WEBVTT 02:17.458 --> 02:20.983 Little ditty about Jack and Diane. 02:21.003 --> 02:25.069 Two American kids growing up in the heartland. 02:26.410 --> 02:30.176 Jackie gonna be a football star. 02:31.017 --> 02:34.101 Diane's debutante backseat of Jackie's car. 02:44.892 --> 03:09.034 Suckin' on a chili dog, outside the taste freeze Diane sittin' on Jackie's lap, got his hands between her knees Jackie say, hey Diane, they're tryin' all behind the shade of trees Dribble off those Bobby Brooks, let me do what I please, say Oh yeah, life goes on, long after the thrill 03:14.343 --> 03:20.462 Life goes on long after the thrill of living is gone. 03:20.502 --> 03:21.244 They walk on. 03:40.285 --> 03:43.706 Jackie sits back, collects his thoughts for the moment. 03:44.826 --> 03:48.047 Scratches his head and does his best James Dean. 03:49.467 --> 03:53.228 Well, then there, Diane, you ought to run off to city. 03:54.068 --> 03:56.908 Diane says, baby, you ain't missing a thing. 03:57.008 --> 04:05.830 But Jackie say, oh, yeah, life goes on long after the thrill of living 04:08.356 --> 04:36.170 Oh yeah, let's see life goes on Long after the thrill of living is gone So let it rock, let it roll Let the Bible bell come and save my soul Hold on to 16 as long as you can 04:37.995 --> 04:52.621 Changes come around real soon, make us women and men Oh yeah, life goes on 05:05.680 --> 05:27.472 Long after the thrill of livin' is gone Oh yeah, they say life goes on Long after the thrill of livin' is gone A little ditty about Jack and Diane Two American kids doin' the best that they can 05:58.319 --> 06:05.364 a test that could detect a virus when the virus wasn't present. 06:05.984 --> 06:13.389 And in addition to that, he didn't have virus, coronavirus, COVID-19 to work with, right? 06:13.709 --> 06:18.192 He was drawing the sequencing from a computer database. 06:18.572 --> 06:19.453 Is all of that correct? 06:20.749 --> 06:31.317 Yes, I would say he had an intention to pick up the virus when it was present, but in his design, he admitted that he couldn't do a very good job with it. 06:31.517 --> 06:32.177 Stop lying! 06:32.197 --> 06:34.059 And that it would pick up other Asian coronaviruses. 06:34.319 --> 06:37.241 And that it would pick up other Asian coronaviruses. 06:37.541 --> 06:44.746 And when you say pick up, you mean that it would indicate, return a positive, if there were other coronaviruses. 06:44.826 --> 06:46.848 And for the layperson, I didn't know this either, 06:47.344 --> 06:48.545 Everything is a coronavirus. 06:48.625 --> 06:54.007 I mean, things, I don't mean that, but many cold viruses are also called coronavirus. 06:54.047 --> 07:04.672 In fact, COVID-19, it sounded so exotic and scary when we first learned about it, coronavirus, but many, many ordinary cold viruses are coronaviruses. 07:05.012 --> 07:05.773 Is that correct? 07:05.893 --> 07:06.253 It's correct. 07:16.923 --> 07:19.324 Yes, it's an anti-vax channel. 07:19.364 --> 07:20.444 Welcome to the show. 07:20.564 --> 07:21.924 It's an anti-vax channel for sure. 07:21.944 --> 07:23.024 I think truth is good for kids. 07:23.465 --> 07:27.305 We're so busy lying, we don't even recognize the truth no more in society. 07:27.766 --> 07:29.406 We want everybody to feel good. 07:30.326 --> 07:31.766 That's not the way life is. 07:34.267 --> 07:35.767 But you can tell if someone's lying. 07:36.408 --> 07:38.128 You know, you can sort of feel it in people. 07:39.978 --> 07:40.679 And I have lied. 07:40.699 --> 07:41.759 I'm sure I'll lie again. 07:41.779 --> 07:42.680 I don't want to lie. 07:42.700 --> 07:44.541 I don't think I'm a liar. 07:44.642 --> 07:45.662 I try not to be a liar. 07:45.702 --> 07:46.563 I don't want to be a liar. 07:47.123 --> 07:49.885 I think it's really important not to be a liar. 07:52.067 --> 08:02.795 Introduce Jonathan, who's going to talk about his latest distillation of what the pandemic 08:11.027 --> 08:20.253 means to society, to biology, to science, and to democracy, and to the whole kind of idea of empiricism and integrity. 08:20.273 --> 08:29.919 And then each of us, this incredible preeminent panel that we have, each one of you is going to get a chance to comment. 08:33.601 --> 08:39.225 It doesn't matter much at all what you believe about vaccines until we invent really important ones. 08:39.932 --> 08:52.140 Until we have a pandemic that's killing everyone, and it's measles plus, and okay, I can tolerate what you think about measles, because not that many people die from it. 08:52.440 --> 08:54.382 It's just a big hassle in the end. 08:56.423 --> 09:10.760 No, when we have this new pandemic that has got 75% mortality, there'll be no pretense of being polite in the face of these beliefs. 09:10.820 --> 09:13.323 It'll be a moral emergency, because it has to be. 09:15.700 --> 09:19.843 I'm afraid that the latest data tells us that we're dealing with essentially a worst case scenario. 09:20.183 --> 09:24.546 I'm afraid that the latest data tells us that we're dealing with essentially a worst case scenario. 09:24.766 --> 09:31.031 I'm afraid that the latest data... Now, Dr. Gallo and Dr. Fauci talked a lot about isolation and purification. 09:31.511 --> 09:33.172 Can you tell me what the difference is between the two? 09:33.192 --> 09:38.236 Isolation, what was it? 09:38.276 --> 09:39.797 Isolation and purification. 09:41.638 --> 09:42.299 Of the virus? 09:43.902 --> 09:54.950 Well, you isolate a virus by finding the virus which causes a disease. 09:55.611 --> 10:00.474 You purify a virus by making a lot of, I mean just by purifying it so you get a pure virus. 10:01.275 --> 10:02.756 I don't understand what the issue. 10:02.796 --> 10:02.916 I see. 10:02.936 --> 10:04.077 No, it depends on how they use it. 10:12.628 --> 10:15.411 Can you explain the process of HIV isolation? 10:17.954 --> 10:19.896 Well, didn't Dr. Gallo do that? 10:19.957 --> 10:25.983 I mean, he actually isolated it, so... I mean, why should I do all of this? 10:26.064 --> 10:28.086 This is all textbook stuff you're asking me. 10:33.888 --> 10:34.308 so so 11:31.147 --> 11:32.148 I think I screwed that up. 11:32.268 --> 11:38.254 I advanced that slide just a bit too early and then it fell over on the front line instead of the last frame. 11:38.854 --> 11:40.275 Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the show. 11:40.295 --> 11:44.239 We're here again to try and dispel a little bit more of this enchantment. 11:45.400 --> 11:48.943 I really appreciate everybody in the chat coming to bat for me. 11:49.764 --> 11:51.025 It's not really necessary. 11:51.045 --> 11:52.427 These people come and go. 11:53.627 --> 12:03.229 The people that are really here to find out what's going on and find out what we're trying to do will have the patience to get through the intro because they will have checked on another channel. 12:03.289 --> 12:13.252 It's not like we haven't been putting out videos for four years and you can't just look along that unblemished record of integrity and find a video and figure out what we're doing here. 12:14.252 --> 12:20.855 Any obfuscation or silliness in the chat is just either naivety or messing with us. 12:20.875 --> 12:21.695 So don't worry about it. 12:21.735 --> 12:26.197 I mean, just enjoy the fact that we've met each other again here this morning. 12:27.017 --> 12:29.258 It's almost not morning anymore here in Pittsburgh. 12:29.298 --> 12:29.798 It's 1135. 12:30.398 --> 12:31.259 I'm a little late. 12:31.999 --> 12:35.880 Your consciousness remains the prime real estate that everybody's competing for. 12:36.381 --> 12:39.602 The main messages of this channel are really hard to find. 12:40.582 --> 12:42.803 Some of them are on this screen here. 12:42.843 --> 12:45.785 There was no evidence of spread in New York City. 12:46.545 --> 12:52.227 Infectious clones is the only real concept you need to understand in order to understand the illusion of virology. 12:52.808 --> 12:57.230 Placebo batches were likely distributed and that's why they got us focused on bad batches. 12:58.391 --> 13:02.394 And transfection in healthy mammals has always been dumb. 13:02.474 --> 13:12.703 The idea that someone would come into the chat and kind of make light of the idea that we're calling these transfections will be brought into sharp focus today. 13:13.784 --> 13:15.305 with a little journal club we're gonna do. 13:15.765 --> 13:21.007 The protocols were definitely murder, just nobody wants to talk about supplemental oxygen as being the on-ramp. 13:21.867 --> 13:25.548 Gain of Function is a mythology that they want us to teach our children. 13:26.048 --> 13:32.850 The Scooby-Doo mystery is real, we were fooled into solving it, and the spectacular commitment to lies is what got us to fall for it. 13:34.895 --> 13:36.316 There are other ways to say this. 13:37.557 --> 13:46.965 Weaponized piles of money convinced us to argue about the origins of the virus, and participating in that argument accepted the premise of the novel virus, and we're still being governed by this theater today. 13:47.646 --> 13:48.626 It's another way to say it. 13:51.249 --> 13:59.836 And because it's so easy to say now, the only thing left is to attribute bad motives to the people who disagree with it, like me. 14:01.141 --> 14:07.323 And that's what you see happening on Twitter and everywhere and anywhere anybody engages with some idea of mine. 14:07.443 --> 14:09.704 It's not about the idea, it becomes about me. 14:10.405 --> 14:18.288 And so I challenge these people to take a screenshot of the words on the screen and then respond to the words. 14:19.088 --> 14:20.168 And they just don't do it. 14:20.449 --> 14:26.651 They just don't do it because there is no response to the biological truth other than the affirmative. 14:26.991 --> 14:31.433 They don't want to talk about this elephant in the room, if you will. 14:33.113 --> 14:41.877 This idea that they want to use AI to solve the genome and all of humanity's problems is something that goes back to Lederberg. 14:41.897 --> 14:44.398 It goes back to the Department of Energy. 14:47.085 --> 14:51.947 And that's what Mark Kulak has brought to my attention over a couple years of work. 14:53.127 --> 14:59.269 One of the first videos I ever caught of him was about Bob Barr or William Barr or whatever the hell his name is. 14:59.489 --> 15:00.870 I think it's William Barr, Bill Barr. 15:01.912 --> 15:09.754 And we've lost sight of how long we have had charlatans have power over us. 15:10.194 --> 15:11.855 It's been more than a generation. 15:11.915 --> 15:19.397 Our parents were also lost in their narrative, a narrative that was largely governed by top secret. 15:20.305 --> 15:26.390 programs, the special virus cancer program, nuclear weapons, this kind of thing. 15:26.951 --> 15:30.254 And this is all one big national security show. 15:30.674 --> 15:34.958 If these people aren't active participants, they are unwitting participants. 15:34.998 --> 15:38.261 They are look-the-other-way participants. 15:38.321 --> 15:41.904 They are, you know, the look-away doctrine type. 15:41.964 --> 15:42.845 Well, don't tell me. 15:42.905 --> 15:43.625 I don't need to know. 15:43.746 --> 15:44.186 I'll do it. 15:44.466 --> 15:45.067 No problem. 15:46.144 --> 15:47.786 And they are traitors to our children. 15:47.826 --> 15:56.634 And if we're going to make gentle the life of this world for our kids, as we transition out of their mythology, we're going to have to see them for what they are. 15:57.074 --> 16:00.277 And we're going to have to teach our children how this illusion is created. 16:00.757 --> 16:08.545 This illusion of consensus on social media that probably exists on Facebook, but I wouldn't know, but also exists on Telegram and on Twitter. 16:09.205 --> 16:25.535 and on Gab and on Discord and all of these places where groups of people think they're getting together and having a spontaneous conversation when in reality, unless you see it for what it is, a coordinated group of liars, you won't be able to successfully navigate the wave. 16:26.616 --> 16:33.022 But it's an artificial wave of consensus, just like that wave was artificially generated moving away from the deep water. 16:33.042 --> 16:34.763 It's a wave of consensus. 16:35.304 --> 16:36.965 Not everybody's going to be able to surf it. 16:37.025 --> 16:39.727 Not all kids are going to be able to see it for what it is. 16:39.807 --> 16:43.291 Not all university students are saveable. 16:43.891 --> 17:05.172 But the ones that are savable, I do believe one of the most reliable lifelines is staying focused on the biology and teaching people not to take that multi-liar, multi-performer bait on social media and to start loving their real live neighbors, the ones they can talk to, the ones they can email, the ones they can call. 17:06.681 --> 17:13.628 It's especially a message to Western world and the United States in particular because that's where my roots are. 17:14.849 --> 17:19.895 My father served in the Navy and married a Filipino girl, brought her back to the United States. 17:19.975 --> 17:23.358 And the joke is that I was made in the Philippines and born in the United States. 17:24.199 --> 17:27.120 And so I am an American kid, and that's all I got. 17:27.801 --> 17:32.323 I'm one of these multiracial Americans that I think a lot of these elites think are garbage. 17:32.783 --> 17:34.704 And that's why I will never be elevated. 17:35.244 --> 17:38.445 No one's ever going to pay attention to me spontaneously. 17:38.926 --> 17:44.468 And Peter Thiel and his minions are never going to put me in the face of your family and friends spontaneously. 17:44.548 --> 17:46.509 So I need your help. 17:47.049 --> 17:48.090 You've got to spread the word. 17:48.130 --> 17:50.571 If you don't spread the word, no one else is going to find this stuff. 17:50.631 --> 17:52.172 And I'm going to be a secret that you keep. 17:53.413 --> 18:05.044 If you want to support me, one of the best ways to do it would be to share this work because every once in a while somebody finds this stream and is inspired to financially support and we don't need a lot of that. 18:06.549 --> 18:11.192 I'm not trying to become the next American Idol or the next Joe Rogan. 18:11.212 --> 18:14.734 I'm not trying to get 100 million followers on Spotify. 18:14.954 --> 18:16.294 I just want to be a teacher. 18:16.715 --> 18:24.919 And I want to be able to put my whole heart and soul into this without having to worry about how my kids are going to eat or how we're going to pay rent. 18:25.519 --> 18:26.300 That's all I want. 18:26.380 --> 18:33.784 And I don't think that's very much to ask when we are in a world of multi-billionaires and many of them who were created during this pandemic. 18:35.347 --> 18:41.529 and a dissident operation that's made from people that haven't suffered. 18:41.549 --> 18:48.551 If you just drop your eyes, drop your hand from your face, drop your phone and look up these people, none of them have suffered. 18:49.212 --> 18:59.455 If they lost their job, they started as an entrepreneur and now they're super successful with the support of a supplement company or three sponsors. 19:01.411 --> 19:06.534 The only way to see through this is to engage in united non-compliance, and it's gotta be informed. 19:06.574 --> 19:11.318 You gotta be able to out-reason these people, and that way you need to learn the biology. 19:11.378 --> 19:13.439 So, I think we gotta do some homework today. 19:13.879 --> 19:14.580 Welcome to the show. 19:21.617 --> 19:21.857 So 19:43.863 --> 19:50.088 It is the 9th of January, July. 19:50.108 --> 19:51.209 What am I talking about? 19:51.249 --> 19:52.110 The 9th of July, 2024. 19:52.150 --> 19:56.333 I was actually caught up in the comment from Endless Current. 19:57.814 --> 20:02.198 Me being a Native American has been a problem since way before I had long hair. 20:02.718 --> 20:09.784 When I was a teenager, I had a crew cut all through high school and was very serious about basketball, but I was also a lifeguard. 20:10.244 --> 20:12.006 And so I would sit out on the, 20:12.546 --> 20:19.590 the shore of a lake in Wisconsin or on the shore of a river in my hometown and lifeguard for like three kids. 20:20.390 --> 20:23.131 And in the sun all day, I turned very dark. 20:23.732 --> 20:28.294 And so there were lots of speculation about where I came from as a kid. 20:28.334 --> 20:32.997 And one of the main speculations because of my height was that I was Native American. 