Episode Transcript
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0:23
Welcome to the Last American Vagabond. Today I
0:25
chose to wear my Truth Matters shirt for
0:28
a reason because we're going to discuss why
0:31
truth is so important today and the sacrifices
0:33
that it often entails.
0:36
People that decide to act solely
0:39
in the interest of truth or in the interest
0:41
of other people, there
0:44
tends to be consequences for it. I think a lot of
0:46
people today are running headlong
0:48
into that. I decided to invite
0:50
today onto the show Dr. Ahmed
0:52
Malik to discuss exactly that. During
0:55
the process of the COVID-19 illusion, he decided
0:57
to act in the interest of the truth,
1:00
act in the interest of other people,
1:02
and pay the penalty for that, like
1:04
many did during this massive
1:07
illusion that we've all been forced to go through, which
1:09
by the way is not going away. The
1:11
discussion today is around his story, what he
1:14
sacrificed and what he's now leaning
1:16
into because of that, which is, in my
1:18
opinion, really in the interest of the truth
1:20
and people's information around
1:22
the lies we're being sold, but
1:25
also how we need to continue to push in
1:27
this direction because if we do not continue to
1:29
fight for these things, they will bring this right
1:32
back around as we're all seeing. So Dr.
1:34
Malik, it's an honor to have you on the show. How are you
1:36
today, brother? I'm great. I'm
1:38
great. I'm Ed Malik, but all your Americans love
1:41
you. Oh, I'm sorry. My first time
1:43
I've said it out loud in front of you. So there you go. I
1:47
just need to say, by the way, your
1:49
intro's epic, the whole smoke burning syndrome. I
1:51
love it. I love it. Really
1:54
nice. I'm very jealous. You'll make
1:56
up for me as much as possible your name. No,
1:58
it's great. It's a
2:00
real nice introduction, thank you so much. And I'm
2:02
just looking at you and truth matters 100%. And
2:06
the next thing, on your laptop, question everything.
2:09
And I'm always telling people that, question everything.
2:12
So quick introduction to some of
2:14
your listeners. I'm
2:16
an orthopedic consultant. I've been a doctor for 25
2:18
years. Apparently I
2:20
look quite young. I'm actually 48. So
2:23
I became a doctor when I was 23. So
2:25
some of you may know about Doogie Howser. I
2:28
was like a Doogie Howser when I was a little
2:30
kid. So
2:32
yeah, 25 years as a doctor, orthopedic
2:34
surgeon. You know, it's not
2:36
easy becoming a consultant orthopedic surgeon. You know,
2:38
there was 250 people in my med school
2:40
year. You know, maybe
2:43
three will become consultant surgeons like
2:45
me. So you know, there's a
2:47
lot of competition. It was hard won. And
2:49
I was living a very kind of like orthodox,
2:52
typical surgeon life. Just
2:55
working in the state system, which is here
2:57
in the UK, the NHS, doing
2:59
a little bit of private practice. And
3:01
it's basically back in 2016, 17 when
3:04
my dad had terminal cancer. I kind
3:06
of like reevaluated everything. He
3:09
was actually sitting on the sofa at home right now,
3:11
you know, where I live. He was sitting there, you
3:13
know, five years ago, six
3:15
years ago. And then I came home
3:17
late at night at 10 o'clock. And he said to me, what
3:20
are you doing son? I'm like, what do you mean? He
3:22
goes, look at you. You're overweight. You look like shit. 10
3:25
o'clock at night. You're about to eat. Your wife
3:27
and kids are asleep. You left the house before they woke up.
3:29
You work like this six days a week. I mean, what
3:31
is all about? Is it just money, status?
3:34
You know, what are you doing? Because take it from me. I'm a
3:36
dying man. This is not the way to live. You
3:39
need to get your shit together. And I was like,
3:41
whoa. But I, a
3:43
tough love man. We all need that today. Yeah. God
3:47
bless him, man. I needed to hear that. You
3:49
know, I need the straight talking glass region. You
3:51
know, that's a blue collar city here in the
3:53
UK and Scotland. You know, it's very gritty. You
3:56
used to work in the shipyards. And you know, you don't, there's
3:58
no bullshit in Glasgow. You just say it as a... it is.
4:02
And yeah, I, you know,
4:04
the next day I quit, and then the
4:06
chess. So I left that system.
