice is that the books written by physicists, such as yourself, genuinely
took on big questions, ones that we we struggled with and which are go to the
fundamental nature of reality. But often, biological,
popular books tend to deal with trying to look over the horizon to some new discovery
that is going to rewrite biology or is going to lead to some fantastic application. And what
I noticed is the shelf life of many of those books was very limited. And I say that because
they they often didn't get it right. It
wasn't some, you know, big breakthrough that they were thinking about, or it didn't
leave to the applications that great interest of people will cause you read the book. And
what I felt was lacking was a book that just explain what we do really understand about
life. And in some sense, there's
nothing new in my book. And it I hope I explain in a way that's clear. And I talk about
things that are interesting. But I am talking about established principles within which we
have confidence, and the sort of books that you write sort of a bit more like that. And I
hope, as I'm sure you hope, your books

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that this still can be read in 30 years, and it will still contribute something. So yeah,
that was my starting point. And the question, what is life just to return more closely to
your, your, your starting point, is, of course, the big problem of biology. I mean, how do
we distinguish between something
that is living and something that is nonliving? And I mean, that's, that's really trouble.
People are fascinated people since Aristotle, really. And we're still addressing the
question Schrodinger. brilliant scientists, as he was, was wrestling at a time when some of
the fundamental principles were
there, but he focused only on part of it, which was essentially speculation about the
nature of heredity, hereditary, absolutely critical. Yeah, codes. In a few years of him
writing the book, which is 42, or 43, became much clearer with the discovery, actually, at
Rockefeller University, that the
hereditary material was DNA deoxyribonucleic acid, and then subsequently in
Cambridge, England, that the structure of the double helix famous Watson and Crick, and
I'm sitting in the Francis Crick Institute with, with with the others that contributed to that
Rosalind Franklin and Morris Wilkins,
which explained, because of the brilliance of their interpretation, so simple, that the
double helix is essentially a digital information storage device that can copy itself. And
there we are, hey, whoa, we have the nature of heredity, we don't have to worry about the
second law of thermodynamics quite so
much as, as certainly Schrodinger was concerned about. And it is putting together those
sorts of ideas of the nature of the gene, the cell and other things as well, that leads to a
picture of life. It's not a tidy, sort of dictionary, like definition. But it is a collection of
attributes that I
hope can clarify what life is. And that's what I wanted to do to really describe ideas that
we can be sure of, you know, see where they came from, because quite a few of them
actually have quite, they're not that new. Yeah, that was what is quite shocking. They're
not that new, to get a better picture of
life. That's what I was aiming at trying to do. I

think you did a beautiful job of doing that. And I wouldn't shortchange you know, the
final two chapters do discuss ideas that are relevant of the moment and may well continue
to be relevant terms of future developments. So it's both the established and also the
visionary side of things. But I
do want to ask, do you see the question, what is life as a question that we're really
seeking the answer to? Or do you see it more as a motivating framework? I mean, how
important would it be to be able to draw a line in the sand versus using this question as
kind of a guiding principle? Is it the

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latter or the former?
I think that's a clever question, Brian, you've sort of got into my, in between my ears
into my brain there, really, because I set it up as this most important question. But of
course, a definition of life isn't quite as precise as we'd like. And I do discuss the virus
which sits in this hinterland.
Yeah. But the living and the nonliving to almost illustrate that. But asking the question,
does give us a framework into which to think about the problems of biology. And really,
that's what I'm doing with it. But you couldn't make a title out of that, which was a tall cat.
What is life with a
question mark is certainly more catchy, I would say,
without a doubt, without a doubt. So would you would you say that in the end of the
day, it's a continuum, or is it discrete between the living and the nonliving
I think it is. screed with some life forms, such as the virus, which to give us a problem
with discreteness. And I had a bit of a copper in the end. And maybe when we talk about
other things, I can go back to it. Because I sort of argue it's both alive sometimes. And
dead others, right? I've never seen that
written down anywhere before. So that's my one, one contribution in this sort of area, it
is a copper, but it's not so stupid. And then and it, it. So life is much more of a continuum
than sometimes we think, because we think human being sits on in some Pinnacle. And
really, we have a lot of relationships with
the simple little yeast that I spent my life studying. And there's little vignettes in this
book about my random experimental career that did lead to certain things that I hope
entertains. Yeah, they're very enjoyable,
very enjoyable every time one of those came along, like, you know, really energizes the
whole discussion. So it was great to include those Well, you know, it's,
it can get a bit tiring, just, you know, the grind of sort of the textbook II type stuff. And
so I thought I would liven it up. It's all true. More or less true. Enough, yet. Close enough.
Yeah. But I think there is a discreteness. But what it, what it demonstrates is certain
principles, that connectivity of
all life, were all related to all other life forms. That's, I mean, it's a wonderful principle,
which is important in our age of trying to protect the biosphere and the planet, there are
everything around us, it's living our relatives, and we have a responsibility to care for our
relatives. But not only

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are we related by descent, which is what that means. And we also interact so closely
with all other living things. Without them, we couldn't survive, we couldn't exist, it
wouldn't be possible. So it is this being related to life, interacting with all life, which is
really I wouldn't put it as a principle,
but it's something we need to recognize about about life. Now, they really go back to
him with more adventurous in the sense of trying to take on a problem, which hadn't been
solved. And he came up with a sort of code script. Yeah, critical concept, but he could
only talk about it in a theoretical sort of way.
And but luckily, within a decade, it was essentially done.

Yeah, it was realized in a in the most concrete of ways I'm, so I'm among the chapters
of your book, you lay out five big ideas that allow you to piece together an image a vision
of what life is. So you talk about the cell gene evolution by natural selection, life has
chemistry, chemistry, and life
as information. Now for this particular audience that we typically have watching these
programs. The first three are probably relatively familiar. So the cell general structure the
gene, the information encoding molecule evolution by natural selection, but when you
come to, for instance, life as
information, maybe we can actually start at the end and work our way back. What What
do you mean by that?
Well, life is information is probably the only part of least this section of the book, the
first five ideas, which might have some controversy about it. It's not how it's it's not what
you find in the textbooks with everything else you find in the textbooks. As I said, I hope I
explained them in a more
interesting way than most textbooks. Yes. That's what they are. Life is information is
rather important to me. And I wouldn't really want to explain why. I think that, to describe
what goes on in biology, we're describing the workings of the cell. And the classical way
that that's considered is to think
about the molecules, the chemistry going on in that cell, and the physics of course, and
to describe the molecular mechanisms that operative there. So it's a description of process.
But to understand that description of process, in biological terms, nearly always requires
thinking about
information. And we've already touched upon this, and I'm going to give two examples
that I get in the book. The first one is DNA itself. Now you can do a molecular
description. DNA, the beautiful double helix. But we had to escape from the beauty to
think about actually what it means. Sometimes the beauty can

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be a bit distracting. And actually, if I ever go to another Research Institute with a piece
of sculpture looking like a double helix, again, I will scream, because it just drives me
crazy. But the point about the double helix is that you are describing in precision, the
position of atoms, or to an
angstrom. accuracy. But it is a description. It has no biological meaning. It is the
biological meaning comes from Well, the biological meaning comes from a couple of
characteristics that emerge from that structure. One is that it's made up of a chain of
nucleotide bases, there's four of them, a
TCG, which are in a particular order. And this, of course, is just like computer storage,
what we have there are four letters. And they are arranged in a linear order. And of
course, linearity of the storage of information is is something that's really rather universal.
And we see it in language, we
see it in speech, we are talking in linear form, with words and letters, that makes sense.
And they make sense because they have information and that information is conveyed.
And of course, in the DNA structure, you have information stored. So that's the first thing.
And it starts making logical sense in
terms of heredity. When you've turned that structure into information, then the second
part of that is the fact that the double helix, these bases only pair another base. So you
have a complimentary like a ladder and you have rungs, and an A will only linkwithin, T
and G with a C, we all know this.
But what this means is tear the Lego apart, then you have a template to make an exact
not copy a complimentary copy, and you make molecules, which are actually the same as
the original one.
So why did I play this, I wanted to introduce you to him so he can tell you who he is,
which he did. And then I also wanted you guys to see this, this is very important. And this
is me 11 years ago. putting this out. Now this is a 10 minute clip, which I show because
what I have been trying to make clear many is the
duplicity of it all. And he just said it. If you strip it apart with the angles and the
chemistry and how it bends and everything where they say it's beautiful, it's really
different. So I'm going to play this video. So you can listen to it with tins and RNA kind of
easy for everyone. seeming that
I find a lot of stuff online, I thought maybe I can give back. So we'll start with my
professor slides. And as we see here, my professor is nicely put down the multiple levels
of DNA packaging. Okay. So basically, what is this slide telling us, it's telling us that first
of all DNA, let me just stay is