20:33.337 --> 20:35.578 And that is definitely not true. 20:36.358 --> 20:41.561 My mom is Filipino and Indian, and my dad is a tall white man from Wisconsin who served in the Navy. 20:43.342 --> 20:46.024 And I'm the result of that partnership. 20:47.325 --> 20:48.746 I am a human just like you. 20:48.806 --> 20:52.248 I went to high school in a very small town in Northern Wisconsin. 20:52.728 --> 20:53.609 I went to prom. 20:53.709 --> 20:56.311 I went to a dance called Snowball every year. 20:57.692 --> 21:04.316 We had a very small conference of schools that we had to ride around in a bus to go play. 21:04.396 --> 21:06.537 Sometimes the bus ride could be as long as 45 minutes. 21:09.159 --> 21:16.084 It was a little bit like the movie Hoosiers with regard to basketball because everybody went to these away games and they were packed. 21:16.544 --> 21:20.927 And it was the thing that was happening that week on a Friday and where were we playing. 21:20.987 --> 21:29.994 And when I was a junior in high school, we were actually ranked second in the state in class C high school, right up until the playoffs. 21:30.054 --> 21:32.295 And then in our first playoff game, we lost. 21:33.456 --> 21:36.438 So it was a extremely humbling moment. 21:37.059 --> 21:40.561 I was playing with a group of seniors that were just killer. 21:41.122 --> 21:46.305 And then there were about five of us juniors, two of which had been already playing varsity. 21:46.325 --> 21:51.889 And then me and a couple other friends of mine all grew to be about six foot five in the same year. 21:52.390 --> 21:55.492 And so we had this incredible team that like was 6'4", 6'5", 6'5", 6'5", 6'6", 6'6", 6'5", 6'6". 21:55.512 --> 21:57.053 And it was all juniors and seniors. 22:02.657 --> 22:03.738 we won a lot of games. 22:03.798 --> 22:06.940 I think we won 11 in a row at one point or more. 22:08.461 --> 22:09.721 It was a really fun year. 22:10.782 --> 22:16.946 And so I lived the ideal American teenage years. 22:17.006 --> 22:21.448 I mean, you know, there is no crime in Kadat, Wisconsin when I was growing up. 22:21.488 --> 22:27.272 And I grew up in the same hometown that my dad grew up in, and everybody knew my dad from when he was a child. 22:27.432 --> 22:30.874 And so I had a lot of his high school teachers, like I am 22:32.028 --> 22:33.892 without wanting to sound too hardcore. 22:33.972 --> 22:35.335 I'm American as they come. 22:35.696 --> 22:36.859 That's all I've got. 22:37.871 --> 22:39.732 is me being an American. 22:39.752 --> 22:41.433 I don't have any other identity. 22:42.274 --> 22:48.817 And so when I say that I'm fighting for America and I'm fighting for my kid's future, that's exactly what I mean. 22:48.897 --> 22:53.500 I'm fighting for the America of the old school NPR. 22:53.540 --> 22:57.022 You remember when the rest of the story was on the radio? 22:58.122 --> 22:59.803 I don't even mean national public radio. 22:59.843 --> 23:05.887 I just mean the public radio of America, the radio of America, where there would be syndicated programs that we all heard. 23:06.656 --> 23:09.879 That's what I grew up in the America that I grew up. 23:10.159 --> 23:23.130 And so I know we can't go back to it, but we can definitely remember it as a time when we weren't so worked up about these ideas that mean nothing like racism, et cetera. 23:23.190 --> 23:26.353 When I was growing up, racism was basically over. 23:26.934 --> 23:28.495 And the idea of racism, 23:29.776 --> 23:38.559 did not have the connotations that it has now where it implies this systemic flaw and this generational debt that people have to other people. 23:39.460 --> 23:45.902 And this extraordinary place that we are in in our cultural history can be brought to a screeching halt 23:46.642 --> 23:48.343 if we just teach people the truth. 23:48.783 --> 23:50.264 And so I'm a human just like you. 23:50.324 --> 23:58.249 I got sucked into a lot of these liars' performances over the last four years and got sucked into believing that there was a mystery to solve. 23:58.269 --> 24:04.353 If we can teach our family and friends how this happened to us, then they also might be able to see how it happened to them. 24:06.138 --> 24:29.645 There are some truths that none of these people will discuss, and if I'm being blocked by doctors, it's because they don't want to have to pay attention to the absolute bedrock message of this stream, which I will continue to repeat every day, probably until I retire, which is intramuscular injection of any combination of substances with the intent of augmenting the immune system is dumb. 24:30.545 --> 24:33.286 A sort of caveat or a, what did they call that? 24:35.111 --> 24:41.954 A corollary of that is the statement, transfection in healthy humans is criminally negligent. 24:41.994 --> 24:42.835 And it always was. 24:42.895 --> 24:55.901 And there's actually thousands of professional biologists in America and professional healthcare people that should have done known better because the word transfection has been around for a few years. 24:56.881 --> 24:58.142 RNA cannot pandemic. 24:59.183 --> 24:59.803 And we know that. 25:01.986 --> 25:15.917 I really think we know that from all the molecular biology that we've done on the bench, we know that RNA is not capable of doing that any more than if you have a notebook of carbon paper, that that could result in the distribution of a newspaper. 25:16.017 --> 25:18.179 I understand that when you write on that, 25:18.679 --> 25:28.308 that paper, it makes another copy on the next page, but that sort of limited ability to make an instant copy of your writing is not going to translate too well. 25:28.769 --> 25:38.298 If you make that carbon the right way, and you use the right combination of paper, it could be enough to distribute your work everywhere on earth. 25:40.353 --> 25:53.319 And that's the level of exaggeration that I think is equivalent to saying that an RNA, if it has the right combination of HIV inserts or furin cleavage sites, that it could go around the earth with high fidelity for five years. 25:53.519 --> 25:55.280 It's absolutely ridiculous. 25:57.389 --> 26:04.952 And so I've been trying to spend the last couple years now trying to teach everyone or convince everyone that the alien that I've seen is real. 26:05.032 --> 26:15.977 And one of the aspects of the alien that I think is most apt in terms of trying to get a handle on things is the idea that I was hired by Bobby Kennedy, by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 26:16.037 --> 26:17.818 to help him write his Wuhan cover-up book. 26:18.318 --> 26:27.148 And during the course of that year and one month of working for him, I came to realize that weaponized piles of money had convinced us to argue about the origins of the novel virus. 26:27.188 --> 26:30.592 And that argument alone made us accept the existence of it. 26:30.632 --> 26:33.995 And there actually wasn't very much evidence for the existence of it. 26:34.396 --> 26:38.540 And in fact, a lot of the arguments that the no-virus people were making were very strong. 26:39.321 --> 26:45.524 And as I started to pivot through this cognitive space of, wait a minute, if there was no virus, then what are they doing? 26:45.564 --> 26:47.425 Did they murder people and just lie about it? 26:47.885 --> 26:50.866 Once we got there, I was person non grata. 26:51.026 --> 27:04.592 And instead of being treated as what I physically am, which is the first listed expert in the acknowledgements of that book, I'm treated as if I don't exist by all of these people. 27:05.768 --> 27:18.911 And the reason why is because all of these people are part of this theater that spans from mainstream media all the way to social media where they create this illusion of consensus with podcasts and they're harmonizing on it. 27:21.052 --> 27:22.732 Harmonizing on the mythology. 27:26.393 --> 27:33.995 And so that's why I always show this slide multiple times a day because Noam Chomsky told us how they do it. 27:35.117 --> 27:46.815 And before Noam Chomsky, there was a guy by the name of Edward Bernays in the 1920s that told us how they do it, back when they didn't have the social media access to our brains that they have now. 27:48.017 --> 27:50.600 And so without a doubt, this guy is right. 27:52.079 --> 27:54.281 Without a doubt, this guy was telling us the truth. 27:54.321 --> 27:56.862 He just didn't tell you the truth that this is everywhere. 27:57.343 --> 27:58.984 This is how they control congressmen. 27:59.024 --> 28:07.490 This is how they control people on the internet that don't know they're part of the conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses. 28:07.550 --> 28:10.052 They just think I got lucky and got a sponsor. 28:10.652 --> 28:16.895 They just think that I got lucky and people are sticking up for me, that I get to get interviewed in places. 28:16.935 --> 28:23.458 And so I better keep saying what I'm saying because it feels like this is the right thing to say because everybody's telling me it's the right thing to say. 28:23.838 --> 28:32.502 And so whether you're wittingly participating in the conscious and intelligent manipulation of our thoughts, or whether you're unwittingly participating, you are participating. 28:33.649 --> 28:38.991 And that's what we need to teach our children so that they themselves do not participate. 28:39.051 --> 28:44.653 They themselves are not bamboozled even by people who don't know they're participating. 28:45.234 --> 28:58.639 Like all the people that think that their Twitch stream on Twitch that talks about video games or that because they dress up and groom horses on camera live are actually stars and influencers. 28:59.929 --> 29:06.697 when really what they are are unwitting participants in the conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions. 29:07.238 --> 29:15.588 Particularly, a lot of these people are manipulating the intelligent attention of these people so that their opinions are useless. 29:17.022 --> 29:39.080 If you spend all your day following Twitch channels that argue about different games or are really pretty or whatever, then you're wasting hours of your day where you could be learning, where you could be teaching your kid, where you could be making useful connections with the people around you, or where you could, I don't know, be doing something useful for your community or for yourself. 29:41.308 --> 29:47.931 That's why there's a international gathering called TwitchCon or something like that, where everybody goes and talks to other streamers. 29:50.272 --> 29:59.716 There aren't very many streamers on Twitch that actually have a message or would like to be a biology teacher, but can't because the internet is full of frauds. 30:03.858 --> 30:04.959 That's the reality of it. 30:06.308 --> 30:18.102 And that's why once you start to see it and then you go back to look at 2020 and you realize that someone like a college dropout, Kevin McKernan, multi-millionaire, 30:19.025 --> 30:29.612 who took IP from the Human Genome Project and created multi-generational wealth for his family, whose father was involved in microarray technology before he got into biotech. 30:30.292 --> 30:36.196 He claims he lifted himself up by his bootstraps to become the Pot Genome King, but that's not true. 30:36.236 --> 30:37.077 His father was in 30:37.757 --> 30:39.058 in with this group of people. 30:39.218 --> 30:51.085 And in particular, because it's microarrays and sequencing stuff, he was in with the DOD crowd or the DOE crowd that Mark Usatonic has been telling us about, bringing to our attention. 30:54.107 --> 31:03.731 And the fact of the matter is, is that he was present in April, he was present in May, he was present in December, and he never usefully questioned the narrative. 31:03.771 --> 31:08.473 He never usefully questioned the possibility that maybe they're just murdering people in hospitals and lying about it. 31:08.533 --> 31:12.475 No, no, there's definitely a novel virus, but novels shouldn't be capitalized. 31:12.515 --> 31:14.356 That was his main objective. 31:14.396 --> 31:15.696 That was his main statement. 31:15.997 --> 31:19.038 We shouldn't capitalize novel because it's not as novel as they say it is. 31:22.168 --> 31:24.510 And they are misleading our young adults. 31:24.970 --> 31:26.791 They are misleading our young parents. 31:26.831 --> 31:32.676 They are misleading our college kids over the last five years, almost completely successfully now. 31:33.676 --> 31:36.779 We have very little time left to wake these people up. 31:38.060 --> 31:46.926 I'm thinking less than a year before a series of events will happen that will make 2020 too far away to get anybody to want to look at it anymore. 31:47.687 --> 31:49.448 It only is going to take one big tragedy. 31:52.478 --> 31:54.680 These people are really traitors to our children. 31:54.760 --> 32:02.085 Brett Weinstein could have called this transfection anytime he wanted to in 2021 because I was insisting that he do it. 32:03.506 --> 32:16.716 Evidence is present in his podcast record because at least once, Heather Haying, his wife, said on screen that I'm the one who told them, insisted that they should call it transfection, and she agreed. 32:16.836 --> 32:19.318 But then they never changed their lingo at all. 32:20.225 --> 32:24.588 And here he is two days ago saying it's the right word, but it's not widely understood. 32:26.910 --> 32:28.711 That's really, that's really lame. 32:33.775 --> 32:42.101 It can't be underestimated how important it is to see this as the malevolence that it was at the time and is and remains now. 32:43.513 --> 32:48.634 He's not just being a little obtuse when he says that it's the right word, but not very many people understand it. 32:48.674 --> 32:53.655 He purposefully didn't teach it when I told him in 2021, it was the most important thing to do. 32:54.436 --> 32:58.597 When I had just gotten kicked out of drastic, because I said it was the most important thing to do. 32:59.017 --> 33:08.819 When I had just lost my job at a university of Pittsburgh school of medicine as a research assistant professor, because I insisted that transfection was the most important thing to teach. 33:13.652 --> 33:18.773 And quite frankly, quite frankly, CHD and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 33:18.853 --> 33:22.274 and the whole staff of that book writing crew, they all know this too. 33:22.334 --> 33:31.376 They all know that my stance is, is that gain of function is something that the national security state wants us to teach our children so they don't have to. 33:33.116 --> 33:40.858 So that for generations, our kids will pass this mythology along about what happened in 2020 and how bad the adults screwed it up. 33:43.564 --> 33:49.067 This is the precipice that we are at where real history is being created as we speak. 33:49.468 --> 33:59.314 And that history is going to blot out the biological truth that intramuscular injection of any combination of substances with the intent of augmenting the immune system has always been dumb. 34:01.795 --> 34:06.398 Transfection in healthy humans was always criminally negligent and that RNA cannot pandemic. 34:06.438 --> 34:07.639 They're just not going to talk about it. 34:09.246 --> 34:11.647 because they're running out the clock on this narrative. 34:11.687 --> 34:12.428 That's what they're doing. 34:12.468 --> 34:13.528 It's running out the clock. 34:13.548 --> 34:14.709 That's how you should see this. 34:14.769 --> 34:22.593 Because they started the clock in 2019 after Kevin McKernan said that, well, it's not novel as in 2020. 34:23.013 --> 34:24.594 It was probably here before that. 34:24.734 --> 34:28.155 They weren't sequencing people in the rural parts of China. 34:28.516 --> 34:31.097 So that's why I started sequencing the weed. 34:32.810 --> 34:35.432 And of course, they told us that this was trackable. 34:35.472 --> 34:37.433 They told us it was evidence of evolution. 34:37.833 --> 34:47.959 And when they had data that showed no evolution, like Alina Chan's data, they just made her a researcher at the Broad Institute and buried the paper. 34:49.600 --> 34:51.001 Lockdowns were done correctly. 34:51.041 --> 34:56.645 They prevent spread because, of course, Australia and New Zealand are shining examples of what happens when you really lock down. 34:57.705 --> 35:01.808 And without strict regulation, gain-of-function pandemics will only be worse in the future. 