4:08
And rather than work extra
4:11
hard in the private sector, I stopped, I only
4:13
worked two and a half days a week, I
4:15
thought I'm going to stop chasing the dream, forget
4:18
the big house, it's never going to come forget the
4:20
fancy card and the credit and the holidays and the
4:22
mistress, you know, I don't need all that. A
4:25
beautiful wife and kids, just work two and
4:27
a half days a week stay out of debt, live
4:29
a good life, lose my weight and everything and get
4:31
my shit together. So my wife and I went on
4:33
this journey. She's a doctor as well. She's 10 years
4:36
younger than me. And she
4:38
was overweight, she wasn't healthy. And we
4:40
figured out how to get healthy in
4:42
a quick nutshell. It's your sleep. It's
4:44
intermittent fasting. So we eat one meal
4:47
a day, high protein, high fats, low
4:49
carbohydrates, low processed food, minimal
4:51
ultra processed, none, none basically,
4:54
exercise practically every day, lots
4:57
of sunshine, sunshine, healthy
4:59
outdoors, companionship, love. And
5:01
you know what, you get everything's great. And
5:04
you know, I shed a ton of
5:06
weight, got rid of my diabetes, got rid
5:08
of my hypertension. And I
5:10
looked 10 years younger. And it's quick comment. We're
5:12
not going to get in when we could today
5:14
get into the health side of the diet side
5:16
of this. But we have not
5:19
discussed off by air my keto
5:21
practices, my audience is aware of that. So it's
5:23
interesting you talk about that we should probably do
5:25
an entire show about how and really
5:27
interesting how and don't forget, pre COVID
5:30
there was a huge pushback on Facebook
5:32
against these keto communities. It's very strange.
5:34
I quite frankly, a healthy
5:36
version of that is probably the best thing you can do
5:38
as far as I can tell, but I'm not 100% keto,
5:42
carnivore, whatever way you look at it. So I'm,
5:45
I'm like keto carnivore, basically, you know, I have
5:47
a little bit carbohydrates, but not very much, maybe
5:49
like 15% 10% good Whole
5:52
Foods, fresh vegetables, fruits, that kind of stuff, right?
5:55
Exactly. It's really just a healthy diet that turns
5:57
out to be it turns out to just inadvertently
5:59
be Keto. You know it's it's and and
6:01
think I'm bloody and with the you look healthy
6:03
you drop the way I mean this is this
6:05
is so important the world we we tend to
6:08
put these things off with a bigger discussions but
6:10
the personal responsibility personal hell for me it's paramount
6:12
and some the congratulate Edmunds. Thanks.
6:14
Man and the reason why is relevant as.
6:16
Good comes to the whole cool with thing.
6:19
So when I got my shit. Together And
6:21
the thing is. My. Wife and I
6:23
were both dogs were looking at. Each other. We're
6:25
talking about what we've discovered. Amigo, Some
6:28
we weren't taught this in med school. Crazy.
6:33
Like. Seriously grind like he giggles and
6:35
five years in med. School secure
6:37
sometimes depending your course. We
6:39
didn't get one lectern. Sleep one liked her
6:42
nutrition and get and until we got no
6:44
none I will not and by the I
6:46
find it almost impossible to believe like I
6:48
know that's true but. I just
6:50
as abusive Utah that you an average person
6:52
they probably say you're missing something. you're not.
6:54
Truth, I mean of. I've heard this from
6:57
many different people going through both becoming a
6:59
doctor or a physician's assistant. I I just
7:01
think that's unbelievable and it's such a perfect
7:03
picture or talking about today. Sixty credible freeze.
7:06
To death is like saying as
7:08
like a rocket scientist saying. When.
7:10
I went to rocket science school. Said.
7:12
Never taught me how to cut rocket
7:14
together. I mean. Your.
7:17
Town like will. What The fact that the kids.
7:19
She there are enough so.
7:21
Yeah. Like what did the teach me? They taught
7:23
me a nice. To me the tommy says urology
7:25
like has a body this think it works. And
7:28
the told you what bulls long and then. The
7:30
told you the tablet to take. right?
7:34
So. Anyway, what's his
7:36
journey of discovery taught me was? Thrust,
7:40
While. I was taught in med school. And
7:43
what my medical profession tells me because
7:45
every where I live. They're telling us
7:47
lies and so is the government. And
7:49
so it's a media every single time
7:51
to see Low fat Low Fat. I.