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over two meters long in length. Okay. And there's no way we can fit two meters in a
tiny little cell right. Now, she's indicated over here. And let's see how this works. Let's go
for blue. She's indicated over here, two nanometers. Okay. That's just a short region of it,
okay. But just remember, the whole DNA is
relatively almost two meters long. Now, what happens is, I mean, we all know that
DNA is a double helix, and it has a sticky ends, meaning, you know, if you kind of bend it
and stick it together, you know, it'll bind with the others want to keep it as to itself as
possible because there are a lot of
interactions correct. So what happens, this optimistic thing, let's just put it this way for
now, as we're starting out, comes in, I need it's kind of like a real and this is called a
histone. It comes in and DNA actually wraps itself around it as we see here. So it's kind of
like the hose reel. Let's
picture it that way. Now, it's about 195 base pairs long what we have wrapped around
here. And then as you see here, there's this little leftover piece kind of to connect, you
know, because it's filled up on that end, so it goes to the next one. And this is what they
call linker. Sorry, I'm using my mouse. So
okay, so this is what is called the linker fancy name to say that it's linking one reel to
another, the linker is about 27 base pairs long. Okay. So this is the first level of packaging,
as she had nicely stated over here. So the first level of packaging is seeing this beads on a
string kind of thing, where
chromatin begins to form because this is not chromatin, and this is the beginning of it.
And she stated that the initial, the initial, I would say, phase of it is bs on the string, you
know, form that's about 11 nanometers long. Now, what comes in here is something called
histone one. And it kind of
stabilizes this mechanism. And once this mechanism is stabilized, it kind of like
smashes them together, they all like come together. And what they do, the way they come
together is like they come together, just closer to each other. Okay, so they just come
closer to each other. And they
just kind of connect. And this package, this level of it is called you know, the 30
nanometre pack, which is the level that it's ready to go. Basically, what happens is, is that
as it comes together, it kind of loops like a little flower. Okay, and let's just picture it that
way. So why am I
showing this to you, I want you to understand, when I get into graphing how it works,
because I'm going to dispel a lot of things. So it's very interesting that 11 years ago, only
this part is on my page, everything else purged. So for those that say that I don't know
what I'm talking about.

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So, as you can see, for those that are watching, and those that are listening, it comes
from the entire mitotic chromosome going up from here, the little centromere up that way.
And you're zooming in zooming into that part, where you see the DNA. So the DNA that
you know is a double helix is
the smallest, like the most zoomed in portion, imagine it like a camera, it's like zoom,
zoom, zoom, zoom. So I'm showing you how from the open DNA, it is actually smushed
together and put in here, like little hose reels. And this little flower is what makes up our
chromatin because you've got a lot of
these little flowers going on around here. Okay, and this is how it's act. Now, it does not
necessarily mean that it's super tight, okay, because it doesn't, a chromosome has to be
accessed. So if it's like super, super tight, that's no good to us, because then we can't read
it. So it's still going to be like a
flower. But proteins are going to be able to access it here, here here to, to read it and to
be able to decode it, though, the most condensed section of the chromosome, as we see
here is the supercoiling. That's the last step that happens. It's an additional coiling that
happens after all these, you know, after
this coiling, and little flower and the histone one coming in, and topoisomerases Next
step is this supercoiling so we're gonna say it's super. So I want you to understand what
I'm trying to explain even though DNA as you can see it over here has been opened up for
people to to be able to see it, read it and see
the five basic elements that I've said is phosphorus, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and
carbon, right. It then is packed and packed and like a little flour, almost like on a little rod.
But the thing is, it's like data storage, it's indexed in a way that it still leaves on the avenue
to read, clip, delete,
etc, etc, etc. Okay, so quilling okay. And the supercoiling actually causes it to be super
condensed. Why is this necessary? Well, this is necessary when we're going through
mitosis. Because if the chromatin is not, if it is not super condensed, then there's access
and all this stuff that's
going around, it's gonna ruin it. So it needs to be super, super tight. That's the only
time we will find competent, super, super tight, you know, because that's the time that it
needs to be tight so that we can split during mitosis. Okay. Now, here's an electron
micrograph she shows these nucleosomes like
beads on a string, okay. You see these little bead beads? This is the open one that we
have the 11 nanometre one and this is the 30 nanometre one going round round Like a
little circle, right? Flowers. Okay, so packaging into a chromosome required for cell
division. We just said that. So over here we've got tons of

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little, little, little little beads, hence the two meters fitting into this chromosome. Yes.
So um, here's the centromere. This is where everything needs to detach. Okay, that's the
center of it. So as we see here, except for the M phase, the DNA is packed into chromatin
rather than
chromosomes. Okay. So what is the whole reason of this supercoiling? Here, the whole
reason for this supercoiling is to become a chromosome. Okay. So this is when we split,
we need the chromosome to split What? sister chromatids. Okay, wow, I'm getting the
hang of this mouse thing. So the duplicity
pay attention. Okay, so these need to split, right. So that's the whole point of this phase,
having the necessary of having this extra super coil, okay. And this is where the histone
comes in, over here, over here. And over here, it's more relaxed, okay. It's more relaxed.
It's packaged
into chromatin because what we need to access it, we need to know what we're reading
how we're reading it, and what we're going to do with it before we split, right? Okay, so
the packaging into comics in fits the DNA into the nucleus, like we said two meters got to
fit into the nucleus protects the
DNA, like we said, it keeps it apart, we have this hose reel going around to keep it so it
doesn't interact with each other and stick because if you take a big long hose, and you try
to cram it into a little hole, it's just going to smoosh and bend and, you know, not work
properly, you know, if you keep
the pack for too long. This way, if it's on the hose reel, there'll be a little bit of rusty,
but you know, it'll open up just like da it organized the segments of the DNA to allow
transactions such as gene expression, like we said, It stretches out to allow some readings
so that way you know
what you need to do. And this also distinguishes between your chromatin and
heterochromatin. And we'll get into that right after. In one of our in my further videos.
And before I close this off, I thought I'd record will show you a recording that I have,
which is amazing. And I found this from a bourbon
site, but it's an English, which sums it up for us. Sorry, I can't expand it any bigger.
We'll go bigger the total length of the DNA and the human cell is approximately two
metres.
The DNA double strand that is wound into an alpha helix only fits into the cellular
nucleus because it is folded in a complex manner. structural proteins are required for this
folding. Together with the DNA they are termed chromatin. October's comprised of
histones bind to DNA, which wraps itself