35:05.871 --> 35:07.972 And they created this illusion of consensus. 35:08.032 --> 35:09.132 Bret Weinstein did it. 35:09.312 --> 35:10.792 Alexandros Marinos did it. 35:10.852 --> 35:11.953 Chris Martinson did it. 35:12.793 --> 35:14.733 I did it in 2020. 35:16.874 --> 35:17.214 You see? 35:18.274 --> 35:25.156 And until I figured out what I was doing and how dangerous it was and how much it served the needs of these people, 35:26.277 --> 35:33.759 these transhumanists, these futurists, these globalists, these servants of the weaponized piles of money that would enslave our children. 35:34.199 --> 35:45.583 Once I realized that I was participating in creating that illusion and that the people that I thought were helping me were egging me on and keeping me away from transfection, I got angry. 35:45.803 --> 35:48.964 I got mad and I still didn't figure it out. 35:50.700 --> 35:54.763 It took me almost nine months of working for Bobby before I really figured it out. 35:55.423 --> 36:02.187 And then still at that point, I couldn't consider the possibility that I had been hired to work on that book so that I wouldn't figure it out. 36:02.588 --> 36:05.129 To encourage me not to figure it out, I still didn't see it. 36:06.310 --> 36:07.871 I still thought Bobby had to be a good guy. 36:07.891 --> 36:09.032 He's just trying to do the right thing. 36:09.072 --> 36:10.693 He's just not sophisticated enough to get it. 36:10.713 --> 36:12.294 I made every excuse in the book. 36:15.290 --> 36:18.472 And the worst case scenario is still going through social media right now. 36:18.572 --> 36:19.732 Are they doing this to us? 36:20.152 --> 36:21.013 Are they killing us? 36:21.773 --> 36:22.954 Who's gonna come to our rescue? 36:22.994 --> 36:23.754 Will it be Bobby? 36:25.015 --> 36:30.237 And the way they are pulling this off is by not talking about 2020 and 2021, not talking about it at all. 36:30.658 --> 36:38.321 If you just do the research on your heroes and go to 2020 and 2021, you're gonna find people that were saying, wow, the TV's right. 36:38.762 --> 36:40.242 Wow, the New York Times is right. 36:40.602 --> 36:41.443 Wow, it's crazy. 36:43.902 --> 36:46.763 Fauci, Dasek, Fauci, Dasek, whoa! 36:46.783 --> 36:51.704 And you don't need to do that. 36:51.824 --> 36:52.844 That's all a lie. 36:52.944 --> 36:54.104 That whole faith is a lie. 36:54.144 --> 36:56.625 The only thing real is transfection and transformation. 37:01.886 --> 37:06.487 And so we're running out of mesmery there, and this will come a little hard, so hang on. 37:15.475 --> 37:17.477 So I got a couple surprises for you today. 37:17.697 --> 37:19.319 I got up early this morning. 37:19.359 --> 37:20.400 I took care of the chickens. 37:21.201 --> 37:26.386 Ruby didn't want to walk, so we're going to go for a walk after this presentation. 37:27.227 --> 37:28.128 And I did some reading. 37:28.168 --> 37:29.690 I did some reading for my friend Mark. 37:30.891 --> 37:45.322 I've been pointing out that very few people will talk about the names that I have come to understand through Mark Kulak and Housatonic Live, the presentations that he does there and the content that he makes. 37:45.743 --> 37:48.545 I've come to understand Sina Bavari is a pretty interesting dude. 37:49.065 --> 37:52.446 I've come to understand is David Hone as somebody who's a pretty interesting dude. 37:52.486 --> 37:54.427 Stanley Plotkin, exceptionally interesting. 37:54.467 --> 37:58.088 Hilary Koprowski is like somebody out of a comic book. 37:58.368 --> 38:06.890 And the Barr family has so many interesting nuggets in history, like these guys and their papas have been around for a while. 38:08.331 --> 38:14.314 It's really cool that you can trace this family all the way back to the Manhattan Project. 38:14.354 --> 38:14.914 It's really cool. 38:15.254 --> 38:21.317 And then Joshua Lederberg, of course, has an intimate role to play in these stories. 38:21.878 --> 38:32.563 And so the first thing that I want to remind you of, yesterday, of course, there is a video about the disturbing discovery of new abnormal clots that Vajon Health 38:33.223 --> 38:39.429 actually had the audacity to promote as the string theory that Jonathan Cooey or J.J. 38:39.489 --> 38:45.235 Cooey and Lasky Eye Center, that's Joe Lee, talked about on my stream. 38:45.315 --> 38:46.977 This is extraordinary. 38:46.997 --> 38:49.600 I think the string theory is silly. 38:51.196 --> 39:06.573 Even if it is a molecular component of what might happen in certain cases during vaccination gone wrong, or immune augmentation gone wrong, it is not an be-all, end-all description of what's going on. 39:06.773 --> 39:10.517 And the worst part about it is, is that it relies on the idea that 39:12.011 --> 39:21.734 that after transfection your body is making useful high affinity antibodies to the spike protein that can cause the string theory to occur. 39:22.314 --> 39:31.117 And so that's already a large assumption that makes you accept an extraordinary amount of their technologies as being sound. 39:33.578 --> 39:38.220 And so I'm pretty sure that Jolie and his string theory are a silly trap. 39:39.229 --> 39:43.250 And that's why he suddenly appeared out of nowhere when he did, when he came on my stream. 39:43.670 --> 39:46.471 And the first time that he was on my stream, he was pretty good. 39:46.511 --> 39:50.652 The second time he was on my stream, he had props ready to go. 39:51.232 --> 39:54.413 And then as soon as that stream happened, we got a clip of it. 39:54.653 --> 39:57.894 And the clip was just forced to go wild. 39:57.954 --> 40:01.895 I've never had any other clip of me ever, ever, ever. 40:02.515 --> 40:17.938 get shared as much as that clip and it is still being shared now and it's still being promoted by this guy now never there is not there's not one clip of me not one that that jeff from earth has made that has ever received the kind of attention that this clip 40:18.359 --> 40:22.841 that was made about Jolie and myself and the string theory. 40:22.921 --> 40:26.883 It has been shared over and over and repeatedly and repeatedly. 40:27.244 --> 40:32.126 And somehow people can't forget about it and new anonymous accounts find it and new anonymous accounts. 40:32.486 --> 40:39.410 And now four and a half years into the pandemic, Vae John Philip McMillan actually finds it and promotes it. 40:41.191 --> 40:42.992 It is spectacular. 40:44.022 --> 40:49.946 how hard they are fighting at this point to try and get me somehow to play along. 40:52.847 --> 41:02.213 And so one of the things that I mentioned the other day was Whitney Webb had mentioned William Barr or whether he mentioned, she mentioned William Barr in her book. 41:03.134 --> 41:04.715 And I think it's really interesting. 41:04.775 --> 41:05.535 I have her books. 41:05.675 --> 41:07.756 I actually have her books and they're signed by her. 41:08.857 --> 41:12.980 And so this morning I decided to skim the book and 41:14.696 --> 41:20.698 The... But I would say that that clip is random. 41:20.778 --> 41:21.458 Just chance? 41:21.758 --> 41:22.279 I don't know. 41:22.899 --> 41:29.661 Because there's been lots of clips from this community, from Jeff from Earth, that have never gone anywhere after his tweet or her tweet. 41:30.521 --> 41:31.462 It doesn't go anywhere. 41:32.062 --> 41:37.344 But this single video keeps coming back so often, it's very extraordinary. 41:37.744 --> 41:40.645 And it's not really a video about me, it's a video about Joe Lee. 41:41.545 --> 41:43.327 So that's the other thing you need to see here. 41:43.367 --> 41:50.173 That video is pushed as watch Jonathan Cui suddenly be taught the truth by by Jolie. 41:50.274 --> 41:51.975 It's it's a deceptively 41:54.970 --> 42:01.437 I feel like it was made specifically maybe to bait me into sharing it but then promoting Joe Lee by sharing it. 42:01.497 --> 42:02.278 So I never shared it. 42:02.898 --> 42:13.068 And watching it go and go and go and people try to force it to go and nobody ever makes that effort with any of the other videos that Jeff ever cuts. 42:14.129 --> 42:16.990 was pretty extraordinary to me, and it's still going on right now. 42:17.390 --> 42:20.551 So anyway, here we are, Whitney Webb on William Barr. 42:20.631 --> 42:23.672 I've got her two books right here, and so I thought I'd go through them. 42:23.832 --> 42:36.676 Interestingly, in looking for a picture of these books, Mark, you'll be interested to note this if Mark's listening, lo and behold, the audio books of Whitney Webb's books right now are free! 42:38.069 --> 42:41.671 Like you can just get them on Amazon. 42:42.351 --> 42:44.252 It's a free trial with Audible. 42:44.633 --> 42:45.893 You get her books for free. 42:47.294 --> 42:48.675 That's pretty awesome, isn't it? 42:48.715 --> 42:59.161 I mean, there must be a lot of really scary, inconvenient truths for the state in these books if they're giving them away for free on Amazon, right? 42:59.221 --> 43:02.803 Must be very, very salacious. 43:04.744 --> 43:06.825 So let me see what happens if I do that. 43:08.868 --> 43:12.471 Hey, to Jonathan, it was great to meet you at the CHD conference. 43:12.511 --> 43:13.512 Thanks for your support. 43:13.592 --> 43:14.813 Best, Whitney Webb. 43:16.154 --> 43:17.455 Not bullshitting around here, man. 43:17.916 --> 43:29.265 I met this girl at the CHD conference, and after her talk, the first person that came out of the conference room was none other than Robert Malone, and he said, wow, what a firecracker. 43:29.325 --> 43:30.306 I didn't expect that. 43:30.706 --> 43:31.447 That was great. 43:38.632 --> 43:57.112 Remember, this is the same CHD conference that Matt Crawford wasn't registered for, but once he found out I was going, he decided to go from Texas to Knoxville and count on the fact that Merrill Nass would get him a registration, even though the registration was all closed. 43:58.769 --> 44:06.271 Just a little tidbit of information, Matt Crawford also had lunch with Robert Malone and his wife while he was at the CHD conference in Knoxville. 44:06.671 --> 44:10.032 And this was also the first time actually where, is it? 44:10.952 --> 44:11.872 Or was it the second time? 44:12.252 --> 44:17.513 I think it was the second time that, oh gosh, now I'm really lost. 44:20.574 --> 44:27.836 I think it was the second time that I met Mark Kulak in person, but it might've been the first time and then the second time was at my house, I can't remember. 44:28.941 --> 44:29.742 And so let's go. 44:30.222 --> 44:43.893 What we're going to do here is we're going to go to what I've done already, previous to getting on air of course, is I've taken a look at the index here and I've looked for bar. 44:45.137 --> 44:47.637 And you can see that I'm not very good with alphabetizing things. 44:47.677 --> 44:48.978 So I turned to the wrong page already. 44:49.038 --> 44:51.378 Bar, bar, bar, bar, bar, bar, bar, bar. 44:51.958 --> 44:53.019 William Barr's right there. 44:53.139 --> 44:57.879 And you see there's lots of, in volume one, there's lots of citations. 44:57.899 --> 45:00.760 So we're just going to go read these citations out loud and see what we get. 45:04.321 --> 45:04.921 Let's see. 45:09.322 --> 45:10.242 So the first one is on 207. 45:13.148 --> 45:16.130 Let's look and see if I can find the Barr name before you find it. 45:16.430 --> 45:17.531 Ah, here we go, here's Barr. 45:18.231 --> 45:29.978 Barr, one former CIA officer on Shaw, Pittman, Potts, and Trobert's pre-roll at this time was William Barr, the future Attorney General for Presidents George Bush and years later, Donald Trump. 45:30.518 --> 45:32.399 Barr worked for the CIA from 73 to 77. 45:32.779 --> 45:40.284 He joined that law firm in 78, but it is unknown if he worked for any of the accounts linked to this private CIA 45:41.755 --> 45:43.115 during his time there. 45:43.816 --> 45:45.496 One lawyer who confirmed, and then it goes on. 45:45.636 --> 45:54.978 So, Bill Barr is a CIA agent, has worked for Attorney General for a couple presidents, and he worked for Shaw, Pittman, Potts, and Trowbridge. 45:55.178 --> 45:56.419 Okay, cool. 45:57.239 --> 46:01.680 Let's see, next reference is on page... 46:07.378 --> 46:10.459 Rick's reference is on page 349, and it goes over to 350. 46:12.379 --> 46:15.080 So it's actually two references, but it's not really two references. 46:15.100 --> 46:15.720 It's just one. 46:16.200 --> 46:17.660 It's here at the bottom of the page. 46:18.840 --> 46:23.801 Um, the attorney general serving under George W. Bush at that time was William Barr. 46:24.281 --> 46:35.164 As mentioned before, Barr had been a CIA officer before joining the agency-linked law firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts, and Trowbridge. 46:36.404 --> 46:36.604 Huh. 46:38.564 --> 46:39.064 And then what? 46:40.205 --> 46:40.586 That's it? 46:41.246 --> 46:45.550 You just said that like 200 pages earlier and nothing more. 46:46.190 --> 46:48.892 So this mention here is not attributed. 46:50.533 --> 46:50.814 Okay. 46:51.514 --> 46:54.377 So, um, and that's two more mentions. 46:54.397 --> 46:55.077 So that's three. 46:55.898 --> 46:57.459 Then here we go to page 406. 47:00.847 --> 47:06.810 And that appointment was made by none other than Attorney General under George Bush William Barr. 47:06.870 --> 47:15.556 As previously mentioned in Chapter 8, Barr had not only alleged role in major aspects of Iran-Contra under Robert Johnson, but had begun his career at the CIA. 47:15.636 --> 47:22.220 As will be discussed in Chapter 11, Barr's employment with the CIA overlapped with his father's decision to hire Jeffrey Epstein at the Dalton School 47:22.740 --> 47:26.182 which would prove essential in Epstein's rise to prominence in these networks. 47:26.282 --> 47:38.349 Early on, Barr essentially stonewalled Congress by denying congressmen access to privileged documents related to Promise and Inslaw Incorporated, much like he had done years earlier when he stonewalled the Church Committee on behalf of the CIA. 47:39.289 --> 47:46.715 As a result, a congressional hearing was held in December 1990 on Barr's continued refusal to make the documents available. 47:47.175 --> 48:00.126 After considerable political pressure, Barr moved to appoint the special counsel to investigate the Inslaw Affair, appointed retired judge from Chicago, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. 48:00.146 --> 48:02.507 Yes and yes and yes, and that's it. 48:03.568 --> 48:04.229 No more Barr. 48:06.771 --> 48:06.911 Hmm. 48:08.066 --> 48:14.730 Okay, I'm still not really paying much attention to Barr, apparently, even though he's been Attorney General for two Presidents. 48:14.770 --> 48:16.091 He's not really that important. 48:16.111 --> 48:18.412 He worked for the CIA, but that, you know, that's it. 48:18.713 --> 48:19.033 Okay. 48:20.094 --> 48:22.055 Here we go, we're going to page 433, same book. 48:25.766 --> 48:34.491 Much of the dirty laundry of these different criminal enterprises would be mopped up in the early 90s by none other than William Barr, who started his career at the CIA and served as George W. Bush's Attorney General. 48:34.991 --> 48:47.358 Barr would play a major role in covering up Iran-Contra promise in BCCI and is seen in his pardoning of the Iran-Contra criminals and his patronage of the Bua report and his thwarting of indictments related to BCCI's 91 collapse. 48:47.818 --> 48:53.461 Some have explained specific scandals away, painting them as blights of the Reagan-Bush administrations and treating them with 48:54.898 --> 48:58.501 treating these intelligence organized criminal rackets as isolated instances. 48:58.561 --> 49:03.005 However, that's it. 49:03.325 --> 49:04.906 There's no more Bill Barr. 49:06.608 --> 49:06.988 Okay. 49:07.008 --> 49:09.750 So CIA again and attorney general again. 49:09.770 --> 49:11.091 Okay. 49:11.131 --> 49:12.392 I'm going to the next one for 51. 49:12.432 --> 49:12.472 Um, 49:18.476 --> 49:27.540 Here it is again, William Casey and in the late seventies had worked alongside young William Barr in stonewalling the Pike Committee and the Church Committee and investigated the CIA beginning in 1975. 49:29.081 --> 49:30.702 And that's it for Bill Barr again. 49:30.722 --> 49:33.303 Hmm. 49:34.884 --> 49:37.525 Not a whole lot on Bill Barr. 49:37.585 --> 49:42.068 It's like, okay, then I go all the way to the back and that's the end. 49:42.188 --> 49:44.129 So, um, that's the first book. 49:45.569 --> 49:46.910 Um, let's go to the second book. 49:48.510 --> 49:50.171 Maybe she has more on the second book. 49:52.652 --> 49:55.513 I'll go to the index here and we got Barr. 49:55.573 --> 49:57.993 Donald Barr's got page 2 and 3. 