7:54
know they're lying for their back teeth every
7:56
single time to say all carbohydrates and me
7:58
is bad and read is bad and don't
8:00
have salt. I know they're lying for
8:03
their back teeth. And if this dumb
8:05
orthopod could figure out their shit and
8:07
is teaching his four-year-old kids this stuff,
8:10
they could be teaching this to all
8:12
the kids in kindergarten, all the adults,
8:14
and start out all the 90% of
8:16
the chronic health problems we see in
8:18
the country, save tons of money. And
8:21
the only reason they can't be doing
8:23
this isn't incompetence or because they don't know.
8:26
The only rational conclusion is they know
8:28
all this and they choose not to tell
8:30
us. And then the next question is
8:33
why are they not choosing to tell us? Well,
8:35
the only inevitable conclusion is, well, have
8:38
a look. Money talks.
8:40
Statins are a $1 trillion
8:42
industry. The low fat
8:46
food industry is a $1
8:48
trillion industry. Vaccines are
8:50
a $1 trillion industry.
8:53
Money talks. So they want us to
8:55
get sick and
8:58
dependent and go through the
9:00
medical industrial complex and
9:02
be dumbed down and stupid and
9:04
vulnerable and dependent on the state.
9:07
And that made me really question everything.
9:09
So when COVID came round, back to
9:11
your question, sorry for the long detour.
9:13
No, that's important. Yeah.
9:15
I was now out of all
9:18
of mainstream medicine. I'm working privately
9:20
as an orthopedic surgeon two
9:23
days a week in
9:25
a private hospital and suddenly lockdowns are happening. And
9:27
I did fall for the fear porn. And there's a
9:29
background story. I don't want to go into it too
9:31
much, but I was involved in the Brexit campaign.
9:33
I got a lot of abuse for that. Financially,
9:36
I got hurt a lot. All the doctors stopped
9:38
referring patients to me because they thought I was
9:40
a racist. Yeah, figure. Look
9:42
at me. But because
9:45
I was EU skeptic and
9:47
pro-Brexit, I was labeled
9:49
this racist. So I got hurt
9:51
badly being involved in the Brexit process. I was
9:53
actually a member of a political party. I stood
9:56
for the parliament and everything. And
9:58
so by the time 2020... early camp,
10:00
I was depressed, I was vulnerable, I was,
10:02
you know, not a good place. And
10:05
then COVID happened and all I wanted was
10:07
life to be back to normal. And it's like, Oh shit, man,
10:09
we need lockdown, blah, blah. But you know, honestly, I'm not going
10:11
to lie. I did fall for it. Three,
10:14
four weeks, but within two, three days
10:16
of lockdown, I was like, hold on. This is
10:18
bullshit. You know, they're telling
10:20
everyone to stay in their house
10:22
to wait until they're almost on death's
10:24
door before going to a hospital and there's nothing
10:27
that can be done. And I'm
10:29
like, this is bullshit. You know, for years
10:31
I've been talking to people about early treatment
10:33
and prevention is better than the cure. You know,
10:35
get in there early. And I
10:37
know the importance of sunshine. I know the importance
10:39
of vitamin D and vitamin C and zinc.
10:42
We could be giving this to people. I know the importance
10:44
of losing weight and having a healthy
10:46
diet and a keto diet. Why are
10:48
we not telling, why is McDonald's open,
10:51
but your local farm shops are closed?
10:54
This doesn't make sense. You
10:56
know, it's garbage. It's bullshit.
10:59
And then, oh, there's no treatment. We need
11:02
to get a vaccine. I'm like, hold on.
11:04
So drug development is, you know,
11:06
a five to 10 year process for a
11:08
reason. You know, there's
11:10
a reason for this. And I've
11:12
done a podcast with someone called Headly Reese
11:15
and we went into drug development and the
11:17
processes involved and they are
11:19
really detailed and intricate and time consuming for a
11:21
reason. Guess what? To protect people. You
11:24
cannot speed, fast speed this.
11:26
Because when you cut corners, you're basically
11:28
cutting critical safety steps.
11:30
You're not cutting bureaucracy
11:33
and red tape. No, that's bullshit. You
11:35
are basically saying, nah, you know what
11:37
the safety step, you know, you know,
11:39
what effect is it going to have
11:42
on pregnancy and fertility? And
11:44
is it going to be cancers down the line?
11:46
Yeah, these are pesky studies. We don't need to
11:48
do that. You know, where does it go in
11:50
the body? We don't need to look into that.