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around this protein core in the process, thus forming a nucleus between adjacent
nucleosomes to piece of DNA, the linker DNA remains free, a characteristic String of
Pearls structure is formed.
Now, for all of you that understand tech, this is exactly how blockchain technology
works as well. A blockchain technology is pretty much the previous. So I would say the
previous optimieren in the sense of science is confirming the next one and the next one in
the next one, because of these approvals,
saying, yep, we're good. Yep, we're good. Yep, we're good. Yeah, blockchain works.
Now, blockchain is singular. It does not have a double helix. Okay. blockchain is synced
singular does not have the W meaning. It's not duplicity. This is why, even though
blockchains are pretty solid, they're still
vulnerable. This is this is actually the key to quantum computing. See, no one's ever
figured out how to create this duplicity. No one's understood how to get that done. And
and why because they think of ways to harness the power for it. And that's the problem.
When you have people trying to harness
the power for it, you lose the meaning of it. It's the best way that I can explain that for
you. You lose the meaning for it when you try to harness power. And it's important for us
to understand just how important that statement is. Because you have a digital extension.
That's an extension of you. particular
output you put out into cyberspace, which is the controlled cyberspace Now, let me
just continue this video so you fully understand how your quantum biological code is
stored.
The nucleosome chain is folded to form a 30 nanometer fiber and additional structural
protein. histone one symbolizes this fiber, certain regions of the 30 nanometer fiber, the
scaffold associated regions coupled to structural proteins, among them, the Toko
isomerase. In this process, the 30 nanometre fiber
forms loops. The filamentous DNA protein complex forms the so called Super twist,
which is further twisted in an additional coiling step. With this final step, the complete
condensation of chromatin has been achieved. This is the organizational state of the
chromosome during nuclear division, mitosis.
So, that is that I needed to show you that so you can understand it, it is a coil, it is a
coil your information is a coil. So the question that many have is that graphene is toxic.
But I want you to think of it this way, we use keyboards, we use mice to input into our
computer, your fingers, you're

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texting, you're picking up apps, that's actually quite a very slow way, a computer, right?
can think faster than you can push your finger on the next letter of your text, it is almost
instantaneous. Your brain does that to think about it. Every single time you lift a finger
like right now you want to lift
your pinky. The minute you think about it, you're already doing it. It's almost instant,
instantaneous. And that is because what you have missed is that humans are trying, really,
really trying to replicate the quantum information system. That is innately part of you. I've
said this many time if if people
looked at biology with the eyes of a coder, it would make sense. A lot of people call
that bio bio hackers do that by trying to hijack systems. And this is what we're seeing with
these vaccines that have used graphene, which they already have planned in put together.
The problem is that when you use things in nature,
which are there to assist always to reinforce scaffolding, maybe to make people
buoyant, or to make, you know living things stronger, or smarter, or connected better.
They don't understand the divinity of it. See, graphene has many, many uses. You inserted
into other metals, you reinforced them you
can make something that weighs a ton weigh an ounce, it can create buoyancy, it can
create interconnectivity through fields that already exists of energy that no one else can
tap. graphene can actually mimic energy waves. It can be used in the form of RFID, like
I've told you, it can be used in many,
many ways, these experiments with other things. Within this biodome, which are all
here to be asked and used by man have been done so with the goal of control rather than
goal of liberation, and that would be to free the chains of limitations. When you do
something, let's put it this way, let's pretend
there's two people, one person decides that they want to make a basketball to make a lot
of money. And people need a basketball because they have a hoop but they don't know
they need the basketball. So person creates a basketball because he wants to make a lot of
money. And so he makes a basketball,
the other person creates a basketball in order to help people be able to put a ball
through a hoop. Therefore, the ball that that person will create is to liberate the people
from not understanding the relationship between ball and hoop and becoming one with the
ball and understanding the ball.
Whereas the other person is just like, I'm just going to give them a ball. So then there's
going to be 50 other balls that are almost going to be identical to that one and not when
they're not done for the right reason all those balls will fail and the ball that was created to
assist to solve the problem.

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Here human take the ball, put in the hoop will stand Is that a good example? No, I'm
trying to think there are many things that we have at our disposal, the intentions behind
creating things are what's important. The intentions will provide the life of whatever it is
that you are creating. Let's pretend you're
writing a book, if your intentions were to provide knowledge, right, it'll be the most
readable book ever. It'll be easy to read, people will like it. You know, you can give
someone quantum physics in a book. But if you're having a grand all time, putting it
together, and putting on the
graphics and explaining the information, the person will be able to read it, it's going to
be targeted to the mind because it will resonate of good.
Whereas the other person that's writing the book on quantum physics in order to make
money and sell it to his students, first course it will fail, make sense. I mean, they'll make
some money, but in the end, it'll fail. This is why it's important that intentions are behind
it, intent. The intention behind
your actions is very, very important. This is where nature really takes its course some
people you know, consider that karma. They name it as karma. But again, intention is an
energy that is behind it. So graphene, graphene is pretty much scaffolding. I told you back
in March before the
lockdowns before anybody talked about AIDS in hydroxychloroquine, we were talking
about it. And what I told you was that I could see that this was developed because it had
sticky feet, you can see the seam of graphene on the frickin virus that they supposedly
found. I told you,
you could see graphene no one Listen, because, you know, again, intention, intention.
intention, you can't mistaken. Like I could see it, how the adenine were sticking together.
You know, it was a fine seam that you can hardly see. But I did say graphing it creates
sticky feet. And again, no
matter how many times one would repeat, and this isn't for arrogance, this is to
demonstrate to you. Just how intentions, right are your downfall. your intention is the
most important thing and energy you can do to empower something, the intention. So
when I say that we are in this position,
because it's everybody's fault, and it is it's because of their intentions. Now we see that
over a year since I've Well, I've mentioned graphing before, because nobody seems to ask
themselves, how did you be friend, the person that mass produce graphing in their garage
with red cup in 2010? Because

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it's just a coincidence. How did you sit in a lecture with the person that had literally this
guy literally had all the data that prove that hydroxychloroquine blocks HIV, but wasn't
reporting that he was just like, oh, there's a high correlation that if you have malaria, and
you're on
medication, you don't get HIV. And if you're on not on medication, we get HIV and it's
like duck, spell it out hydroxychloroquine blocks HIV blocks, viruses from acting like
parasites. So again, how did I know to be in proximity to these people? Nobody's going to
answer that. Right? Because they don't
have good intentions. So intention, the intention of how you utilize products is
important. See, like I've told you niobium, for example, has tipped the dentist, the dental
industry on its head and nobody's talking about it. niobium applied to enamel actually
regrows enamel. So how
is it that something living slash dead because any dentist out there will tell you enamel
does not regrow. Once it's gone? It's finished, but niobium activates it? Why are they
hiding this knowledge from the people who's sequestering this information? niobium also
can trigger regrowth of bones who
sequestering that information? Hmm. See intention is exactly how you see where
someone goes, What is a person's intention when they're communicating with you, when
they're interacting with you, when they're providing your product, speaking to you.
intention is key here. And it always is, if you remember even
comi let Clinton off because he couldn't find intent that's actually unwritten but written
and embedded in our laws. intention. Now, graphene has been around for a very long
time, they use it on aircraft to make aircraft lighter, so that they can use heavy steel and
make it lighter.
Almost floating, you know, they use graphene to recreate frequencies of energy. They
use graphene to create a biological merged RFID chips. Wait, what? Yeah, by in ingesting
it, you actually have temporary tracking information by embedding it into your code or
being the scaffolding for your code. It
can allow someone to have access to things remote control, because it does have those
properties. It depends on where you target. These are real things. This is real science. And
again, I asked, What was my intention, you know, that the age of 30, to go back to school?
in something that I never
studied? To finish my undergrad within two years, I literally started December 2008. I
graduated with my BSC, December 2010. Who does that? Why? Because I was in a rush
to be a college of medicine, to garner that proximity to information. But again, I say it you
can tell me how is it possible that I