50:00.034 --> 50:01.815 And William Barr has 2, 3, and 31. 50:02.275 --> 50:02.915 Okay, good. 50:02.955 --> 50:04.716 Let's go right to the beginning of the book. 50:04.776 --> 50:06.116 Man, that's promising. 50:06.136 --> 50:10.218 Okay, so 2 and 3. 50:10.918 --> 50:13.199 Donald Barr was the son of a communist and 50:14.898 --> 50:19.843 son of an economist and psychologist who had joined the OSS during World War II. 50:21.004 --> 50:26.910 He is alleged to have been a member of an OSS target team in Germany and have worked for a prisoner of war camp. 50:27.785 --> 50:45.180 His son, William Barr, would subsequently follow his father into the world of intelligence services and served from the CIA from 1971 to 77, which overlaps with the last few years his father was headmaster at the Dalton School, including the year Donald Barr is alleged to have hired Jeffrey Epstein. 50:45.601 --> 50:53.247 William Barr, who allegedly had a role in the Iran Contra mentioned in chapter eight, would go on to serve as attorney general for George, 50:54.198 --> 50:57.740 in a capacity, was arrested and found dead in New York prison. 50:59.401 --> 51:03.784 After exiting intelligence, he briefly worked as a literary editor and then went into academia. 51:03.824 --> 51:05.165 He taught English at Columbia. 51:05.185 --> 51:05.965 Oh boy. 51:06.525 --> 51:14.690 And for 10 years while pursuing graduate studies, he started a series of conferences in 1955 focused on identification guidance and instructed of the gifted. 51:15.911 --> 51:22.934 and joined the School of Engineering following year, and these conferences then grew into Science Honors Program, which offered Saturday classes to gifted high schoolers. 51:22.954 --> 51:23.594 Nice idea. 51:24.175 --> 51:33.499 At the same time he was running his high school-focused program, Barr was also directing the Talent Preservation Project, a massive research therapy program for high school underachievers. 51:33.979 --> 51:43.323 It is possible that there may have been an early Epstein-Barr connection if Epstein had attended one of these programs for gifted high school students. 51:45.233 --> 51:46.534 Donald Barr would become the head. 51:46.574 --> 51:56.297 So it's all about tying them to promoting him as the school headmaster, and the headmaster, and the headmaster, and the headmaster Dalton, and the headmaster. 51:56.357 --> 52:08.882 So despite the fact that he was somebody in World War II, an OSS target team, that's all she's got to say. 52:08.942 --> 52:12.804 And then she repeats the stuff that she said 13 other times in the first book. 52:14.269 --> 52:16.032 And then adds a little bit about the dad again. 52:16.172 --> 52:16.593 I don't know. 52:16.973 --> 52:17.374 I'm not. 52:19.554 --> 52:20.834 I'm not terribly impressed. 52:20.894 --> 52:30.698 If you look at Mark's catalog of research into the Barr family, every time he opens the book on them, something interesting falls out. 52:30.878 --> 52:38.360 And I find it incredible, absolutely incredible to see that this book is free, has an audio book on Amazon. 52:38.401 --> 52:39.861 That cannot be good. 52:40.261 --> 52:47.284 That cannot mean that this is the most controversial, most dangerous books for the state that have ever been produced. 52:47.324 --> 52:48.344 It's just not possible. 52:50.703 --> 52:53.444 This is the opposite of that label. 52:54.144 --> 52:56.405 They are encouraging people to read this. 52:57.786 --> 53:07.750 As many people as will download a three-month trial of Audible and will willingly put themselves on the list. 53:09.790 --> 53:10.631 Amazeballs. 53:11.508 --> 53:12.389 amazeballs. 53:13.069 --> 53:17.892 So he worked for the CIA and he was a district attorney was a attorney general twice. 53:18.012 --> 53:20.353 That's about what she knows about William Barr. 53:21.194 --> 53:26.597 And her dad, his dad was the headmaster at at the Dalton school. 53:26.617 --> 53:31.660 And that's all you really need to know from Whitney Webb as far as William Barr and his dad are concerned. 53:32.281 --> 53:33.942 And unfortunately, because of 53:34.602 --> 53:41.269 Robert Malone's incredibly ridiculous endorsement in Knoxville at the CHD inaugural conference. 53:41.990 --> 53:46.715 I can't help but think that Whitney Webb is probably part of this ridiculous little thing. 53:48.632 --> 53:58.280 Curious note, Whitney Webb actually mentions Joshua Lederberg in an article that she published in 2020 about Michael Callahan. 54:00.842 --> 54:11.070 It's a really interesting hat tip to Joshua Lederberg and is actually what has led me to think that we should be looking into Lederberg like Mark Kulak is as well. 54:11.890 --> 54:13.791 Remember, I think these people have misled us. 54:14.192 --> 54:21.436 I think in particular, Robert Malone is intimate in terms of, really important in terms of understanding what's going on here. 54:21.916 --> 54:23.577 I want to just cover these points really quick. 54:24.718 --> 54:32.783 In the Vajon Health video that I covered in two videos in the previous shows, it became clear that Robert Malone has worked particularly on retroviruses. 54:32.803 --> 54:34.664 This will become important in the Journal Club today. 54:35.624 --> 54:39.507 Investigated packaging sequences will also become important in the Journal Club today. 54:40.387 --> 54:45.950 suffered PTSD because those labs were so cutthroat, and he actually got a diagnosis of that. 54:46.370 --> 54:59.237 But since then, he's able to work for DITRA, DOD, speak at the WHO, and sit on multiple NIH study sections where he's overseen and helped people award more than $50 billion worth of American funds. 54:59.637 --> 55:04.679 He won't touch Mickiewicz because she comes from the same retro viral mentor chain that he does. 55:05.680 --> 55:15.384 And he has actually done a movie with Gerrit van den Bosch where he has a little black taxi cab driver hat on and there's drone footage from him in the mountains of Spain in 2021. 55:15.884 --> 55:19.646 And so I assure you that Gerrit is also intimately involved in this theater. 55:20.426 --> 55:35.757 Finally, I can't encourage you enough, please use the website housatonicits.com and peruse the news articles and things that have been so generously correlated together, collated together, archived together for our use. 55:36.298 --> 55:38.840 Please go there and find things that I haven't found yet. 55:39.961 --> 55:41.423 So we did this already. 55:41.463 --> 55:55.043 Vajon Health is a really interesting window into this that spans from Geert van den Bosch all the way through Christine Grace and Charles Rixey and Kevin McCairn all the way through to Robert Malone and 55:56.304 --> 56:02.446 and right now up to citing Joe Lee and his string theory in a video. 56:02.546 --> 56:23.212 It's absolutely shocking how much can be learned if you just look at that guy's catalog and see how he was set up to be present for the spike, be present for autoimmunity, and try to misconstrue it as both the spike protein in transfection and the spike protein from the gain-of-function virus are causing the same calamity in 56:23.792 --> 56:24.213 humans. 56:24.554 --> 56:28.947 And that is a disturbingly malevolent mythology. 56:31.317 --> 56:34.439 And I think it's really available right now to see what's happening. 56:34.499 --> 56:49.710 The limited spectrum of debate is currently being buttressed on one side by CHD and Brownstone, and on the other side by a much more reasonable and nuanced take by Robert Malone's Substack. 56:49.831 --> 56:58.357 And so here we are in avian flu, and the mythology is being actively curated by the exact people that won't talk about me, and actually some of them even let me go. 56:58.957 --> 57:24.143 After hiring me as a hero The way that they do it is they don't talk about 2020 and what they were doing then and what what they were talking about The first interview with Jolie is a pretty good interview the second one with Jolie is a 57:25.188 --> 57:26.369 is less entertaining. 57:26.409 --> 57:26.949 It's okay. 57:27.629 --> 57:30.030 Um, there's no question that Jolie is not on our team. 57:30.130 --> 57:32.291 I don't know whose team he's on, but he ain't on my team. 57:32.371 --> 57:37.994 Otherwise he wouldn't be, um, taking the stance that he does and pretending that I'm ignoring him or something like that. 57:38.034 --> 57:41.155 He knows exactly the truth of the matter. 57:41.615 --> 57:42.456 Uh, and that's fine. 57:42.856 --> 57:49.359 That's why I have him prominently featured on my meddlers, uh, diagram because that's for sure where he belongs. 57:49.779 --> 57:52.940 Um, let's take a look at this and work together on it. 57:53.040 --> 57:54.601 Let's just, um, 57:56.018 --> 58:00.561 Let's just turn the highlighter on and see where this gets us. 58:00.661 --> 58:02.662 So, let me see if I can see the highlighter here. 58:02.702 --> 58:03.662 Which one is the highlighter? 58:04.403 --> 58:04.983 That one, I think. 58:05.584 --> 58:05.784 Yes. 58:06.684 --> 58:13.068 So, this is a paper from 1994. 58:13.108 --> 58:14.149 Excuse me, I was going to say 2094. 58:18.328 --> 58:31.720 1994, that was the year that I graduated from university in Chicago and started my rude awakening into adult life and how it wasn't going to go as planned. 58:33.442 --> 58:35.984 And at that time, a guy by the name of John A. Wolfe 58:37.155 --> 58:46.924 wrote a review, a kind of special feature review with Joshua Lederberg about the early history of gene transfer and therapy. 58:48.205 --> 58:57.934 Now, the reason why this is so interesting is because this John A. Wolfe is someone on a paper called Direct Gene Transfer into Mouse 58:59.187 --> 59:00.428 muscle in vivo. 59:00.808 --> 59:06.611 And this is, of course, the paper that also has Robert Malone as an author. 59:06.691 --> 59:23.840 Now, interestingly enough, while Robert Malone is claiming to be the kind of intellectual dude that's behind direct gene transfer in muscle, you know, to do that kind of thing, transfection transformation, he doesn't really mention this guy very much. 59:24.775 --> 59:30.997 I've heard him mention this dude, I think I mentioned, it's weird because this guy died in April of 2020. 59:34.259 --> 59:46.063 At some point you think there would be a, yeah, you know, one of the guys that unfortunately isn't here that could probably give us a lot of insight into what's going on and would back up everything I'm saying is a guy by the name of John Wolf, God rest his soul. 59:47.624 --> 59:47.784 Nah. 59:48.595 --> 59:49.735 We're not gonna mention him at all. 59:49.795 --> 59:54.977 So keeping in mind who is John A. Wolfe is the question that I'm trying to ask with this stream. 59:55.377 --> 01:00:03.378 And so I thought it's actually very appropriate to go back and read a paper that he wrote in 1994 with none other than Joshua Lederberg. 01:00:03.418 --> 01:00:04.399 Like he is the man. 01:00:05.399 --> 01:00:10.620 Joshua Lederberg is the guy that brought us Carey Mullis and the PCR. 01:00:11.100 --> 01:00:18.202 And you're gonna find out in this article and other ways that Joshua Lederberg is the guy that brought us, found us bacteriophages. 01:00:19.724 --> 01:00:21.705 And so I don't know if we can read this whole article. 01:00:21.745 --> 01:00:22.886 I think we probably can. 01:00:23.627 --> 01:00:42.279 And as we read it, I want you to understand that this is a snapshot in the history of how these ideas have evolved and how the expression of these ideas has evolved to either avoid or minimize the ethical questions that are involved in these issues. 01:00:43.413 --> 01:00:48.995 And Joshua Lederberg seems to almost be handing off the torch to John A. Wolfe here. 01:00:49.015 --> 01:00:53.877 If you go on PubMed and look for this article, it's not gonna be that easy to find. 01:00:53.917 --> 01:01:00.239 You might actually be very surprised if you search for John A. Wolfe and just get the articles that pull up. 01:01:00.299 --> 01:01:05.761 There are a lot of interesting articles that will show up, but none of them are this one. 01:01:05.921 --> 01:01:08.161 Let's see if I can, do I have that up here? 01:01:08.661 --> 01:01:09.602 Yes, I do. 01:01:10.302 --> 01:01:13.423 So let me just take this over here quick and show you this. 01:01:14.143 --> 01:01:34.588 So here is the PubMed search that I did and you see direct gene transfer here, direct gene transfer into muscles, another paper in 94, gene therapy of primer in 1993, small interfering RNA delivery vehicles, naked DNA transport and expression in Memento 97, 01:01:36.768 --> 01:01:45.914 So if you think then that that this guy's got a lot of stuff under his belt And that he has one paper with Robert Malone from when? 01:01:45.934 --> 01:01:57.562 1990 It's curious that Robert Malone in that stream We watched with with vage on health over the last two days in the beginning So you have to go to the first program we did on it in the beginning of that podcast. 01:01:57.602 --> 01:02:00.844 He's very insistent I don't know if anybody else came up with these ideas. 01:02:01.304 --> 01:02:01.965 I'm just one 01:02:02.625 --> 01:02:11.712 you know, we stand on the shoulders of giants, was kind of a very faux humble way of saying that there's lots of people that this idea is from and I wasn't even the first author on the paper. 01:02:16.855 --> 01:02:20.438 And so let's read this paper to find out who the hell John Wolf is. 01:02:21.599 --> 01:02:31.846 The term gene therapy was coined to distinguish it from Orwellian connotations of human genetic engineering, which in turn was derived from the term genetic engineering. 01:02:34.841 --> 01:02:42.227 Human genetic engineering is derived from the term genetic engineering, and we don't want it to be Orwellian, so they called it gene therapy. 01:02:42.688 --> 01:02:46.051 Well, that's already a creepy admission, isn't it? 01:02:47.772 --> 01:02:50.314 That's already an incredibly creepy admission. 01:02:50.474 --> 01:03:01.544 Genetic engineering was first used at the 6th International Congress of Genetics, held in 1931, and was taken to mean the amplification of genetic principles to animal and plant breeding. 01:03:02.620 --> 01:03:22.148 Once the basics of molecular genetics and gene transfer in bacteria were established in the 1960s by Joshua Lederberg, gene transfer into animals and humans using either viral vectors and or genetically modified cultured cells, which became inevitable. 01:03:22.408 --> 01:03:25.389 Using cultured cells is a lot of what they do now. 01:03:26.334 --> 01:03:35.081 in order to fix the immune system, they'll ablate the immune system, get rid of all the cells in your bone marrow, and then put some genetically engineered bone marrow stem cells back in. 01:03:37.303 --> 01:03:47.612 And when he described the application or when Robert Malone described the experiment that inspired him, 01:03:52.443 --> 01:03:53.709 I can switch over to this. 01:03:54.231 --> 01:03:57.404 He described transformation of cells. 01:03:59.121 --> 01:04:06.046 they used retroviruses to transform the cells and then they put those cells back into the mouse and those cells express the protein. 01:04:06.847 --> 01:04:26.541 And so what we're talking about here in this paper, and what he's saying here with the idea that either using human viral vectors or genetically modified cultured cells became inevitable, he's speaking exactly of the kind of experiment that Robert Malone described to us in that early Vajon Health June 2021 video. 01:04:29.721 --> 01:04:37.693 Despite the early exposition of the concept of gene therapy, progress awaited the advent of recombinant DNA technology. 01:04:37.733 --> 01:04:39.576 What is recombinant DNA technology? 01:04:40.036 --> 01:04:43.822 Well, that's synthetic RNA and DNA made by bacterial cloning. 01:04:46.525 --> 01:04:57.190 what virology will often refer to as infectious clones, but what pharmaceutical companies will refer to as basic molecular biology. 01:04:57.330 --> 01:05:02.113 It is recombinant DNA technology where they grow it up in bacterial culture. 01:05:02.533 --> 01:05:04.714 That's what that phrase means. 01:05:07.435 --> 01:05:14.640 The lack of trustworthy techniques did not stop many researchers from attempting to transfer genes into cells in culture animals and humans. 