11:52
You know, one of the earliest examples that
11:54
I think are really clear to people and this isn't
11:57
the most important, I would argue, but
11:59
it was early to. discussed with the skipping or
12:02
essentially the skipping of the animal trials where that came
12:04
out where that's where they would have discovered. And
12:07
I think they knew this, the antibody dependent enhancement,
12:09
overlap, the myocarditis point, all these different things that
12:11
would have been clear there. And
12:13
that was the choice. And I make this
12:16
joke throughout all of COVID, which is facetious.
12:18
It's still horrible, but doing dangerous things for
12:20
your safety was like this mantra. When
12:23
you really say it like that, it's like, well, that's stupid,
12:25
but that's what they really did. And it's
12:27
incredible to me, but yeah, you nailed it. I mean, it's
12:29
exactly what was happening and the drive into
12:31
it. So please continue. Yeah,
12:33
exactly. But like, you know, Ryan,
12:35
you talked about antibody dependent enhancement. No, no, you know
12:37
what? Look, we didn't need animal studies. We didn't
12:40
need any of that shit because like I
12:42
was looking at the literature, I was googling
12:44
PubMed and what happened first time around with
12:46
SARS-CoV and SARS, sorry, SARS, you know,
12:48
and it was like a lot of studies had been doing
12:50
vaccines and the conclusion was quite stark.
12:54
It was like, hmm.
12:56
We caution for their studies
12:59
in vaccines because the risk of
13:01
antibody dependent enhancement. And they're
13:03
talking about how animals were
13:05
dying with the vaccines. It's all there from
13:07
like 10 years ago. I don't, you know, like a
13:10
lot of things people say to me now, you
13:12
can't find stuff that was there
13:14
early on. They've literally like erased
13:16
the book burning has happened. They've
13:18
been burning like the medical, you
13:20
know, research papers. I remember March
13:22
2020 reading papers from like eight,
13:24
10 years ago saying, don't do
13:26
this. This doesn't work.
13:28
It causes problems. You know, an antibody
13:31
dependent enhancement is a real issue. And
13:33
I was mentioning this to people and they're like, what the hell are
13:35
you talking about? I was like, I'm telling you right now, they're going to
13:37
bring in vaccines and they're going to say,
13:39
this is the only way out and this is bullshit.
13:41
And this is exactly what happened. So quick,
13:44
that's a quick little detour into medical
13:46
ethics. So as a surgeon, I've, you
13:48
know, I can send paper people, you
13:51
know, I wouldn't be an ethical surgeon if I
13:53
just said to people, right, you need an operation.
13:55
Come on, let's go and start zipping them up,
13:57
open them up. And you know, you know, I need to get.
14:00
consent from them. So let's
14:02
talk about one of the key pillars of medical
14:04
ethics, informed consent. So Ryan, you know, when you
14:06
have a problem, right, you busted your shoulder, your
14:09
ankle, whatever, you come and
14:11
see me. My first job is to inform
14:13
you of the diagnosis,
14:15
to educate you about the
14:17
issue and then empower you
14:19
with choices so that instead of
14:21
feeling like a vulnerable person, and I don't know
14:23
what's happening to me, and I don't know, I
14:25
feel like I'm at the mercy of these horrible
14:27
doctors. You actually walk out of that
14:30
clinic room going, right, I'm on top
14:32
of this, I know what the shit is, I know what
14:34
my options are, I'm going to go think about it, have
14:36
a chat with the missus, I'll come back to you in
14:38
a few days time. And I actually even offer
14:40
to my patients, go get
14:42
a second opinion. Right. And that might sound
14:44
crazy to some people, but I say, look, it protects
14:46
me and it protects you. You know, if
14:49
you don't trust me, or you've got doubts in your head,
14:51
go see another doctor, go have a chat with
14:53
them, you know, and run it through with them. And once
14:55
you're 120% sure what you want to do, come back and speak
14:57
to me. But
15:00
if you have any questions. Yeah,
15:02
right. Right. Yeah. So,
15:05
so what it means is I inform you of
15:07
the condition, I inform you
15:09
of what your risks are of
15:12
that condition. And if you don't do
15:14
anything, what your risks are, if you
15:16
have an intervention, what the risks
15:18
are, I typically will give you
15:20
a non-operative option, a
15:23
lifestyle option, a do nothing option,
15:25
tablet injection option, and maybe a
15:27
surgical option. And with
15:30
all these options, I say there are pros and
15:32
cons. There are pros and cons of everything. I think,