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gained proximity to all the things that are relevant now? It was not a coincidence. Yeah,
some people go rogue to be nuts. Other people go rogue to help, I guess, sometimes
whatever. So how do we, how do we help mankind as a people? How do we participate?
There's a way that you can change things. Nikola
Tesla wanted everyone to know what the secret was. He wrote papers, people stole
them. And maybe one of those papers may have been in my pocket, who knows? He's
pretty much made it clear. And you guys can check it with science that the way the
frequencies in your mind work is how you are able to function.
Just like your eyes, there's color blindness. Why? Because the your eyes cannot see
certain frequencies that are assigned to specific colors. The same thing with your brain.
That's why I said most of those people that Mark Dice was interviewed. were operating on
theta waves with Delta waves, and I said theta
waves, which means that they're completely detached from reality. Okay, they're
sleeping, there can be people walking and sleeping. Hello, sleepwalking, delta waves. So
funny that there's a Delta variant. Gamma waves are the ones that have expanded
consciousness, just like gamma rays are the ones
that are in x rays that see right through you. It is not a coincidence how things are
allocated and put definitions have a meaning. And words matter. When someone is in a
very relaxed position. Usually people that smoke a lot of pot, right? will resonate with this.
They can be creative, and they
can visualize things. But the problem is, is that when you're smoking weed, right
smoking and I said smoking weed, you're resonating on what one would call an alpha
wave, which is your, your constant, you're you're you're chill, you're creative, you're
visualizing. But if you notice those of you
that smoke pot, suddenly that shifts from an alpha to a beta, and suddenly, you're alert,
you're concentrated on something, you're hyper focus. And usually that turns into
paranoia because it's conflicting with your alpha waves. It's just bad programming. Hence,
why people
with edibles work differently. They actually go straight into the hyper concentration
mode. They go straight into different modes, and you're gonna say, Well, well, well, how
does that work? It's, again, the presentation of molecules. Right? I've said this before
with vitamin C, you can use
sublingual drops or take pills, but it's not going to be as potent as the ones in mandarins
and tangerines because the communication that a cell has with certain

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molecules is completely different. It's all about communication. I I've told you the
story of quorum sensing, and I'm going to delve into it on another show where I had
tapped Vani basler. and wanted to learn about quorum sensing, because I was taking a
graduate level Plant Pathology class. And
because plants again, and this is where I relate to Sir Paul nurse that you were listening
to earlier, are a very stable and streamlined template to understand life. And this is why I
took physiology plant physiology, it took two units, I, I also went to the plant pathology,
and I'll tell you
why, because I was also working, the majority of these classes, I couldn't even
physically attend. Right, I would only attend. When, when, when I could. But what I what
I remember is that we were sitting in the laboratory, and we were looking at tobacco
virus, and how it infects plants. And then he, Dr.
Ben, Sally introduced agrobacterium tumefaciens. And I was, this is why it was at that
class that day. And I sat there, listening intently, because this guy is incredible when it
comes to conveying information. And anything plants, anything with disease in plants, if
you're a farmer, I mean, this is why the
government uses Him, He's incredible. He understands it, like he's a plant, okay, he's
perfect. But the one thing that it stumbled that that I stumbled on is that he glossed over,
you know, the the cellular mechanisms of communication within a plant cell, and this
bacteria agrobacterium to
efficient. So agrobacterium to motivation is in the soil. And what it does is it actually
goes into a plant and creates these crown goals, I'm sure many of you have seen the stuff
that looks like cauliflower on the side of trees, or plants, it looks like you know, herpes on
your lip. And so the this some
this interaction, as he explained it, was that the agrobacterium tumefaciens, the
bacteria itself would exchange its DNA with the plant cell. And so everyone's writing
notes and not thinking, right, I'm like, Wait, hold on a second. Are you telling me that
there's cross species mating? And he says,
well, we'll kind of Yeah, it is it is He goes, uh, we don't know why it does it. We don't
know why it shoots its DNA into the plant cell. And then they recreate because plant
cells, you know, replicate. And this one actually injects its DNA into a plant cell, and then
it shoots out a hybrid. And
actually, the the crown Gall, the active, the the more it grows, like as cauliflower. If
you skim off the outer side, it stops perpetuating. So if you tick off, you know, the ones
that are active. And I was like, Okay, well, then what's the explanation? Why is it that this
plant cell is, you know, getting
getting jiggy with it with the bacteria or vice versa? I don't know, he said.

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So what he did tell me though, is that usually we see agrobacterium tumefaciens
infecting plants that have been wounded. And that was a kill for me. How I was like, all
right, so then that sensor, there's got to be in kind of like in technology, the only way
someone can hack you, if there's an
avenue, right? Remember that whole fight about Apple not giving a backdoor to the
FBI so they can spy on everyone? Right? Remember, when they wanted the San
Bernardino phone, they staged that so they can get a backdoor. Any backdoor any Avenue
out means you can get hacked. If you're a say I create
a web domain. And I tell you, Hey, you know, like the Google dongles, right? You
know how Google has their little dongle and you stick it on your TV and you watch, you
can pay for shit on it, right? But here's the thing, it's not secure, because if you're paying
for it, it's going through multiple
processes. It's going through your bank processor, to approve it through other
processors and then to communicate back to say, yeah, it's been approved and then back
into your account. There's a lot of avenues when there's open doors, right? So that's the
back door that this was used. So here's where it got
interesting. It meant that there was something that the plant was exceeding that was a
language that attracted this bacteria. I mean, you go looking for trouble or shit just
happens in you come like, if you light a fire, and people are hunting you and you have a
fire, you know, you've just given them a beacon of
where to go. So here we are. This bacteria is entering, obviously when it's wounded.
And lo and behold, something no one decided to discuss was that there's always a
problem in translation. Now this is key, it means that the phenol that is excreted by a plan,
which is a molecule that signals its
neighboring cells that it's hurt, and it needs to recruit tools to heal itself is almost
identical to that of the bacterium, when it is calling on another bacterium to meet or not
Nate, repopulate, like, you know, get in. So I want you to picture it, that the wound of a
plant can actually be like
Mayday, mayday, I need people here to like build up new cells get over here. And that
made a signal sounds like, Hey, we're, we're regenerating get over your bacteria. So then
they mesh. So there's miscommunication. Something that people don't seem to
understand, just like our DNA, there's always
miscommunication. It sounds like the same signal. But it isn't the same signal. It's
crosstalk. Now, when you're using things like mRNA vaccines, right. And you're
providing instructions, to hijack certain proteins to decode mRNA with your machinery to
create a protein, do not be mistaken that mistakes are made.

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Because every single human being has a digital footprint, just like they have a
biological footprint. And so when you're using graphene as a vessel, the graphene that you
use as a vessel in order to stabilize, this is how you stabilized and remember, I told you
that the virus that they were showing,
was depicting canine human with a capital H, human with lowercase H. And you have
to ask yourself why that's number one. Number two, why is it that they were using the
vehicle of graphene? Because graphene stabilizes things? This is why I told you, this
COVID-19 was invented and they use graphene
to create it. So obviously, whatever mRNA vaccine, they are going to throw to you is
going to have graphene in it. Because it's graphene created, hello. Now, there's many
tangles that occur. There's many reactions, and that's because they did it blindly. These
this whole deployment of this vaccine was
to eliminate the weakest point. I mean, why do you think they went for the old people
first. So this graphene isn't toxic for you, it is not toxic? In fact, it can solve a lot of
problems that humankind has brought upon itself, if used correctly, it is an answer to
many things, obviously in conjunction with
others. But when you're using it as a vessel to do harm, while that's different, because
they need graphene in order to be able to use it from a distance. Now, that's a story that
we're going to get into it another time. Right. And this goes back to data collection. You
hear me like Why? Again, I refer to you
to go and take a look at patents of crypto mining through humans. Now, I don't have to
say it again. There are actual Patents, Patents. So once again, graphene is not something
that is toxic. They actually use graphene to monitor how safe or fresh Your food is. Did
you know that? Yes, they do. They use graphene for a
variety of things. Like I said, tracking.
What else? Food printing? Wait, I think I have a hold on. I have a video for that. Give
me a second. I'll show it to you. I think I talked about this a couple years ago, because it's
pretty fascinating. Here you go. Take a listen and watch.
Been able to make graphene on many different substrates. Previously, we could only
make graphene on materials that that were like polymet a particular type of polymer But
now what we found is by tuning the laser a little bit differently, and D focusing the laser,
which first carbonizes the material and then
we take the carbonized material and convert it into graphene. So what you see here is
you don't see in this is not a this is not the addition of ink to a material. This is taking the
material itself the wood itself and converting it into graphene and the laser allows us to
write it into eight pattern that we