01:05:15.140 --> 01:05:22.725 Viral genomes were used for the development of the first relatively efficient methods for gene transfer into mammalian cells and culture. 01:05:23.305 --> 01:05:31.851 In the late 1970s, early transfection techniques were combined with the selection systems for cultured cells and recombinant DNA technology. 01:05:33.365 --> 01:05:41.988 Early transfection techniques were combined with selection systems for cultured cells and recombinant DNA technology. 01:05:43.868 --> 01:05:46.409 Do you see why virology is a lie? 01:05:46.749 --> 01:05:47.430 It's an illusion. 01:05:50.050 --> 01:05:55.132 They're lying to you about the biological correlate of bacteriophages. 01:05:56.012 --> 01:06:01.214 They're lying to you about what bacteriophages are and what their correlate would be in our own biology. 01:06:03.868 --> 01:06:20.237 With the development of retroviral vectors in the early 1980s by people like Robert Malone and Robert Gallo and David Baltimore and their students, the possibility of efficient gene transfer into mammalian cells for purpose of gene therapy became widely accepted. 01:06:20.277 --> 01:06:30.182 Gene therapy, of course, being a term that was coined to distinguish it, the idea, from the Orwellian connotations of genetic engineering. 01:06:34.912 --> 01:06:39.960 This article outlines the conceptual and experimental beginnings of gene therapy. 01:06:40.080 --> 01:06:43.446 The idea, how do we understand, how do we know something? 01:06:44.380 --> 01:06:45.741 That's what Alex Karp would ask. 01:06:45.781 --> 01:06:46.802 How do we know something? 01:06:46.842 --> 01:06:48.104 How do we understand something? 01:06:48.144 --> 01:06:54.971 Well, the concept can be consciously and intelligently manipulated so that it means what they want it to mean. 01:06:55.711 --> 01:07:07.243 And he just introduced it in the abstract that to try to divorce the Orwellian connotations of human genetic engineering from that term, they started calling it gene therapy. 01:07:10.663 --> 01:07:12.664 Not getting very far in this article very quickly. 01:07:12.744 --> 01:07:21.508 Concurrently, experimentalists attempted gene transfer into mammalian cells, culture, and animals in anticipation of recombinant DNA technology. 01:07:22.248 --> 01:07:28.651 So they attempted gene transfer, knowing eventually they would be able to make nucleic acids very cheaply. 01:07:29.994 --> 01:07:30.955 What a weird statement. 01:07:31.495 --> 01:07:41.641 Unreliable practices in early studies open the experimental results in the entire approach of gene therapy to question, even though many basic methods and theories would eventually be proven correct. 01:07:45.184 --> 01:07:50.647 I'm sorry, but this right here sounds exactly like what I have been saying they want to do with transfection. 01:07:51.608 --> 01:07:57.812 They want the unreliable practices of the pandemic emergency 01:07:59.775 --> 01:08:16.669 to be discredited, be discarded because they're just, you can't put the entire methodology of transfection into question because we rushed it, because we cut corners, because Donald Trump made us cut corners. 01:08:18.891 --> 01:08:29.220 And so just like Joshua Lederberg and John Wolf are making the argument that unreliable application of gene therapy 01:08:30.620 --> 01:08:41.491 is making it dangerous that people might throw the whole idea out even though the basic methods and theories would be proven correct. 01:08:43.012 --> 01:08:44.314 It's the same grift. 01:08:45.335 --> 01:08:49.018 It's exactly the same grift and it's still ongoing. 01:08:49.078 --> 01:08:50.820 It's taking them years to do it. 01:08:51.681 --> 01:08:52.562 Almost 30 years to do it. 01:08:54.622 --> 01:09:02.229 to invert our understanding of ourselves so that something like this could be read and not make any sense to us other than, okay. 01:09:05.933 --> 01:09:15.222 Transfection in healthy humans was always criminally negligent and they want you to believe that the unreliable practices of early application during a pandemic crisis 01:09:16.368 --> 01:09:28.417 should not be reason to throw the whole methodology out when the whole methodology will be proven to be correct in the end in the next generation of vaccines that we give to our old people and young alike. 01:09:33.722 --> 01:09:47.670 It was not until transfection techniques and selection systems for cultured cells were coupled with the ability to manipulate recombinant DNA that substantive progress was made in gene transfer. 01:09:48.290 --> 01:09:49.251 Holy shit. 01:09:50.351 --> 01:09:51.552 They say it all out loud. 01:10:02.099 --> 01:10:04.801 Transfection is gene transfer technology, you see. 01:10:07.683 --> 01:10:24.976 As the enterprise of gene therapy enters an accelerating period of growth, it is timely to examine and it's, it's, it is timely to, sorry, I was trying to find out how many people are watching, but I can't see it. 01:10:25.016 --> 01:10:26.697 I guess I don't have that window open anymore. 01:10:27.217 --> 01:10:30.360 I had to redo my OBS and so everything's fresh. 01:10:30.997 --> 01:10:36.857 As the enterprise of gene therapy enters an accelerating period of growth, it is timely to examine its earlier, more tentative phase of development. 01:10:37.421 --> 01:10:41.642 The rise of gene therapy has been compared to the growth of aeronautics. 01:10:42.262 --> 01:11:02.168 Just as the ancient Greeks fantasized about Acheros' disastrous flight, gave away to da Vinci's fanciful, if unflightworthy, drawings of flying machines, and later to the design of many strange and awkward contraptions, so too has the early history of gene therapy been marked by numerous dreamers, prophets of doom, naysayers, missteps, and fiascos. 01:11:03.004 --> 01:11:07.986 In both cases, many experiments were attempted too early before the necessary tools were available. 01:11:11.268 --> 01:11:19.231 The John Wolf guy works at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and of course, Lederberg is at Rockefeller University in New York. 01:11:21.252 --> 01:11:29.336 But just as the invention of the Wright brothers' crude but successful early flying machines rapidly led to the development of supersonic jets and space travel, 01:11:30.757 --> 01:11:37.962 So too has the development of recombinant DNA technology brought us, in an astonishingly brief span of time, to the brink of curing. 01:11:38.463 --> 01:11:42.366 Hereto though, here the two, here there too? 01:11:43.964 --> 01:11:45.004 Sorry, I said that wrong. 01:11:45.024 --> 01:11:45.445 That's funny. 01:11:45.485 --> 01:11:46.025 It's a funny word. 01:11:46.885 --> 01:11:47.925 Untreatable diseases. 01:11:48.506 --> 01:11:51.366 Gene therapy is not as generally thought a new concept. 01:11:51.827 --> 01:11:55.948 The notion that genes can be used to treat human disease actually goes back several decades. 01:11:56.568 --> 01:12:03.370 Many of the pioneers of modern genetics were aware that their discoveries eventually would lead to medical applications. 01:12:05.171 --> 01:12:08.212 Perhaps this history is obscure because halting process 01:12:10.251 --> 01:12:17.714 Perhaps this history is obscure because halting progress in the science of gene therapy and transfer was slow in coming. 01:12:18.394 --> 01:12:33.020 Now that researchers and their patients have embarked on promising gene therapy trials, it may be useful to review the evolution of gene therapy's theoretical foundations and thereby gain insights into its medical, scientific, social, ethical, and economic milieus. 01:12:35.662 --> 01:12:48.012 Reviews covering later advances in gene therapy and in non-viral gene transfer methods have appeared, and one of the more prominent early proponents for gene therapy has recently explored its history. 01:12:48.573 --> 01:12:56.179 This contribution, while stressing early attempts at gene transfer in cell cultures in animals, seeks to place these studies in a wider historical context. 01:12:56.759 --> 01:13:01.082 Moreover, a historical perspective may be useful for evaluating the prior art. 01:13:02.263 --> 01:13:03.624 in patent applications. 01:13:03.704 --> 01:13:06.244 What an interesting thing to say. 01:13:06.664 --> 01:13:08.325 They mention IP. 01:13:11.266 --> 01:13:22.689 Of course, there's this little anecdotal story about Brett and Eric Weinstein's dad, who happens to be an IP, intellectual property lawyer, who was appointed to the Department of Justice of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 01:13:22.869 --> 01:13:24.590 and John F. Kennedy Jr. 01:13:26.019 --> 01:13:28.362 And so worked with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.' 01:13:28.342 --> 01:13:30.345 's dad. 01:13:31.647 --> 01:13:32.628 Their dads worked together. 01:13:32.988 --> 01:13:33.409 Interesting. 01:13:33.489 --> 01:13:35.292 And they mentioned patent applications in this. 01:13:36.434 --> 01:13:44.603 So the beginning of genetics, long before the discovery of the gene, our species participated in genetic manipulation. 01:13:45.544 --> 01:13:52.511 The first Council of International Genetics was held in 1899 in London. 01:13:53.112 --> 01:13:57.536 It was actually called the International Congress of Hybridization on the Crossbreeding of Varieties. 01:13:58.470 --> 01:14:04.695 William Bateson used the use of the term genetics at the Third Congress of Genetics in 1906. 01:14:05.056 --> 01:14:13.102 In the interim, Hugo de Vries and others had rediscovered Mendel's work, which originated the concept of the gene as a unit of heredity. 01:14:15.224 --> 01:14:25.673 One of the first uses of the term genetic engineering was in a paper of the title presented at the Sixth International Congress of Genetics held in 1932 in Ithaca, New York. 01:14:25.733 --> 01:14:26.614 So again, 01:14:27.796 --> 01:14:39.527 The term pandemic potential probably made its debut in a publication and used it in the title or in the abstract and has nothing to do with the results of the paper or any of the papers that followed it. 01:14:40.908 --> 01:14:49.116 To Marxist commentators, the term genetic engineering was synonymous with eugenics in contrast to social engineering of the USSR public policy. 01:14:49.456 --> 01:14:53.060 This is also something that Lederberg talked about, wrote a paper about, which is interesting. 01:14:53.888 --> 01:15:00.873 The term gene therapy was adopted to distinguish itself from ominous gene line perceptions of the term human genetic engineering. 01:15:00.933 --> 01:15:09.978 While the human genome has previously been modified indirectly by human activity, more direct manipulations could usher in a new epoch. 01:15:10.939 --> 01:15:14.081 So here we are again talking about the future of genetics. 01:15:14.781 --> 01:15:20.005 The concept of gene therapy is set in the context of pharmacological and surgical traditions. 01:15:20.065 --> 01:15:21.626 Gene therapy can be defined 01:15:23.877 --> 01:15:27.159 as the application of genetic principles to the treatment of human disease. 01:15:28.520 --> 01:15:47.891 Screening programs for phytoketoneuria and Tay-Sachs disease and many conventional medical and surgical therapeutic approaches such as liver transplantation could fall under this definition because they were founded under the understanding of their genetics and biochemistry. 01:15:47.911 --> 01:15:48.692 That's a little weak. 01:15:49.732 --> 01:16:01.022 More specifically, the term gene therapy unites pharmacotherapeutic with genetic principles, implicating the use of a polyonucleotide to treat the disease state. 01:16:01.463 --> 01:16:03.465 And so this is very good. 01:16:04.346 --> 01:16:15.073 This is very good because what this is, it's telling you how these ideas have been contorted from the irreducible complexity idea, from the sacred biology idea. 01:16:15.493 --> 01:16:33.745 Because rather than saying that our understanding of genetics is immorally impotent, in the sense of it would be immoral to go forward with so little understanding, as actually Craig Venter said on video. 01:16:35.609 --> 01:16:42.595 but instead trying to talk about genetic therapy as equivalent to pharmacokinetics. 01:16:43.596 --> 01:16:57.849 When we understand that chemicals and the way that they augment our homeostasis and our physiology, chemicals are very different than genetic signals. 01:16:59.510 --> 01:16:59.631 And 01:17:00.580 --> 01:17:09.247 the potential downsides of administering genetic signals and treating them as just pharmacotherapeutics, you know, like an opioid. 01:17:11.369 --> 01:17:26.321 You are actually hearing and listening to the semantic warfare that is being here misconstrued as some scientific discussion that will add nuance and understanding to our list of terms in the toolbox. 01:17:27.293 --> 01:17:27.993 Stop lying. 01:17:28.533 --> 01:17:29.894 And that's not what's happening here. 01:17:29.914 --> 01:17:32.594 What you're hearing is exactly what they said at the top. 01:17:33.155 --> 01:17:50.719 It is a, they are, they are trying to describe the term gene therapy accurately enough in their own language to distinguish it from the Orwellian connotations that are almost impossible to divorce from the phrase human genetic engineering. 01:17:52.728 --> 01:18:01.957 This whole article is about trying to convince you that if you think about genetic engineering in the right way, it's actually not as morally confounding as you think. 01:18:02.417 --> 01:18:08.563 It's not as actually insulting to the irreducible complexity of God's creation than you think. 01:18:08.643 --> 01:18:12.547 If you call it gene therapy, it's not nearly as problematic. 01:18:13.609 --> 01:18:20.832 this whole damn article's about, and trying to put this argument into a historical context so it feels more like, well, it's an illusion. 01:18:21.232 --> 01:18:24.093 It's a consensus that all these old smart people came up with. 01:18:27.254 --> 01:18:38.799 More specifically, the term gene therapy unites pharmacotherapeutic with genetic principles implicating the use of a polynucleotide to treat a disease state. 01:18:39.419 --> 01:18:39.559 Ugh. 01:18:40.520 --> 01:18:41.180 Stop lying! 01:18:43.351 --> 01:18:44.215 It's so gross. 01:18:46.311 --> 01:18:52.556 And so in 1878, Langley proposed the concept of the receptor substance known simply as the receptor. 01:18:52.596 --> 01:18:58.500 The hypothesis that interactions between a drug and the receptor are governed by the law of mass action was first developed. 01:18:58.900 --> 01:19:02.843 And so here he goes on again, talking about what should be termed biophysics. 01:19:02.903 --> 01:19:08.587 And he should be talking about ion channels and receptors and G-protein coupled receptors and all this stuff. 01:19:09.047 --> 01:19:15.072 But instead, he's going to try and twist it around very, very succinctly so that he can only use this stuff 01:19:15.672 --> 01:19:17.673 for the expression of genes. 01:19:17.793 --> 01:19:22.374 And that's the only thing that really matters is that we we can express these things in different places. 01:19:22.434 --> 01:19:32.778 The molecular understanding of protein function and enzyme action led to the development or rational drug design based on targeting the receptor or active site you see. 01:19:33.238 --> 01:19:35.399 So he's just trying to take 01:19:35.919 --> 01:19:45.332 our limited understanding of this irreducible complexity and pinch it all the time off and put it on the shelf of, see, but this is another argument for genetic therapy. 01:19:45.352 --> 01:19:47.094 It's another argument for genetic therapy. 01:19:47.154 --> 01:19:51.580 Another reason why you should think genetic therapy is no different than pharmacokinetics. 01:19:55.026 --> 01:20:01.451 Antisense and ribozyme gene therapies represent an extension of this concept and they have not come to market. 01:20:01.951 --> 01:20:14.861 Approaches that involve the addition or modification of genes that are conceptually similar to protein replacement therapies, such as those for diabetes and hemophilias in the naturally occurring macromolecules are administered as remedies. 01:20:14.921 --> 01:20:23.568 Here again, not a very good sentence, but he's trying to suggest to you that we're just a matter of time before what we do now with a very ham-fisted ways of doing it, 01:20:23.928 --> 01:20:26.231 we can do very elegantly with gene therapy. 