15:34
you know, it's very easy to see the cons of
15:36
surgery, you get infection or nerve damage
15:38
or whatever, but actually there are cons
15:40
of every decision you choose to make,
15:42
including doing nothing. And I lay all
15:44
that. And I go, no pressure,
15:46
no hard sell, these are your
15:48
options. It's all going to be in a letter,
15:50
go away, digest it, take your time. There's no
15:52
rush unless your foot's pointing 180 degrees the wrong
15:55
way. Because you've been in a car accident. You
15:57
know, there's no rush with a lot of things. And
16:00
then I'm not pressuring you and I'm
16:02
not incentivizing you. I'm not giving you a burger
16:04
if you choose one option over another I'm
16:07
not restricting your life in any way if you
16:09
choose one option or another. I'm not being
16:12
mean to you and Condescending and
16:14
rude and saying you're white supremacist
16:16
or you're a misogynist or you're
16:18
racist for choosing one over the
16:20
other I will respect whatever decision you choose
16:22
to make including the option of Stop
16:26
you know what? I'm just gonna leave it and see how it
16:28
pans out. I'm not gonna be anything right now see that's
16:30
a really That's a really important development
16:32
right there where we saw and it
16:34
started like that I made this point throughout the a
16:37
lot of different processes where it's you know at first
16:39
It's like here you'll get a burger next thing It's
16:41
like well now you'll get your burger taken away from
16:43
you if you don't or back of the line But
16:45
then it becomes well, you're killing grandma, right? We saw
16:47
how that works, you know and throughout this what we're
16:49
discussing right here is is the obvious way that that
16:51
I think I knew I was gonna do that. I
16:53
kind of lost the point. What were you just saying?
16:56
Give me the point one more time. You were just describing We're
16:59
talking about informed consent and how no
17:01
choice is an option. No, no decision. You're
17:03
not choosing to do anything Well,
17:05
sure. No, I was gonna make an excellent point there
17:08
My audience knows I do that far enough But the
17:10
obvious thing though is that is how you could it's
17:12
clear that people get coerced into this Using
17:14
that kind of method and I was gonna bring
17:16
this up and if that point comes back to
17:18
be I'll make that point But you're speaking of
17:20
informed consent and I think this is really important
17:23
This this was one of these documents you were
17:25
you were pointing to first my my discussion of
17:27
it calling out MZ dog or whatever his name
17:29
was for literally acting like antibody-dependent enhancement was a
17:31
conspiracy theory Here's the yeah, and this is from
17:34
December 2020 and it is
17:36
exactly what you're talking about both
17:38
things In fact informed consent disclosure
17:41
for specifically COVID injections And here's
17:43
what it found the specific and
17:45
significant COVID-19 risk of antibody-dependent enhancement
17:47
Should have been and should be prominently
17:49
independently disclosed to research subjects in vaccine
17:52
trials those being recruited for trials And
17:54
those who would eventually take the injection
17:56
after approval and it says in order
17:58
to meet the medical standards
18:00
of informed consent. So this
18:02
was in the beginning where they found
18:04
not maybe not hypothetically but that the
18:06
risk of the injection causing antibody-dependent
18:08
enhancement should they get COVID-19 afterward
18:11
is significant and specific and should be
18:13
told or were not meeting informed consent
18:15
and literally nothing happened. Like that was
18:17
one of those moments for me where
18:19
I was like it was jarring.
18:21
But dude that's
18:24
just one. You've nailed it. That's
18:26
just one. So like informed consent
18:28
let me just break it down. Did
18:30
anyone know that they were actually getting
18:32
a gene therapy? No. Because
18:35
they were told if you say this
18:37
you're conspiracy-theorist. Was anyone told
18:39
actually this isn't really a vaccine?
18:41
They've changed the definition of vaccine
18:43
to include this
18:46
in there. So it's like let's the
18:48
ultimate goal shifting you know let's
18:50
move the goal post. Oh I mean you can let
18:52
me let me say this point before I forget. I
18:54
knew I was gonna say. Okay. So you're talking about
18:56
the hospital discussion right? The idea being that that big
18:59
shift was where suddenly the hospitals argued not just that
19:01
they were coercing you with the right thing but that
19:03
they now suddenly said it's now because of our liability.