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wish this is on a piece of wood. Or we can do it even on
my back online. I'm back online, right? I'm back. I'm back. Man, they really hate truth.
I'm telling you like, come on. Are you kidding? Just as the No, no, that's so not fair. Here
we go. Let me pick up where I left off. Okay, guys, let me just pick up where I left off,
we're gonna pick up where I left off. Just
some refresh your screen. And I'm gonna see if it works on my end, too. All right,
down, that was really crazy, wasn't it? super crazy. Let's
go single, atomic thick sheets of graphite. And now we take these and we put a few of
them on top of each other as we convert the material itself a piece of bread, until you can
convert the carbohydrates that are within bread to graphene.
Did you hear that? It's not ink. It's not putting impressions. It's not, it's changing the
actual molecular composition of bread and wood. It's changing the actual molecular
composition of the wood, the bread, the potato, the cloth, and you it is changing your
molecular composition. It is not toxic. It
is replacing I have mentioned before, slowly This is why I say if people actually knew
the truth, they'd be jumping off the roof again. Why did they say silicon based life in in
Venus and carbon here, it's Kylie identical. Well, what you can do is hijack carbon and
replace it with graphene because it
integrates.

Or we can do it on a coconut. So you can take a coconut and convert that into graphene.
Now why would we have something like this, this is all conductive. So it can conduct
electricity. So what we can do now is we can make electronics embedded within fabrics
and make electronics embedded within wood. So right
now we're going to be lacing a cardboard box here. And the significance of being able to
put
electronic traces on cardboard boxes is that it has a lot of potential commercial
significance in being able to write RFID tags directly on boxes. So you can either test
tell where it's been, or you put a sensor on the box and see what kind of conditions it's
been exposed to. Currently,
people are using RFID tags that have been manufactured and they attach them to the
boxes. But being able to directly convert a box would be really valuable.
Why would one want edible electronics? But first of all, let me start with very often we
don't see the advantage of something early on. But when we make it available, people start
seeing the real advantage. So can you even take, have electronics embedded on food and
then say use this as a heat

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circuit? to heat the food more easily there, say an RFID tag written onto this potato?
Where has it been? How long has it been stored? Where did what what's its country of
origin and its city of origin? And what path did it go to, to get to your table. All of that
can be embedded not on a separate tag
that's placed on the food, but directly on the food itself. And these can also have
sensors, sensors that would detect ecola sensors that would detect micro organisms that
you might not want, they could immediately light up and give you a signal that you don't
want to eat this. So being able to barcode food,
in a sense, could have real advantages.

So again, I've said this in the nicest of way, they that graphene does not cause you
harm. It's just the vehicle. Okay? So when people tell you it's toxic, it's not it's the vector.
It's like saying, you know, I'm gonna have soup. So you're eating soup, right? That's
poison, right? But you're
blaming the BOE. Okay, graphene is the ball now? Is it a bad thing? Yes, it is. And I'm
going to be quite frank and say that there's a lot of people that were introduced to this
technology without their consent, and you have been slowly been introduced to it. Other
people were propelled into
it. And what this has is properties of their RFID conducting electricity. Could you
imagine that your piece of wood that you put graphene? Well, not by itself, can connect
with the internet? Easily? It can tap into cots? I don't know. Maybe, you know, could you
think of it? Could you imagine? Just
imagine what a SpongeBob say, imagination wants you to imagine? What if there was a
human being that was so riddled with all of this? Right and it didn't fail. But that human
being can tap into your thermostat and listen to everything, tap into your eye watch and
listen to everything.
Tap into your, you know, a lot of people claim about remote viewing thing. Think of it
that way. If that makes more sense to you, I want you to think of it that way. What if there
was? Imagine how dangerous a person like that would be if they didn't have limitations?
Or if they weren't good. Right?
Imagine. So just imagine, why would they be messing with something that can bite
them in the ass later? Probably because they realize it can fail or because they were told
that they can control it in other ways. Maybe? What do they call those? The the rumors,
the conspiracy theories of heart attack guns,
rumors, right? conspiracy theories, right. I told you that Starbucks years ago, was
putting graphene in their coffee to track where people live to open up new stores. I
checked my knee and I put a magnet and it was young, because guess what graphene also
has electromagnetic properties when

29 of 43
it is put into meat. So for example, how many of you have done that water trick where
you're holding rods? And it looks for properties of water? I don't know. Well, someone
that would be embedded with graphene, those rods would turn right on the person with
graphene. You know, they would totally homed
in on that. Why? Because they're just a human with different scaffolding. And could
you imagine? Yeah, the divining rods that one. Can you imagine what they've been doing
to everyone since the 70s, late 70s, when they had already started between 1969. And the
last experiment was conducted in 1979. on actual
children, right, they introduced why the swine flu, you know, they introduced it about
what, four to five years into their experimentation. So it was like when 1974 1975. So
they were giving small doses to see if they can change things. And what did it result in,
you learn bahrein syndrome, right. And
then they started introducing other vaccines, changing your vaccines from tetanus being
just a bacterial vaccine, where it comes in and trains your B cells to be able to fight off
that bacterium. It now has other additives in it too.
Slowly but surely testing it out, suddenly, we see a lot of add a lot of autism. Because
add means that a lot of things are connected at the same time and the person can't filter it
out. Maybe there's some scaffolding that shouldn't be there. And it is completely out of
control because it only targeted that
one section, maybe autism. And we know that a lot of people that are autistic, you
know, have certain qualities, like they may be hindered on the way they communicate, but
they're just geniuses on another level. This is why we have savant maybe, you know,
we're using something that is not toxic in
the wrong ways. And they know well on the on the books, they've realized that
graphing to some and killed them, and probably didn't take to others, the ones that survive
well how they know. graphene creates or changes the properties of what you've just
inserted it to. So how do you know that it never
took? Because you can't detect it? You think that if you take the DNA of someone who
has DNA DNA scaffolding with graphene attenuations, you would be able to see it. Fuck
no, you aren't. Unless you know exactly what you're looking for. You can even see the
seams. There's millions of scientists that look at the
code that they presented as COVID-19. And none of them. I did, but none of them told
you, hey, looks like there's a seam here. Why? Because they don't speak code. Those that
are programmers and developers, if they actually looked at genetic code, if they actually
looked at RNA code, if they actually

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looked in biological functions and molecular communications, as code they would
completely understand What was going on? This is it. So think about it. This is this is
pretty dangerous. If you asked me creating what super humans were you super things,
huh? Let me show you another clip. This is
from China Morning Post a couple years ago. Here we go.
Flexible transparent electrodes are essential components of wearable devices. Your
reading, researchers have successfully used a new material to make the component or
proxy with more. graphene is known for its toughness and ability to conduct electricity.
Korean researchers have chosen the material to make
electrodes that change are visible colors in less than one second. Using on
electrochromic materials to base the researchers successfully stacked layers of graphene
with polymer based materials. They found that four layers of graphene electrodes have the
most electro chemical stability and can
change color the fastest. When we reduce the total thickness of graphene to 1/5.
Increase the transmittance to over 90% and increase the speed it changes color by over 10
times. Flexibility is an essential quality for electrodes and wearable devices. The material
also needs to be good at
conducting electricity. And to be used for displays. It needs to be able to control light
transmittance. When placed on a transparent surface. The researchers were able to meet
such requirements by layering graphene, the study which could bring changes to the
design of electronic devices was published
in the journal Scientific Reports

booksale I didn't use Well, you know, I have been telling you what you need to know
and you know, something else that I kind of hinted at you that changes colors to with
energy. And so, you know, could you imagine if there were actually I don't know, any of
these people that were actually reinforced with
the correct compound, do you think they would say, Hey, I'm right here? I'm just
saying, Would they fuck no, they wouldn't. They would take them and tear them apart.
Here's some other stuff they're doing with graphene, which is quite interesting. I'm just
gonna leave you with a lot of little
nuggets to chew on as you watch everyone freaked out about graphene oxide. And you
already know what it is
graphing the scar room, same as a diamond or, or the graphite you have from your
pencil. But instead of having a 3d structure, graphing is a two dimensional material. You
can think of it as you look at through a microscope, you can think of it as a paper with a
lot of surface but very thin is