01:20:27.193 --> 01:20:31.659 Transient expression of exogenous genes, the use of artificial RNA. 01:20:31.679 --> 01:20:34.263 Oh, citing Wolf et al. 01:20:35.124 --> 01:20:37.888 1990, which is of course that wonderful paper that 01:20:39.580 --> 01:20:44.043 that Robert Malone often cites but doesn't point out that the first author isn't even him. 01:20:44.563 --> 01:20:53.709 Gene therapy with the incorporation of a therapeutic gene into the cell's chromosome more closely resembles surgery in which tissue, oh that is just gross. 01:20:54.789 --> 01:21:02.434 Gene therapy with permanent incorporation of the therapeutic gene into the cell's chromosomes more closely resembles surgery. 01:21:04.215 --> 01:21:07.859 in which a tissue or organ is modified for the lifespan of the recipient. 01:21:08.679 --> 01:21:10.101 Stop lying! 01:21:10.461 --> 01:21:12.083 This is a really extraordinary article. 01:21:12.123 --> 01:21:13.244 Thanks, Mark, for the heads up. 01:21:15.743 --> 01:21:22.266 The discovery by Avery McLeod and McCarthy that a gene could be transferred within nucleic acids is a critical point of reference. 01:21:22.286 --> 01:21:25.148 I didn't look at that article, so I'll just go on and assume. 01:21:25.668 --> 01:21:36.993 Biologists have long attempted by chemical means to introduce in higher organisms predictable and specific changes which thereafter could be transmitted in series has hereditary characteristics. 01:21:37.073 --> 01:21:37.353 Okay. 01:21:38.014 --> 01:21:41.395 Trying to understand how evolution might occur or heredity might occur. 01:21:41.895 --> 01:21:42.756 Sure, that's fine. 01:21:43.692 --> 01:21:48.677 The capacity for viruses to transmit disease was first demonstrated in Salmonella. 01:21:50.438 --> 01:21:54.282 Well, that's not what you demonstrated in Salmonella. 01:21:54.322 --> 01:21:56.284 You demonstrated bacteriophages. 01:21:58.191 --> 01:22:01.853 So there's a semantic shot over your bowel right there. 01:22:01.913 --> 01:22:16.520 If you're not biologically sophisticated enough to know that bacteriophages have a lot more proof of existence than RNA viruses do, then when he says viruses were first discovered in Salmonella, you won't even realize that he's already pulled the hat trick on you. 01:22:17.020 --> 01:22:19.201 The little, you know, cups with the ball inside of it. 01:22:19.221 --> 01:22:20.542 It's just moving all around now. 01:22:23.137 --> 01:22:31.341 The idea that viral genomes could become a biting part of the cell genomes was discovered with bacteriophages. 01:22:31.361 --> 01:22:34.103 Oh, he says it in the second sentence, not the first one. 01:22:34.503 --> 01:22:40.967 In the first opening sentence, he puts viruses as equivalent to bacteriophages, which they are not. 01:22:41.507 --> 01:22:42.227 Stop lying! 01:22:43.048 --> 01:22:45.809 And then extended to animal viruses. 01:22:47.610 --> 01:22:48.331 And so if 01:22:49.418 --> 01:23:17.769 If bacteria and bacteriophages are part of the same cycle of pattern integrity, and exosomes and higher mammals are part of the same pattern integrity, then the story of animal viruses being separate from and not a part of us, it falls right in place. 01:23:20.231 --> 01:23:24.534 It doesn't make sense, but it falls right in place for what bait-and-switch they're trying to do here. 01:23:25.355 --> 01:23:30.098 The ability of Roos Sarcoma virus transformed in cell culture to produce new virus. 01:23:30.638 --> 01:23:33.701 So this is actually, that is actually Gallo. 01:23:35.282 --> 01:23:42.026 Roos Sarcoma virus is what he was mixing and matching in cell cultures all the time and producing more 01:23:43.220 --> 01:23:45.801 is something that Gallo apparently proved here. 01:23:46.201 --> 01:23:48.802 So further studies of RSV infections. 01:23:48.902 --> 01:23:50.583 Oh, this is also Temin's work. 01:23:51.103 --> 01:23:57.786 Temin, of course, was one of these guys that was a contemporary of these guys that, of course, Mark Kulak has also covered. 01:23:57.846 --> 01:23:59.587 Nobody else, but Mark Kulak has. 01:24:00.287 --> 01:24:06.950 And others demonstrate the integration of SV40 DNA in transformed cells. 01:24:07.390 --> 01:24:09.851 So again, we know that SV40 isn't a virus. 01:24:09.891 --> 01:24:11.512 We know it was just the name on a tube. 01:24:12.950 --> 01:24:20.173 And we know that transforming cells just has to do with reverse transcriptase, which is an enzyme, not a virus, and it was found by David Baltimore. 01:24:21.274 --> 01:24:29.098 So here you can kind of see how all these ideas are mixed up shitty and regurgitated by their mentor-chained students. 01:24:33.519 --> 01:24:48.649 And here you have Joshua Lederberg writing a very conspicuous article with none other than the first author of the paper that Robert Malone touts as his primary lanyard to all the VIP rooms. 01:24:51.071 --> 01:24:55.674 The elucidation of the structure of DNA and its parsimony with DNA's surmised function 01:24:56.573 --> 01:24:58.915 brought forth an upheaval of biology. 01:24:58.975 --> 01:25:04.479 So we imagined that there should be something that was easy to copy and very high fidelity. 01:25:04.499 --> 01:25:07.461 And then we found something like DNA and we said, well, we found it. 01:25:09.143 --> 01:25:10.884 Not saying that it's not it. 01:25:11.024 --> 01:25:13.746 I'm just saying that that's what he's saying here, right? 01:25:14.467 --> 01:25:18.870 That one of the reasons why we assume the DNA must be it is because its structure was so cool. 01:25:21.616 --> 01:25:35.761 The history of the subsequent discoveries of mRNA and the formulation of the central dogma, genetic information flows from DNA to RNA to protein, is chronicled in the Horace Judson seminal book, The Eighth Day of Creation. 01:25:37.267 --> 01:25:43.629 And of course this genetic information flowing from DNA to RNA to protein is what we are supposedly trapped in. 01:25:43.669 --> 01:25:55.314 That's the simple biology that makes a human being and everything outside of that where they copy DNA or they rewrite RNA or they use retro or use RNA, sorry, 01:25:55.874 --> 01:25:59.035 reverse transcriptase to write DNA backwards or whatever. 01:25:59.075 --> 01:26:00.475 That's all virus stuff. 01:26:01.975 --> 01:26:08.057 We live despite those things rather than in concert with them, never mind using them as part of our pattern integrity. 01:26:09.817 --> 01:26:16.039 So, speculations on gene therapy in the interval intermediately preceding the recombinant DNA era. 01:26:17.250 --> 01:26:21.753 Key aspects of gene therapy were elaborated by forward-thinking investigators of the day. 01:26:22.454 --> 01:26:29.179 Edward Tatum predicted that viruses could be used to induce, to transduce, transduce genes. 01:26:29.219 --> 01:26:35.244 So transduction is a word that was often used and then replaced by transformation at some point. 01:26:35.284 --> 01:26:41.769 But transduction is a more specific term that at this time referred to using viruses to change the genome of a cell. 01:26:42.469 --> 01:26:49.395 So transduction is another term that you can put in your toolbox that these people have all known for decades. 01:26:50.216 --> 01:26:56.421 Transduction, transformation, transfection are all interchangeable terms depending on how you use it. 01:26:56.441 --> 01:26:58.502 You know, like isolation and purification. 01:26:59.063 --> 01:26:59.723 Stop lying! 01:27:01.707 --> 01:27:02.227 So here we go. 01:27:02.287 --> 01:27:10.609 Finally, it can be anticipated that viruses will be effectively used for man's benefit in theoretical studies in somatic cell genetics and possibly in gene therapy. 01:27:11.029 --> 01:27:26.072 We can even be somewhat optimistic on the long range possibility of therapy by the isolation or design of new genes into defective cells of particular organs. 01:27:26.133 --> 01:27:28.173 Sorry, I'm going to pause here and I'm going to get the 01:27:29.437 --> 01:27:31.997 the doc out that shows me how many people are here. 01:27:32.598 --> 01:27:33.258 Where is that? 01:27:39.079 --> 01:27:40.039 I still don't see it. 01:27:40.099 --> 01:27:40.939 Why don't I see it? 01:27:41.139 --> 01:27:43.179 It's not coming into my purview here. 01:27:43.339 --> 01:27:43.859 Get in. 01:27:44.840 --> 01:27:45.720 You should be here. 01:27:45.740 --> 01:27:49.360 I want you right there. 01:27:49.660 --> 01:27:50.841 Why won't you go in now? 01:27:51.061 --> 01:27:51.621 Come on. 01:27:54.901 --> 01:27:56.342 So where is the other doc? 01:27:56.502 --> 01:27:57.022 Stats. 01:27:57.102 --> 01:27:58.422 Twitstats is what I want. 01:27:59.343 --> 01:28:00.324 Ah, 89 people. 01:28:00.424 --> 01:28:00.964 All right. 01:28:01.004 --> 01:28:02.365 An hour and 27 minutes. 01:28:02.405 --> 01:28:03.045 That's perfect. 01:28:03.065 --> 01:28:04.526 That's exactly what I wanted to know. 01:28:05.326 --> 01:28:06.106 Um, okay. 01:28:06.146 --> 01:28:20.873 So Tatum speculated that because the basis of cancer is altered genes, treatment could be achieved by modification and regulation of gene activities or by means of gene repair or replacement indirect or ex vivo approaches toward gene therapy were also envisioned. 01:28:21.574 --> 01:28:26.356 Hence, it can be suggested that the first successful genetic engineering will be done with the patient's own cells. 01:28:27.756 --> 01:28:36.840 For example, liver cells grown in culture, the desired new genes will be introduced by direct mutation from normal cells of another donor by transfection or direct DNA transfer. 01:28:37.241 --> 01:28:49.427 But of course we already knew that because Robert Malone said he described that exact experiment and that experiment is what inspired him to just put the DNA or the RNA directly into the frog embryos or the chick embryos. 01:28:50.427 --> 01:28:56.170 And then he did that while he was teaching an embryology course and then that's what led to the idea of direct gene transfer. 01:28:57.008 --> 01:29:05.314 But they were first thinking, as Lederberg describes it right here, as the way they would do it is they would transfer a patient's own cells back in. 01:29:08.216 --> 01:29:21.405 Which is how I think they cured or claimed to have cured sickle cell anemia or something like that recently by ablating someone's bone marrow and replacing it with their own cells that were cultured beforehand and genetically altered. 01:29:24.417 --> 01:29:45.225 So the efficiency of this process and its potentialities may be considered improved by the synthesis of the desired gene according to the specifications of the genetic code and the enzyme of discernment, and in vitro enzymatic replication of this DNA, and by increasing the effectiveness of the DNA uptake and integration by the recipient cells as we learn more about the factors and conditions affecting these processes. 01:29:45.745 --> 01:29:48.186 So the more DNA we can make, the more likely it'll work. 01:29:48.686 --> 01:29:52.187 The cheaper and more accurately we can make that DNA, the more likely it will work. 01:29:52.627 --> 01:30:14.515 And so, when Kevin McKernan tells you so excitedly that the cost of making DNA has gone down to peanuts, when Ray Kurzweiler tells you that the making of DNA and the sequencing of it has gone down to cost peanuts, this is exactly what the same narrative that frickin' they were laying down in the 90s with this article with Joshua Lederberg! 01:30:16.257 --> 01:30:20.688 You know, the one that's in a photograph with the Sacklers and went to their funeral and stuff. 01:30:22.984 --> 01:30:28.107 Tatum was extremely confident that gene therapy would be feasible with the knowledge of the structure and function of genes at hand. 01:30:28.347 --> 01:30:36.992 One of us speculated about the possibility of gene therapy in an October 24th, 1962 letter to Stanfield Rogers in Lederberg, personal communication. 01:30:37.613 --> 01:30:46.057 It will only be a matter of time, perhaps not long, before polynucleotide sequences can be grafted by chemical procedures onto a virus DNA. 01:30:46.958 --> 01:30:50.120 And of course, if you can put it onto the virus, then the virus can carry it in. 01:30:51.343 --> 01:30:57.809 which is exactly what Robert Malone was working on when he was working on RNA and viral assembly and packaging sequences. 01:30:58.590 --> 01:31:03.054 And you can look again at our notes and you can look again at that stream from two days ago. 01:31:05.171 --> 01:31:11.434 And so you can also look on Mark's website to find more about Robert Malone and Lederberg and all of them. 01:31:11.514 --> 01:31:27.662 In an attempt to be made to transform limber cells of a male offspring of a hemophiliac ancestry by introduction of carefully fractionated DNA carrying normal alleles of the mutant hemophilia gene, this experiment would appear to be entirely analogous to the typical attempts to transform 01:31:28.562 --> 01:31:30.324 transforming bacterial forms. 01:31:30.364 --> 01:31:35.410 So they're trying to do the molecular biology they think they can do in bacteria in people. 01:31:36.312 --> 01:31:41.478 And they're doing it by trying to transform the cells of people in culture and then put them back. 01:31:43.911 --> 01:31:55.519 Robert Malone is one generation ahead of this because he, again, described this interesting experiment in using retroviruses to transform mouse cells and then put those mouse cells back in the mouse. 01:31:56.199 --> 01:32:03.224 And that inspired him to think about direct transfection and transformation, which he is credited for, credits himself for having invented. 01:32:03.664 --> 01:32:07.848 This experiment would appear to be entirely analogous to transforming bacterial forms. 01:32:07.888 --> 01:32:20.639 However, it is not clear whether one should regard this as a pure example of genetic engineering, since the practical outcome would probably be best achieved by influencing the nuclear constitution of somatic tissues rather than directly tackling of the germline. 01:32:23.541 --> 01:32:27.745 So instead of changing the germline, what we should try to do is change the tissue in people. 01:32:29.566 --> 01:32:30.447 interesting argument. 01:32:30.467 --> 01:32:41.631 The precedence for this type of intervention would be that the virus mediated transduction, there it is again, of the genetic characteristics that was also demonstrated in bacteria almost 20 years ago. 01:32:41.671 --> 01:32:50.795 So transduction in this case seems to refer to the use of retroviruses to rewrite or add to the genetic complement of a cell. 01:32:51.235 --> 01:33:00.045 So that might be transduction, whereas transformation would be using just raw DNA to do that, and transfection would be to use RNA to do that. 01:33:00.926 --> 01:33:07.033 The proposal recently revived by Dr. S. Rogers would require the discovery or artificial formation of cryptic viruses 01:33:07.634 --> 01:33:12.035 to which specific genetic information relevant to the cure of disease has been grafted. 01:33:12.115 --> 01:33:22.659 So here again, Robert Malone was looking for packaging sequences that you could graft sequences to, and then that would trigger the packaging of those sequences, i.e. 01:33:22.699 --> 01:33:27.040 the manufacture of viruses with your gene of interest incorporated. 01:33:27.100 --> 01:33:32.242 So again, we're describing all the ideas that Robert Malone was brought on the scene to claim authorship of, 01:33:32.682 --> 01:33:39.293 But actually it sounds like, and it looks like from the PubMed list of John A. Wolfe, that actually it's John A. Wolfe's idea. 01:33:39.834 --> 01:33:46.124 And Lederberg seems to give John A. Wolfe credit by deciding to write him, with him, a review. 01:33:47.915 --> 01:34:03.307 1994 right this is a review in 1994 if Robert Malone was the was the Was the intellectual juggernaut behind those papers then maybe Joshua Lederberg would have written this review with him But instead he wrote it with John a wolf who? 01:34:03.728 --> 01:34:10.653 Robert Malone seems to really have a hard time mentioning if you know of a video where he mentions him I really be great and to know where that video is I 01:34:13.126 --> 01:34:27.736 Rogers would require the artificial genome, once the essential techniques for grafting segments of DNA from different sources of that microbe have been perfected, experiments along these lines provide the most favorable opportunity to select these segments of DNA information which are needed. 