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only one atom thick. And it's because of this structure two dimensional that graphene
has amazing properties. There are many potentials application for graphing things to a
combination of properties that graphene has, we could use green graphene, for instance to
make light coatings for aircrafts. And then again
Standard Oil applications will be also to protect a protection against corrosion. For
instance, in preparing a type coatings, we are trying to create 3d structures and odors
made of graphene in order to be able to really explore the potential of these wonder
material. And one of the techniques that we are
exploring now is 3d printing. And the challenge for us is to be able to develop graphing
pastes made of graphing, being able to use them in a 3d printing profit process to build
these 3d objects. We are now working with Imperial innovations to call to commercialize
our process. And
also we are looking for a establishing collaborations with industry in order to apply this
process. And also here in Korea. We are working on developing the applications one for
example to create pressure sensors for for artificial skin and robotics or for making
membranes for cleaning oil spillage
making membranes for cleaning oil spillage helping planes be lighter and fight against,
you know, Thunder printing out edible RFID trackers and or using it for medicine sounds
like they just use the whole world as their petri dish, doesn't it? I mean, we did do that
whole Kodak ventilator
thing. And the reason that I did it even though it is not exactly what is it is a very good
introduction. For you to be able to digest what it is, that is here has been, will be. This is
the whole shebang. So while people are freaking out about all of these things about
graphing your emotions affect
your health and general state of well being, it is all about resonating on frequency. So
while many panic and the chop a year and a half later, right, you need to know that, if you
knew about this a year and a half later, and they're all panicking. Now, there's only two
reasons. One, they can't hide it
anymore. Right? Because people found out and two, nothing can stop what's coming.
And if that is happening, if nothing can stop what's coming, and they can't even keep a lid
on it anymore. But you were told about it way in advance. Doesn't that mean that there's
some mitigation. So you have to
reinforce that feeling, instead of creating this circuit of negative experience, because
like I've said, it is very important. Last year, I said it around this time, that the most
important thing you have to do, coming up to the elections and after is to trust your gut, to
find that still within you to

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trust your gut. And this is why I've come in with a sledge hammer against those that
have been deceiving the public, providing them information that doesn't exist, making
making them look crazy as shit with red string, digital red string, they fucked up, and they
deserve to be hung by their toes. And this
is how it is. A lot of people say it's just arrogance because you know, no, you need to
stop looking down for someone to give you the answers and start looking up. Look up. It
is very important that you understand how all of this works. But again, if graphene
resonates with frequency, and it can
reflect like frequencies it can absorb, it can transmit, it can change, it can mimic, then
what you need to do is make sure that you're resonating in the right place. All of these
people spring out out of nowhere, calling themselves trump cards calling themselves this
and that, that they're important how
many people were tasked to actually without knowing to actually just conceal the truth.
If you ever use assignment scope, you can actually see distortions in frequency.
For those of you that are scientists, and I know I have many around the world that
listen to this, if you have assigned a scope, I hope that you are able to use the simatic
supplied and see the frequencies of those that speak as investigative journalists
somewhere else and use the same
use that scope with me. There's going to be a very distinct difference in frequency why
truth resonates on another frequency to so does anger. This is why we screen so does a
cadence, you must find you're still because you not only vibrate on a cellular level, but
your consciousness your thoughts
and your emotions have own energetic imprint. It is 100% fact. Remember Dr. emoto,
about exposing how water how you can change water. I mean even writing things in if
you put nice words on a bottle of water, it'll charge it with with love. If you can see that
and you have seen it, I urge you to look at
his experiments, you will understand it. Everything is about frequency and
communication. miscommunication leads to fights, right? How many of you have
miscommunicated and leads to fights? And it's not because the communication wasn't
correct. It could have been bonafide and honest from both
sides. But the receptors on the other side were such for something else. For example,
someone finds it sees deceit and everyone trusts no one hates everyone always looks to see
what they can get out of someone to move up. Well, when they have someone across from
them, speaking to them with love and

33 of 43
devotion and factual information with kindness. They don't have the receptors to
understand that. They vibrate differently because of intention. intention is exactly where
these vibration comes from. vibrations are found in your microtubules within your brains
neurons. they vibrate, they walk remember they
literally walk along scaffolding So it's it's very important to see how what you hear you
know, they say that couples in a car fight often. Because Did you know that when you
drive your right ear, I think I've said this before is to the passenger side. So if you're
irritated in any way, that ear will only
receive it as nagging, nagging when they come when sound comes in from your right
ear. Why? Because usually your right ear is the one that goes to the processing center,
where you have the biggest advocate reason, reasoning shit out is the biggest advocate for
you to not trust your gut. So
vibrations are found in microtubules within your brain. Therefore, you find that if you
put harmonious thoughts into your brain and you think about nice things, you can turn
your perception of your thoughts from chaos into magnificent harmonize information.
Now, to end this, I'm going to I need to find it,
shoot, don't it? I can't believe I closed that window. There's a new video that Gwen's
Tiffani put out. Okay, this is how in your face they are brand new music video.
Remember, she's like 50 something years old, but I want you to pay attention, how they're
telling you everything you need to know from that video
only. You don't even need to listen to the song you just need to watch and look at the
words. I am just saying. They're all telling you who they are. How do I see this? It's so
complex. And I try to zoom out while I zoom in assuming that everyone understands what
I'm saying. And that's one of my biggest
hindrances. Because I know the potential of every single person out there to understand
everything. And I sometimes forget that I have to step back and put it in another place.
Um, you all know that mainstream media is used as a tool, you know, advertisements,
marketing, they're all influenced tools. So
are movies and music? Well, what if I told you movie a movie? told you everything you
need to know about the Clinton Foundation? Would you say? What if I told you their
ideas? Did you know? Thank you, john, that there was a time where actually Hillary took
a stab at Barack Hussein Obama and he got pissed.
Because like I said, these are Titans fighting. These are Titans fighting. And boy, oh
boy, they're going right back to Tartarus as fast as possible. But you have to be patient, I
urge you to watch that video and understand that music.

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Was it that um, that did it. It was the fifth harmonic was found by Baroque music, right.
But walk was one of the most healing harmonic arrangements ever. It's expansive, it
creates a steady rhythm and people through the use of Baroque music. br o qu E, it's
toning a single vowel through the use of a gong or a
Himalayan bow, you'll see. right you'll see the difference and how it resonates. This is
why I use specific music not only for the frequency of the sound, but also for the verbiage
that comes with it. Obviously, a lot more truly lately, but okay. This is how you get your
subconscious in your unconscious mind resonating
on the same frequency. And this is why we have things called like unresolved issues
where we get triggered by things is because they're not in sync. And that's for a reason.
Could you imagine if you were in sync, you would be unstoppable. This is why it's
important that an unstoppable America is only one
that is united, that can resonate on the same frequency. Now, once again, once again,
what we are about to go through as a nation is not going to be easy. It's gonna be very,
very hard. I found the clip, um, of them pretty much spelling that out. Well, where did it
go? No, I had it. On my gosh, hold on.
Let me see. There it is. I'm gonna play this for you, Chris so that you can see where
we're at, and how this is going to go. Just like I told you last year, some people need a
boot on their face. To understand the gravity of the situation. While they're hiring and
doing with red string. They're distracting you
from focusing. Take a listen to this the door outreach here to get written more
healthcare settings and respond to hotspots. Rosen will outline five areas his team focused
on to get more Americans vaccinated. One targeted community by community door to
door outreach to get remaining
Americans vaccinated by ensuring they have the information they need on how both
safe and accessible the vaccine is to a renewed emphasis on getting the vaccines to more
primary care doctors and physicians something that we've seen and more healthcare
settings and responds to hotspots. Rosen will outline
five areas his team is focused on to get more Americans vaccinated. I repeat one
targeted committee by community door to door outreach to get remaining Americans
vaccinated by ensuring they have the information they need on how both safe and
accessible the vaccine is to a renewed emphasis
on getting the vaccines to more primary care doctors and physicians something that
we've seen in more healthcare settings and respond to hotspots. Frozen will outline five
areas his team is focused on to so long answer your question Did I guys did I tell you how
I came into proximity to recently.

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vaccinated people and the the the feeling like how I felt after that? Did I tell you guys,
let me check the chat. I just want to make sure I'm not double backing and stating again.
Okay, so if I haven't, here it is. I was in contact with people that were recently getting
their second vaccination, contact
meeting, I hug them you know, and that, you know, that's about it. I was wearing long
sleeve shirt. I always do though. I was wearing a long sleeve shirt. And I hugged them a
couple times, and sat in a closed space with them and everything. I'm going to tell you
from the first hug, and I'm not overstating this,
and anybody can say whatever this is what I experienced, I immediately felt a sharp
migraine. Now, I sometimes suffer from migraines when I'm when I'm thinking too much,
and I'll just leave it at that. But I felt
migraine immediately. And then I slowly after about 15 minutes of interacting. When I
separated from them. I was in my vehicle and I was driving and my daughter says Hey,
can I get a chick fil a? And I was like, Okay, I just I felt weird. It felt like my shoulders
were heavy. my elbows were heavy.
Just my upper body felt really, really heavy. It's kind of like the funny story. When I
was once at the doctor's office when my when my liver wasn't being nice to me. And I
don't respond well to narcotics at all. And they gave me like, you know, where they inject
like dilaudid everybody loves a lot of great,
I don't see why they like it. They only put like a fraction of it. And it was like I was
melting into the you know, I felt heavy. I felt like it was a drug. It was a fatigue that I
couldn't explain on my upper body. And I it reminded me of how I felt heavy when they
gave me that narcotic to help me
because they could obviously walk see why I was in pain. And this is why I don't like
narcotics because they take away the reality of things. But anyway, I was in the vehicle,
thank goodness it was a Tesla and I was like, okay, it's only a mile away. I can put it on
auto drive. It may be just that
I'm tired. But by the time I got to the chick fil a place, I said we're not going to go
through the drive thru I want to go inside and you know, wash my hands and my neck and
my face. It was down to my finger. Like even my index finger felt like it was tired and
heavy. It was a really weird response. But the
minute I washed my hands and my neck, I looked like I was crazy, right the exposed
areas. In my face, I felt a little bit better. And then when I went to the chick fil a to order I
got myself a chicken sandwich I use their hand sanitizer and that was I actually put hand
sanitizer on my neck and face

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they probably thought Oh, she's just paranoid about COVID. But I felt instantly better,
which means that there was something where it actually shut down your bodily processes
to fight it. instantly. I felt better headache went away limpness weighed on way. So it had
to do with whatever was emanating from
from from them. So it was it was so shocking because I've heard of the side effects that
people claim they have. But
it was quite fascinating to actually it only affected my upper body. And I guess because
that's where I had contact my fingers, my hands, my neck and My face from actual
proximal contact, right not breathing contact, it was the proximate contact. So I can also
tell you that I felt that when I gave
someone a hug, I thought it was because I was hot and bothered. But I felt as if like the
hair on the back of my neck percent, and I'm not hearing on the back of my neck, okay.
was standing up, it was a really weird, you know, it was like a spidey senses thing. And,
but it was fine. I was fine after that. But
I can tell you that that is how I felt it, it felt like I was getting electrocuted, I can't
explain it otherwise. And then, and then I was burning out. That's how it felt like my arms,
my elbows locked into my waist while I was driving. And I had my hands on the steering
wheel. And I was like, okay, they're
there. But they just didn't want to move. It felt like my circuits were burnt out. It was
so weird. I don't know if anyone else has felt that maybe it's just me. But you know, I was
in contact in and actually embracing people, and four of them all variety of ages, from
very young, to, you know, over
70. And so I'm telling you, I felt something, I don't know what it is. Remember, when
you're putting in programming in different computers, it gives you a different output. So it
may have been a conglomerate of different output, because you like every other system of
human that exists is just a chunk of
ELLs that is pertaining to you. This is why you don't mesh with your desk and your
chair, you have boundaries. And so that's your programming. So every program turns out
different things. So this is probably why they're claiming variance as well. I just wanted to
say, so. This is something that I wanted
to share with you guys. Just to, you know, give you my insight. It may be nothing. It
may be something going on in my imagination, I don't know. But I'm telling you how it is.
And to close, I think we should look at this. How there was this bizarre Fourth of July
video by Zuckerberg. Remember the person
that's pushing the reeducation, I want you to pay attention. This is really important.

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Governor of Washington this week talking about climate change as a permanent
emergency. So my question is, how has the news media cover a permanent emergency?
Just treat it like your ratings bozo?
Didn't I tell you that they were going to do the whole emergency climate? and john
kerry, so excited. Well, well, well, well, well, I hope you enjoyed your fourth of July. I
know Pat did. My god that's so good.
He's fine. I mean, you know, it's cat. But now the fourth as you know, celebrates our
independence from some toothless weirdos. It's quite an accomplishment to travel to the
Empire. So 250 years later, we can listen to this.
Are you proud to be an American? No. embarrassed to be an American every day. I
think a lot of things about this country are really embarrassing. Just like I mean, what's
embarrassing is that she doesn't have boobs, and she's not wearing a bra. How's that
wanted to be catty, racist history, colonization,
even currently, just what's going on with politics and the cops? I'm not really in this
climate. No, like, I'm a black person. So obviously, I experienced a lot of
Oh my god, here we go victim card. You know, there's like oppression that comes with
that. I'm
not most of the time. I think sometimes it's just a little embarrassing. I think that's a
complicated question. For me. I think I, I, I think most of the time, no, at least over like the
past four years. It's been tricky to, you know, love to be an American halfsies on that,
like, partly because, like, I feel like there's certain topics where it's like, very
controversial, but like,
controversial, not so.
I just think that our economy just cares about money and not like ours. Like, there's like
yeah, in general.
I mean, oh my god. I mean, like, she said, like 433 times five Z's. I can't wait till she
entered the real world. It takes my order at Arby's. All these lovely people are embarrassed
by America, but do they have any alternatives?
Can you name of the country then the United States in your opinion? I'm not sure if I
can. I don't think I can. Um, I mean, there's probably a really tiny European country that
thriving
Europe. Europe's not a country.