01:34:27.776 --> 01:34:30.578 This describes the assembly of 01:34:31.298 --> 01:34:47.214 of clones that Ralph Baric is blamed for, but of course you can see from this article, and you could know if Kevin McKernan was being honest, that the no-see-um technique that Ralph Baric is credited with is just simple ligation. 01:34:48.277 --> 01:34:49.177 It's so stupid. 01:34:49.738 --> 01:34:58.901 It's so stupid that they call it no-see-um when it's just using restriction enzymes to ligate DNA just like they do and we're already talking about for decades. 01:34:58.981 --> 01:35:15.388 It is a joke and it is so much a part of the Scooby-Doo that Ralph Baric was elevated as a molecular biology genius when in reality they've been talking about grafting DNA from different sources together and they've known how to do it with restriction enzymes for decades. 01:35:16.289 --> 01:35:16.889 Stop lying! 01:35:18.055 --> 01:35:26.697 In this way, it should not be extraordinarily difficult to obtain micro-DNA packets which are enriched with a gene, for example, for the synthesis of phenylalanine hydroxylase. 01:35:27.278 --> 01:35:34.720 One may, of course, argue that similar results could be achieved by the manipulation of tissue cells and culture as if they themselves were microorganisms. 01:35:36.040 --> 01:35:47.183 Arthur Kohnberg's successful replication of DNA in a test tube was widely reported in the popular press as the creation of life in a tube and was viewed as an important milestone on the road to gene therapy. 01:35:48.906 --> 01:35:54.091 performed one of the earliest mammalian gene transfer experiments stated at a poultry breeders roundtable. 01:35:54.532 --> 01:36:09.246 When presenting our data at seminars and symposium in 62 to 64, we coined the terms gene surgery and gene therapy to stress the clinical potential of our work, but there was little interest in our results, probably because at the time prokaryotes, DNA synthesis, 01:36:10.307 --> 01:36:12.749 and the genetic code was at the center of the attention. 01:36:13.309 --> 01:36:17.713 By the late 60s and 70s, gene therapy had become the subject of increasing number of articles and meetings. 01:36:18.814 --> 01:36:24.558 Shin Shimer ruminated on the prospect for designed genetic changes of mankind. 01:36:25.219 --> 01:36:33.706 And at Autumn 1969 meeting, Afosian advocated for the use of pseudoviruses derived from mouse pyelomavirus and placed in gene therapy. 01:36:35.046 --> 01:36:37.828 and place gene therapy in the pharmaceutical tradition. 01:36:38.389 --> 01:36:46.634 If considered the purpose of a drug to be restored the normal function of the body in some particular process of the body, then DNA would be considered the ultimate drug. 01:36:47.475 --> 01:36:58.642 But if you consider DNA a tiny sliver of the irreducible complexity of our biology that we should consider sacred, then it's not the ultimate drug at all. 01:37:01.604 --> 01:37:08.856 This entire article is trying to invert our understanding and appreciation and reverence for the sacred. 01:37:09.918 --> 01:37:15.608 And it is trying to twist it around into something that's just the same as pharmacokinetics, just putting drugs in. 01:37:17.965 --> 01:37:32.596 In a 1970 article, B. Davis discussed the human genetic engineering and explored the feasibility of ethics of somatic and germ cell alteration, cloning of humans, genetic modification of behavior, determination of sex, and sexual reproduction. 01:37:34.577 --> 01:37:40.902 One of his major points was that control of polygenetic behavioral traits is much less likely than cure of monogenetic diseases. 01:37:41.442 --> 01:37:43.604 And of course, this is the fuel 01:37:44.602 --> 01:37:56.830 for the 20 or 15 years of gene knockout studies in mice to try and understand what single genes do by knocking them out and then culturing the cells or growing the mice if they do live. 01:38:00.132 --> 01:38:07.577 And this is the reason why neuroscience was so focused on single gene knockout models of autism for so long. 01:38:07.657 --> 01:38:14.102 Because again, one of the major overarching ideas pushed by people like Joshua Lederberg 01:38:15.723 --> 01:38:28.136 is that monogenetic trait diseases are the low-hanging fruit of the eventual goal, which is being able to tackle polygenetic behavioral traits. 01:38:30.856 --> 01:38:44.405 And so you can see aspects of these ideas and aspects of Lederberg's kind of influence and thought leadership potential already in these papers and before, because of course, Mark has been documenting this. 01:38:44.445 --> 01:38:57.253 This paper is just extraordinary in how succinctly it tells you that gene therapy was a word combination chosen because of the Orwellian connotations of genetic engineering. 01:38:58.054 --> 01:38:58.714 Stop lying! 01:39:00.664 --> 01:39:01.188 LION! 01:39:03.482 --> 01:39:11.028 A symposium on gene therapy was sponsored by the National Institutes of Neurologic Disease and Stroke at the National Institutes of Health and the Fogarty International Center. 01:39:11.048 --> 01:39:21.516 The first session entitled Information Transfer by Mammalian Viruses included talks on recombinant SV40 viruses by David Jackson and Paul Berg and on RNA tumor viruses by Howard Temin. 01:39:21.976 --> 01:39:32.744 Other sessions were entitled Isolation of Altered Viruses with Specific Genes, Information Transfer by DNA, Mammalian Cellular Systems, and Immunologic and Medical Aspects. 01:39:32.924 --> 01:39:36.910 Several other articles and meetings brought gene therapy into more mainstream as well. 01:39:37.791 --> 01:39:46.784 So publishing papers with the titles, with the words that they want to develop, are the way that you get pandemic potential in bat caves and in laboratories. 01:39:47.432 --> 01:39:52.176 Surely there were other visionaries that an accounting of this early period would eventually reference. 01:39:52.316 --> 01:39:59.322 It is apparent that schemes for gene therapy occurred to many researchers once the basic of molecular genetics were established. 01:39:59.863 --> 01:40:12.114 Despite these premonitions, Friedman observed that it is not always quite so obvious as it is now that gene therapy is a rational and logical consistent approach to the treatment of some forms of human disease. 01:40:12.714 --> 01:40:15.276 from both the medical and scientific perspectives. 01:40:15.396 --> 01:40:25.843 Until fairly recently, the concept of gene therapy had been criticized by a sizable portion of the molecular biologic community as being remote and even improbable, possibly even unnecessary. 01:40:26.323 --> 01:40:34.169 In addition, several prominent scientists rejected the reductive view of DNA's role in biology and therefore implications for gene therapy. 01:40:34.209 --> 01:40:41.614 So that's a very shitty, tiny reference with shitty words to the fact that lots of people 01:40:43.579 --> 01:40:54.789 said that the model of how we're trying to claim that DNA results in RNA results in protein results in us as a pattern integrity was way too reductive. 01:40:56.110 --> 01:41:03.856 And therefore moving forward under the pretense that DNA and we understand it so we can squirt it in places was ridiculous. 01:41:06.118 --> 01:41:06.959 That's the addition. 01:41:07.279 --> 01:41:09.281 That's the admission that you're gonna get here. 01:41:09.321 --> 01:41:10.502 That's it, nothing more. 01:41:15.109 --> 01:41:20.392 Several studies in the late 1950s and early 60s revealed that cell cultures could take up radioactive DNA. 01:41:23.174 --> 01:41:25.256 The nuclear part. 01:41:26.198 --> 01:41:28.600 the radiation part, the mutation part. 01:41:29.061 --> 01:41:29.661 Interesting, huh? 01:41:30.001 --> 01:41:31.202 Oh, they're just using it for tracing. 01:41:31.743 --> 01:41:34.966 The entry of radioactive DNA into the nucleus of cells was also reported. 01:41:34.986 --> 01:41:41.652 The ability for polynucleotide transfer to induce the N effect was provided by viral studies. 01:41:41.752 --> 01:41:48.197 In the late 1950s and early 60s, it was demonstrated that naked viral DNA or RNA is ineffective when applied to cells. 01:41:48.237 --> 01:41:52.841 This was first disclosed with plant and tobacco mosaic viruses and then reproduced with polio 01:41:53.502 --> 01:42:00.924 myelitis, semi-leaky forest encephalitis, influenza, and several other viruses in malignant cells. 01:42:01.604 --> 01:42:02.164 Interesting. 01:42:03.764 --> 01:42:21.068 This prompted a science review article that discussed the infectious disease implications of these studies, i.e., their release from infected tissues and resistance to antibodies may explain some anomaly. 01:42:22.841 --> 01:42:30.904 The infectious entity presumed to be polynucleotides was obtained by phenol extraction of the virus, was labile to nucleases, and not neutralized by antibodies. 01:42:43.936 --> 01:42:45.837 Doesn't sound like direct evidence of anything. 01:42:46.258 --> 01:42:57.505 For example, phenol extract of poliovirus yields RNA that produces plaque forming poliovirus when injected into embryonic eggs or when applied to monkey kidney tissue culture. 01:42:57.545 --> 01:42:58.706 I guess we got work to do here. 01:42:59.246 --> 01:43:01.668 I don't think these are good papers probably. 01:43:03.269 --> 01:43:08.393 Maybe these are some papers that were covered in the virology is a lie document. 01:43:08.793 --> 01:43:08.853 Um, 01:43:10.998 --> 01:43:25.280 In the studies of the effect of viral RNA concentration, solution composition, and temperature on infections of mango virus encephalitis in mouse fibroblasts, hypertonic saline and sucrose solutions were found to increase infectivity of RNA. 01:43:26.829 --> 01:43:32.833 infectivity of RNA rather than transfectivity or transformativity or activity. 01:43:33.293 --> 01:43:42.680 They call it infectivity because they are already building the synonymous with the, the synthetic RNAs are synonymous with the virus. 01:43:42.700 --> 01:43:45.682 So they can use synthetic RNA and then call it infection. 01:43:45.702 --> 01:43:48.904 You see, see, you see what they're doing here. 01:43:50.669 --> 01:43:53.211 Exposure to hypertonic solutions, yes. 01:43:53.751 --> 01:43:58.135 Polio viral RNA uptake was also enhanced by high concentration of magnesium sulfate. 01:43:58.175 --> 01:44:05.260 Dubbs and Klinger reported higher efficiency of polio RNA plaque formation with the use of calcium depleted cells, blah, blah, blah. 01:44:05.400 --> 01:44:18.310 Infection is also facilitated by the fine cloudy precipitate, very probably a calcium phosphate formed when phosphate buffered saline is made by mixing its ingredients before sufficient dilution in water. 01:44:19.940 --> 01:44:24.941 It's just recipes and bacon cakes and whatever works to get more crap to get packaged. 01:44:26.842 --> 01:44:28.042 Whatever gets more plaques. 01:44:29.043 --> 01:44:36.585 The uptake of cellular or viral polynucleotides could also be improved by complexing with various proteins. 01:44:38.185 --> 01:44:44.987 Amos found that uptake of radiolabeled Escher E. coli RNA by cultured chick cells was enhanced by protamine. 01:44:46.289 --> 01:44:56.634 Other polycations such as streptomycin, spermine, and spermidine did not increase uptake but were observed to protect the RNA from RNAs causing precipitates to form. 01:44:57.254 --> 01:44:59.395 Causing precipitates to form! 01:45:01.206 --> 01:45:18.449 But ladies and gentlemen, one of the main objections of the no virus group is that when you apply streptomycin to these cell cultures, they form, that's what causes the cytotoxic effect, which you could describe as precipitates forming. 01:45:18.529 --> 01:45:20.970 And the RNA is forming the precipitate. 01:45:21.530 --> 01:45:23.990 You're gonna, number one, you're gonna see particles. 01:45:24.450 --> 01:45:26.891 Number two, you're gonna test positive for the RNA. 01:45:27.851 --> 01:45:29.674 And it's caused by streptomycin? 01:45:30.435 --> 01:45:31.256 Holy shit! 01:45:35.423 --> 01:45:39.208 The no-virus people are right, and Lederberg knew it, back in 94. 01:45:39.248 --> 01:45:39.549 They knew it in 1961! 01:45:51.755 --> 01:45:53.676 So this is all about DNA incorporation. 01:45:53.716 --> 01:45:59.040 I'm not going to read it all because it's a lot of terms that are just there's coxsackie cells and helo cells and whatever. 01:45:59.060 --> 01:46:06.906 A potpourri of studies in the 1960s asserted changes in cellular phenotype by the transfer of non-viral genes. 01:46:07.466 --> 01:46:08.046 So here we are. 01:46:08.127 --> 01:46:10.568 Now we're not talking about viral genes anymore. 01:46:10.628 --> 01:46:16.112 Now we're talking about transferring endogenous genes or known genes to change things. 01:46:16.152 --> 01:46:18.253 So this is really transfection and transformation. 01:46:18.794 --> 01:46:27.860 Bone marrow cells and culture from patient homozygous for sickle cell disease express normal beta globulin peptide when the cells were exposed to DNA from normal bone marrow cells. 01:46:28.340 --> 01:46:40.546 So again, this transformation experiment initiated in 1961 is still basically the basis for the sickle cell anemia cure that was recently published in the news. 01:46:41.286 --> 01:46:42.547 They're doing the same damn thing. 01:46:43.584 --> 01:47:02.536 and it's only become cheaper to do it and it's only become easier to do it and only had the excuse to do it because they have these lipid nanoparticles and they have this new technology that they rolled out during the pandemic that they're now claiming is brand new and improved and used to cure sickle cell anemia in the exact same shitty way that they were proposing to do it already in the 60s. 01:47:05.058 --> 01:47:11.282 Completely ignoring the irreducible complexity of our physiology and just saying that they already understand it. 01:47:23.894 --> 01:47:26.195 Okay, I'm going to do direct gene transfer into animals. 01:47:26.235 --> 01:47:33.257 I'm sure there's good stuff in all of this stuff, but a lot of this here in my scan here looks very, very technical. 01:47:34.378 --> 01:47:42.961 And so they're just talking about all the different ways that people got higher expression of the gene when exposing the gene in RNA or DNA form. 01:47:43.001 --> 01:47:46.702 So trying to bypass the need for what they call a virus. 01:47:47.952 --> 01:47:50.615 in order to get transfection or transformation to work. 01:47:51.336 --> 01:47:55.180 So then we go down here to gene transfer in animals. 01:47:55.861 --> 01:48:04.131 Perhaps the earliest predecessor of a direct in vivo approach was the use of vaccines, which permanently modified the body's response to infection. 01:48:05.270 --> 01:48:06.711 Interesting declaration. 01:48:07.291 --> 01:48:15.074 Vaccination with attenuated viruses may be viewed as a form of gene therapy, especially since the viral genomes may persist long-term. 01:48:15.114 --> 01:48:27.139 So again, here you have a very interesting attempt to equate gene therapy now, not with pharmacokinetics and drugs, but now they're trying to equate it with vaccination. 01:48:28.039 --> 01:48:31.680 And of course, we know that this is being done now, right now, today. 01:48:32.120 --> 01:48:32.781 This is 30 years ago. 01:48:35.393 --> 01:49:01.577 And so you can see very easy how this evolution of these ideas, more importantly the evolution of these concepts, to try to steal from them the irreducible complexity, the sacredness, the reverence for what we don't understand, and steal from them all of the morality associated with those things, and equate them to the best drug on earth. 01:49:03.157 --> 01:49:14.905 equate them to a therapy rather than a ham-fisted meddling with an irreducible complexity that we should just respect and consider sacred. 01:49:17.287 --> 01:49:26.973 So another notion, so the ease of administration, relative cheapness, and long-lasting effects of vaccine are ideal qualities to which the proponents of gene therapy aspire. 01:49:27.013 --> 01:49:29.395 That's also a really gross statement, yuck. 01:49:31.069 --> 01:49:36.312 That sounds like something that Bret Weinstein would say in his best English using day. 01:49:37.333 --> 01:49:43.657 Another notion for direct in vivo therapy was treating bacterial infections by injection of bacterial phages. 01:49:45.558 --> 01:49:49.220 Although this therapeutic approach was discussed in Sinclair Lewis's novel Aerosmith, 01:49:50.350 --> 01:49:53.433 There were several actual reports of successful use in animals and humans. 