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Maybe the British are better off without us. I mean, their food still sucks, but at least
they like their country. And I know surveys like this are like shooting really stupid fish in
a tiny, tiny barrel colleges where good grades don't matter as long as you get a hammer
and sickle tattoo on your butt. Still
there, but hey, they're just dumb kids, right? We can forgive them. But what happens
when patriotism is now considered offensive by our very own leaders this weekend?
Idiots from maxine waters to Cory bush slammed for the July is nothing more than a
celebration of racism. I could read you their
tweets,

dude. Maxine Waters. Oh my gosh. Like what is wrong with her face? Seriously, look,
oh my gosh, Like who? Whoa,
it's a Korean push slammed for the July is nothing more than celebration of racism. I
could read you their tweets. But why? Here's this just from Bush, quote, The freedom they
are referring to is for white people. Oh my god.
Oh my god.
Which raises a point. Perhaps our politicians do such an awful job because they hate
America. Do you ever think about that, and they're in competence is their weapon. Think
about how easy it is to subvert a republic get elected, then rot it from within. And if
anyone challenges you, well, that's racist.
Meanwhile, National Geographic mark the fourth by tweeting that smoke from
fireworks causes disproportionate harm to communities of color.
Just like you know people that were black are the ones that are getting more of this
COVID-19 infection and dying. But they don't mention that they tested it in Africa before
the deployed here. That shits already on hunter Biden's laptop yet here. They are not
telling people why it was custom made. You know,
Black Lives Matter everywhere but Africa.
So I hope you enjoyed that roman candle you racist. But of course National
Geographics virtue signal comes after decades of exploiting communities of color all over
the world. Oh, look at topless women in their natural habitat. Remember that? When I
was a young man, I just assumed every naked woman carried a
basket of food on their head. And then there's a new Facebook feature that warns users
when they've been exposed to extremist content. Facebook asks if you know someone
who's becoming an extremist, which is why this morning I ratted out every anchor at
CNN. Actually, you know, I did ask myself if I

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came across anything that seems extreme, and I did, but oddly, it's from Facebook's
Mark Zuckerberg himself. What the hell was that? I mean, really, what the hell was that?
Have you seen anything as white as that in your life? I mean, if writing a hydrofoil
surfboard holding an oversized American flag isn't a
market extremist privileged behavior. What is All that's missing is the Red Hat, a rifle
rack and a plate of racist apple pie. I mean, this in this era where patriotism is merely a
dog whistle for hate, couldn't want to argue that any form of patriotism in an oppressive
racist society is celebrating
its past and therefore an example of extremism. I believe that's msnbc is mission
statement. I mean, Zuckerberg is certainly not helping his own case here as he encourages
citizens to narc on citizens and it's working. At my fourth of July cookout I caught my
brisket wearing a wire.
Maybe it had graphene, the corny joke.

But thanks to Facebook, it's no longer media and government policing your beliefs.
They're motivating the public to do the dirty work for you. If the new version of if you see
something say something The only difference is that something is no longer in unintended
and unintended suitcase at the
airport. It's your buddy getting a don't tread on me tattoo. The rise of canceled culture
isn't a mistake. It's bad on purpose. They throw over losing one's job over something you
said that's intended. So that fear self police's your own words. You don't need a
government to do it. When your fear silences you
and debate mysteriously disappears. When the world's largest social media platform
asks you to knock on your neighbor's. It's not just you. They're asking but your neighbors
too.
So remember, like I said, this is how they're going to do it. Right, didn't I? I told you
that. This is how they're going to do the reeducation camps. This is why the Karen's were a
problem. I did say that they will come for you. You know who's going to be knocking on
your door for the vaccines. Your
Karen's that's who is going to be knocking on your door. The Karen's This is where we
all put no solicitation stickers on our door under any circumstances. This is The problem
that we have I did say last year, we laughed at the parents, but boy, they're gonna come
for you. And it's gonna be your neighbor. You
think that deceitful friends and family are the problem? The Karen's are. But here's the
thing. One thing I have realized and I've grown to realize is that when you come across
people in your life, that are opportunists, or seek to advance themselves in whatever they
think is the right way to go and

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do things like Karen's do. They think they're doing the right thing? Did I tell you guys
about the limp penile dysfunction conversation on the airplane I had with someone I'm
trying to think if I told you guys that on air. Today, tell you guys that. Okay, he was a
Karen, with the hot Chinese girlfriend. He was a
caring, but he was quickly putting his place by almost everyone in that cabin right
there. Because unbeknownst to many, aside from the media and the social media, because
I've got Karen's, that are my friends. Here's what you need to understand. What you sow,
you will reap if you sow a beautiful
flower, but you water it with intentions of self preservation, you know, getting
vengeance or whatever, it's going to wilt faster than ever actually, believe it or not, gosh,
darn it, there was a woman that reached out to me. Let me find that quote. Because it's
like everywhere there was a TED talk
that I went to famous quotes and I have to misspell My name because that's the way it
is. famous quotes. I'm going to find it there is a link Believe it or not, yeah, I'm on a
famous quotes thing. Quotes authors There we go. And they still have me as Lindemann
whatever, allow ads No, allow WAMP there's a
damage. Oh, he controls the present controls the pen that records the past and this is the
owner of the brush that paints the future. That's something that I had put, okay. The
cargoes importance is divine is defined by its vessel. That was key for now, the cargo the
importance of the cargo that
they put on the graphene oxide is defined by the vessel the the way they're doing it,
gosh, darn it, how can I get out of this? Let's see if I can do it this way. I'm gonna find it
because it was a specific quote, she actually reached out to me and wanted to it was about
a flower. I can't I have ad blockers the
way I put it out, in order to avoid my show being taken down again. Okay, let's see. Jim
dammit. I can't find it. But I can share the link with my misspelled name. As everyone
likes to put it. I don't know who created this. But it's pretty awesome. There's a few
famous quotes by me. But one of
them was about how flowers what you sow, right, you will reap. And what's important
is is that you find that
this is how everything is happening. Now you do not request vengeance, you should
not you will let them conduct what they want. It's kind of like when I'm put in an ambush
situation, I'll roll with the punches. I'll just go with it and stick to my truth. Stick to God
stick to having faith even

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though I'm getting screwed again. And again, again, it's like when I went to the first
time ever that the attorney general actually filed something against me was in February of
2018. And I went there and I went there with nothing. I didn't need a lawyer. The guy just
totally violated my rights.
You know, it's totally in thing. He couldn't even show that he had a complaint or
anything of any sort. And I was like, This is America. I have a fourth you know,
amendment right. You know, and he can't do this. And he's like, this isn't your show. And
I was like, Oh shit, I guess because you got a loan for your
lake house from his bank. You got to see that you prick. And you shouldn't be on a
bench. But I didn't. I sat there and said uh huh. And that was the judge that they found the
open door to ask Don't let her use the internet. Don't let her do this. I don't need a
computer to access to the internet. It's
2021 I guess. So again, any people in your life that you come across that caused harm
to you. Any people in your life that you come across that have wronged you that be a
politician, your your family, your friends, your government? Police Officer a soldier.
Vengeance is not yours to take.
You stick to truth, honesty, and your gut, and you'll be just fine. Just keep looking up.
And remember, no matter how hard they try, the one thing they can't do is cancel the
truth. And again, I'm going to play this song so you can understand, no matter how many
Karen's come at you, how many of you like me?
Walk through hell in open sandals, drinking gasoline. Man, that's like one of my
favorite bars ever dropped by this man. So I'll see you guys tomorrow. Oh,
announcement, my show will be 730 to 930. Every day, in the evening, that way, my
peeps in California can listen and Hawaii. And I think that's a
that's a good time. Because it was kind of like in the middle. So I think 730 to 930 is
just fantastic. God bless everyone.
I can't be canceled. There's no way that you can stop me. fully independent. There's no
label who can drop me. y'all been started rumors. Let me help you with some. He's a
racist. He's a sexist is in love with Donald Trump. How can cancel me My life is scandal
free. There ain't no sponsors taking losses because
the brand is mean my hands are clean family and my fans
agree. Now can't cancel me for facts because you're mad and weak. Go ahead and tell
the world I'm ugly and racist. I braid my hair and I don't care about cultural appropriation
I moved to the ghetto lived in the ghetto. There's no Caucasians and still I loved every
single one of my neighbor's house.
Amazing. I'm clickbait. If he can use this face to get clicks on his page, I'll

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hypocrite some me.
And I ain't trippin about these bullies that ain't sixth grade. Go ahead and dispute trying
to sell a couple mixtapes

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