01:49:53.973 --> 01:50:01.159 The negative results of well-controlled studies and assent of antibiotics stopped further investigation. 01:50:01.199 --> 01:50:10.527 I want you to think about something very interesting that someone sent me in, wow, I got a lot of email here. 01:50:12.148 --> 01:50:17.433 Somebody sent me a really cool idea this morning, and I want to, 01:50:20.737 --> 01:50:21.557 Just a thought. 01:50:22.178 --> 01:50:28.380 This is coming from a guy by the name of, I don't even know his name because it's not in this chat. 01:50:30.900 --> 01:50:34.942 I am a robot says, I am a robot says. 01:50:35.782 --> 01:50:36.642 A message for JJ. 01:50:36.662 --> 01:50:38.143 You know, I just had a thought. 01:50:39.383 --> 01:50:44.205 Why ivermectin might be recommended for COVID and why antibiotics were not allowed. 01:50:45.464 --> 01:50:53.108 maybe because bacteriophage transporters would be killed by the antibiotics, but not by ivermectin. 01:50:53.168 --> 01:51:13.339 Now, there was speculation a long time ago, actually, that what they did was they produced a bacteriophage and they released that bacteriophage so that people's own microbiota would express the spike protein, maybe cause people to get sick, but more importantly, would be detectable as a PCR signal. 01:51:15.174 --> 01:51:19.576 And so a bacteriophage containing the spike protein would be very, very interesting. 01:51:20.056 --> 01:51:26.199 And I know of at least one PCR test that uses a bacteriophage as its control. 01:51:27.559 --> 01:51:34.922 And so there's no doubt that there are bacteriophages that have been manufactured to contain the entire spike gene sequence. 01:51:36.323 --> 01:51:38.264 They were used as PCR controls. 01:51:40.612 --> 01:51:54.284 And so the idea that the PCR signal that we are finding was not present in us, but present in the bacteria in our noses, in our saliva, and in our microbiome, and therefore present in high quantities in the sewer, 01:51:55.293 --> 01:52:02.318 would be easily accomplished by manufacturing a bacteriophage with the spike protein in it. 01:52:03.098 --> 01:52:15.246 And then transforming or transfecting or whatever you want to call it, all of us or any of us in New York and elsewhere, where we intended to find it and we wanted to blame it on that, that toxin. 01:52:16.547 --> 01:52:19.548 we wanted to find that exact sequence, we would plant it there. 01:52:19.568 --> 01:52:24.949 And one of the ways to plant it there would be to plant it in a bacteriophage because then it might replicate. 01:52:25.929 --> 01:52:26.869 You might find more of it. 01:52:26.889 --> 01:52:30.070 It might spread around a little bit in the bacteria that it's replicating in. 01:52:30.110 --> 01:52:30.610 Do you see? 01:52:30.630 --> 01:52:34.691 Do you see why this biology is so important to understand? 01:52:35.091 --> 01:52:45.613 Because the scenario that we are being offered on the television and on social media is inevitably a very simple scenario that doesn't acknowledge almost any of this complexity at all. 01:52:53.915 --> 01:53:04.447 Another notion for direct in vivo therapy, bacteriophages, the direct transfer of polynucleotides into tissues in vivo and in situ was attempted in 1960s as well. 01:53:07.210 --> 01:53:15.099 Peritoneal malignant and normal cells in the peritoneum and tours in situ took up radioactive DNA, but the foreign DNA demonstrated no functional activity. 01:53:15.911 --> 01:53:25.818 radioactive DNA injected intravenously or intraperitoneally in rodents were taken up by the spleen and bone marrow cells, but it doesn't necessarily mean that they were active. 01:53:28.001 --> 01:53:30.864 So again, we're looking at this stuff. 01:53:31.064 --> 01:53:37.912 Early exploits of the human gene therapy in the Bayloid studies prompted many attempts to research DNA uptake by vertebrate cells. 01:53:37.932 --> 01:53:43.358 However, the study made the entire field of gene transfer into cells of higher organisms somewhat suspect. 01:53:43.378 --> 01:53:47.022 So apparently there's a thing here where they tried to do it, but it didn't work. 01:53:47.082 --> 01:53:48.043 We could probably read that. 01:53:49.380 --> 01:53:57.243 The belated studies in ducks attracted enough attention to prompt several others and investigators to attempt phenotypic modification of DNA transfer. 01:53:57.263 --> 01:53:59.624 So Garrett, they must've done something in ducks. 01:53:59.864 --> 01:54:04.786 A Peking duck injected intrapreneurially, oh my gosh. 01:54:06.533 --> 01:54:23.564 So this paper in 1956 takes ducklings injected intraperitoneally with DNA extract from khaki Campbell ducks and says that they exhibited characteristics of khaki Campbell ducks in terms of body size and head size and that these effects were passed on to their progeny. 01:54:24.424 --> 01:54:26.766 Ooh, that's an interesting paper. 01:54:28.294 --> 01:54:37.760 to the dismay of pate manufacturers and Chinese chefs who were expecting a culinary breakthrough, these results in the ducks have never been reproduced." 01:54:38.600 --> 01:54:38.740 Oh. 01:54:39.440 --> 01:54:49.526 And so that inability to reproduce that result led to the discrediting, or quote unquote, of the gene transfer studies in higher cells. 01:54:49.566 --> 01:54:52.948 And he's kind of saying, but that's throwing the baby out with the bathwater. 01:54:52.968 --> 01:54:53.708 We know it works. 01:54:53.748 --> 01:54:54.729 This just didn't work. 01:54:59.215 --> 01:55:00.275 So that's really cool. 01:55:00.915 --> 01:55:02.035 I'm going to keep reading this. 01:55:02.736 --> 01:55:07.856 I'm just tired, so I want to... Recombinants and blah, blah, blah. 01:55:11.637 --> 01:55:12.377 Here, we'll go right here. 01:55:12.417 --> 01:55:15.098 The advent of recombinant technology, because this is where we are now. 01:55:15.558 --> 01:55:17.458 This is where the Human Genome Project comes in. 01:55:17.498 --> 01:55:26.920 This is where production of DNA in quantity and production of DNA using a recombinant bacterial culture is now in its heyday. 01:55:26.960 --> 01:55:27.740 So let's read this part. 01:55:28.340 --> 01:55:40.927 It was not until early transfection techniques and selection systems for cultured cells were combined with recombinant DNA technology that major progress was made in gene transfer. 01:55:41.047 --> 01:55:52.554 Please see that that sentence is complete and total vindication of my four years of work to try and get someone like Brett Weinstein to teach people that transfection is what they're doing. 01:55:55.541 --> 01:55:56.562 See it for what it is. 01:55:56.862 --> 01:55:59.083 These people are traitors to our children. 01:56:00.784 --> 01:56:06.966 The isolation of a single gene enabled both greater efficiency and better documentation of its transfer. 01:56:07.487 --> 01:56:14.470 Greater efficiency would be produced by more production of that DNA, and better documentation of its transfer would make it easier to detect. 01:56:16.251 --> 01:56:18.672 Ah, using irradiated herpes simplex virus. 01:56:18.732 --> 01:56:20.712 I mean, it's so crazy, this. 01:56:22.273 --> 01:56:25.334 Fragments of herpes simplex DNA generated by shearing. 01:56:27.094 --> 01:56:27.574 I don't know. 01:56:28.114 --> 01:56:29.655 Subsequently, other DNA. 01:56:29.795 --> 01:56:31.135 I'm not going to read any of this anymore. 01:56:31.175 --> 01:56:32.115 This is just crazy. 01:56:32.676 --> 01:56:34.996 Here's some more recombinant SV40 factors. 01:56:35.056 --> 01:56:36.517 We're using a bacteriophage. 01:56:41.518 --> 01:56:44.919 Retroviral vectors were developed by three different groups. 01:56:47.556 --> 01:56:48.617 which include Temin. 01:56:51.618 --> 01:56:57.242 So it's interesting, for example, that Robert Malone's never mentioned Temin, even though he's another mentor he probably descended from. 01:56:58.442 --> 01:57:06.767 So the conclusion, although the discovery of the central dogma of molecular genetics quickly led to the idea for gene therapy advancements, 01:57:07.839 --> 01:57:13.722 was hindered, advancement was hindered initially by several poorly designed studies. 01:57:14.382 --> 01:57:18.424 As the field has gained credibility in recent years, however, progress has accelerated. 01:57:19.104 --> 01:57:37.192 Central to this progress have been the discovery of basic genetic concepts in bacteria and bacteriophages and the elaboration of these concepts to mammalian cells, recombinant DNA technology, and mammalian gene transfer techniques, including viral vectors and physical chemical methods. 01:57:38.669 --> 01:57:45.218 So what I'm suggesting to you is that the equivalent of bacteriophage is not viruses. 01:57:46.980 --> 01:57:49.964 Bacteriophages are part of the bacteria. 01:57:51.001 --> 01:57:57.622 pattern integrity, just like exosomes are part of the eukaryotic pattern integrity. 01:57:57.783 --> 01:58:12.766 And so to call them viruses and study them as things that are separate pathogens from us is being completely disingenuous to the discovery that is outlined and described in this article, which is that these exosomes are part of our pattern integrity. 01:58:13.286 --> 01:58:27.492 And these geneticists have been trying to tell us that they are outside of our pattern integrity so that they can use them as tools without the moral and scrupulous consequences of those lies. 01:58:27.672 --> 01:58:37.937 They have convinced us that gene therapy is closer to pharmacotherapy than it is to disrespecting the irreducible complexity that is our sacred biology. 01:58:40.199 --> 01:58:57.662 The new field of gene therapy combines the advantages of pharmacology, namely the ability to treat human diseases with externally administered substances that have specific actions, and surgery, namely the ability to alter tissue or organ permanently. 01:58:58.403 --> 01:59:10.152 As such, dean therapy represents a more extensive, a more extension, more of an extension of established medical practice rather than an entirely new branch of medicine, one that could potentially 01:59:11.221 --> 01:59:13.504 Rather, sorry, I'm reading it wrong, it's so awful. 01:59:14.124 --> 01:59:19.090 As such, gene therapy represents more than an extension of established medical practice. 01:59:19.250 --> 01:59:27.178 Rather, it is an entirely new branch of medicine, one that could potentially revolutionize the way we treat human disease. 01:59:28.099 --> 01:59:28.400 Stop! 01:59:29.749 --> 01:59:33.072 That is spectacular, ladies and gentlemen. 01:59:33.512 --> 01:59:37.396 What a great recommendation for a reading by Mark Kulak. 01:59:37.436 --> 01:59:38.537 Thank you very much for that. 01:59:38.597 --> 01:59:43.822 This show has been, you know, who the hell is John A. Wolfe? 01:59:43.882 --> 01:59:50.649 And I think we found out that he's somebody pretty important because Joshua Lederberg decided to write a pretty 01:59:51.309 --> 02:00:06.907 seminal review about these ideas with him in 1994, four years after John A. Wolfe was the first author on the naked DNA paper that Robert Malone carries around as his lanyard and access to all of the 02:00:07.768 --> 02:00:11.289 VIP rooms that he is regularly circulating through. 02:00:12.189 --> 02:00:20.891 The way that they pulled this off, ladies and gentlemen, is they're lying about 2020 and the murders that were committed, the fraud that was committed, and the mythology and the stories that were told. 02:00:21.372 --> 02:00:23.772 And those stories are continuing to this day. 02:00:23.832 --> 02:00:28.553 That's the reason why you have to call the faith a lie, because it's part of that mythology. 02:00:28.573 --> 02:00:30.334 It's part of those stories that involve 02:00:30.894 --> 02:00:36.239 gain-of-function research and the potential for the worst-case scenario being a gain-of-function bioweapon. 02:00:36.279 --> 02:00:46.289 This is all elaborate lies about transfection and transformation and transduction in cell culture and they are willing to murder people to keep this lie 02:00:47.249 --> 02:00:51.571 intact because it is how they plan to govern our kids for generations to come. 02:00:52.051 --> 02:00:56.173 If you want to understand this, you got to understand it from the perspective of lack of fidelity. 02:00:56.694 --> 02:01:03.777 RNA cannot copy itself very well and therefore if they want to study what RNA does, they need to make a DNA copy of it. 02:01:03.877 --> 02:01:14.802 Once they make a DNA copy of it, they can use the techniques described in this 30-year-old paper and described by Brian Artis on stage at the Red Pill Expo, although not very well, 02:01:16.580 --> 02:01:20.345 And they can use those techniques to make a lot of that DNA in bacterial culture. 02:01:20.365 --> 02:01:26.512 And then they can take that DNA and convert it to RNA using any number of techniques described in that paper and developed since. 02:01:27.413 --> 02:01:31.058 And if they apply this RNA to DNA to cell culture, it's called virology. 02:01:31.098 --> 02:01:32.539 If they apply this RNA to DNA, 02:01:34.701 --> 02:01:36.182 to animals, it's called virology. 02:01:36.202 --> 02:01:38.783 And if they send it to their friends and they do it, it's called virology. 02:01:39.143 --> 02:01:42.725 The crazy part is that these techniques can be used to make large quantities of it. 02:01:42.745 --> 02:01:51.349 So it doesn't have to be like the virologists say, and they're just making infectious DNA clones in small quantities for my lab to work on. 02:01:51.389 --> 02:01:58.673 It could be made using the exact same equipment that has existed for 10 years already in these pharmaceutical companies to make a giant portion of it. 02:01:59.093 --> 02:02:01.034 and then you wouldn't have to call it infectious clones. 02:02:01.354 --> 02:02:15.420 You can be more specific and just say, you know, it's synthetic DNA and RNA made in quantity, which we've been able to do for a very long time and been trying to do for a very long time as so succinctly described by Wolf and Lederberg in the paper we read today. 02:02:17.475 --> 02:02:27.351 These people, especially Robert Malone, know very well they are descended from these same mentors, they are descended from these same idea chains, and that's why they are made to protect them, because they are part of it. 02:02:27.811 --> 02:02:32.198 It is a national security operation that didn't start in 2020, although it became public then. 02:02:32.719 --> 02:02:37.841 Ladies and gentlemen, they are hiding Pierre Kory and he's one of the greatest ways to red pill your friends. 02:02:38.782 --> 02:02:44.024 Ladies and gentlemen, intramuscular injection of any combination of substances with the intent of augmenting the immune system is dumb. 02:02:44.444 --> 02:02:48.386 Transfection in healthy humans was always criminally negligent and RNA cannot pandemic. 02:02:49.827 --> 02:02:55.369 This has been Gigaohm Biological, a high-resistance, low-noise information stream brought to you by a biologist. 02:02:55.810 --> 02:02:57.010 This is our main message. 02:02:57.450 --> 02:03:05.475 If you want to argue with us, argue with this main message, that the argument about the novel virus accepted the novel virus. 02:03:05.995 --> 02:03:11.758 And all of these people, Fauci and Malone and everybody in between, was responsible for us 02:03:12.618 --> 02:03:18.862 vigorously arguing about it, and vigorously engaging in the Scooby-Doo until we accepted the existence of the virus. 02:03:19.342 --> 02:03:21.924 And these people need to stop lying! 02:03:29.898 --> 02:03:34.942 Stop all transfections in humans, ladies and gentlemen, because they are trying to eliminate the control group by any means necessary. 02:03:34.962 --> 02:03:47.351 GigaOM Biological does need your support, and that means I need you to share the videos at stream.gigaom.bio, and anybody who can, I need you to go to gigaombiological.com and find a way to support. 02:03:48.071 --> 02:04:06.835 The work that I do with a large amount if you want to And you have it or a very tiny amount if that's all you've got and worst case scenario Please just work to share and make a habit of sharing the stream every day Because the stream is gonna be here every day at least once if not twice I'm gonna get some lunch head to the gym, and maybe I'll see you afterward. 02:04:06.895 --> 02:04:08.696 Thank you very much for joining me I'll see you again soon 02:04:44.460 --> 02:04:47.707 I have no responsibility for the current pandemic. 02:04:49.651 --> 02:04:50.512 Stop lying! 02:04:52.897 --> 02:04:54.320 Stop lying!