19:06
I think that's an important shift right? That where
19:08
they suddenly started acting like well no I can't
19:10
let you just walk away now. You've entered our
19:12
doors. Now we're responsible but that's not really the
19:14
truth. There's all sorts of legalities and they know
19:16
that. So sorry to interrupt. I just want to
19:18
make sure that point came out. I hate when
19:20
I do that but that's such an important shift
19:22
isn't it? Where now you're not allowed to make
19:24
your choices because we're responsible but it turns
19:27
you're into you know you're
19:29
just a your disorder follower now. Exactly. I mean where
19:32
does bodily autonomy go at? Right.
19:34
I mean that's not another key
19:37
medical ethics pillar. So but
19:39
let's just focus on the informed consent for a little
19:41
bit longer. So informed consent it
19:44
wasn't a vaccine. It wasn't gene therapy. Did
19:46
they know for example the manufacturing process or
19:49
the trial was different from the one that
19:51
was rolled out to everyone else? The plasma
19:53
is in there. The DNA contamination. Did anybody
19:55
know about that? Did anybody know that the
19:57
RNA isn't actually messenger RNA but it's
19:59
more modified messenger RNA, it's
20:02
M-M-R-N-A. Did they, were they told
20:04
that by the way, you know how it's gonna stay in
20:06
your arm for 10 minutes? Remember this garbage? Actually
20:08
it's gonna spread to the rest of your
20:10
body and your ovaries, your testes, your brain,
20:13
cross your blood-brain barrier, go into your fetus.
20:15
Were they told that? Were they told how
20:17
long the spike protein would be made for
20:19
in your body? Were they told like it
20:21
was their variation and the amount of protein
20:24
made? What's the duration? Is there safe upper
20:26
limit? Is there switch off button? Is there
20:28
an antidote to the spike protein? What are
20:30
the long-term safety results? Were they told
20:32
about the 34 pages of complications
20:34
with thousands of address effects that they'd seen
20:37
in the clinical trial? Well, they told that
20:39
the clinical trial was absolutely bullshit and actually
20:41
they were talking about relative
20:43
risk reduction, not absolute risk reduction,
20:45
that they weren't looking at the
20:48
actual symptoms. It was all PCR
20:50
driven crap. I mean, none of this,
20:52
it was not informed consent. Were they told that by
20:54
the way, you know, the
20:56
placebo group that was
20:58
meant to be in this arm of the trial, that they
21:00
were meant to be followed up for years to see if
21:03
there was a difference between the two groups, they
21:05
were all given the shot, making the whole
21:07
study null and void. Was anyone
21:09
told these multiple important factors?
21:11
Because I bet your
21:14
average person, your average Joe on the street
21:16
or Jill, if you went up to them
21:18
and say, hey, by the way, I've got
21:20
this little needle syringe, I've got this like
21:23
experimental thing in here, it
21:25
could potentially change your genetic code.
21:28
It's got some DNA contaminants, E.
21:30
coli and some other stuff. And you know, we
21:32
don't really know how it works long-term. It's pretty
21:35
new. I mean, we've been using this stuff in
21:37
the last 10 years, but they've all failed miserably.
21:40
I mean, we're trying to work and make cancer
21:42
drugs from this, but none of them have worked
21:44
so far, but we want to put this in
21:46
your arm. Is that okay? I
21:48
don't think anyone would say yes. I
21:52
think they would all say, crack off.
21:55
But that's not what they were
21:57
told, was it? They were told it was safe and
21:59
effective. effective. They
22:01
were told that 90% 95% effective.
22:03
They were told it's totally safe.
22:06
You know, the government is telling you take this.
22:08
So do you see how powerful informed consent is?
22:11
No one, no one
22:13
on this planet of
22:16
all the billions of shots given had
22:18
informed consent. Make
22:21
a short of that. We need
22:23
to hear that. Exactly. Right. So
22:25
then, good, the violations of medical
22:27
ethics. No one, everyone has bodily
22:30
autonomy, right? What happens to
22:32
my body? No one has the
22:34
right to decide except
22:37
me. That went out
22:39
the window. So the reason I was quiet during
22:41
the whole lockdown period was I was stuck in
22:44
my house in this garden, my tiny
22:46
little garden with three young kids, right? I
22:48
wasn't earning a penny. I was not
22:50
getting anything from the government. I was self-employed.
22:53
I was broke. My
22:55
savings are going down, down, down. I'm stressing how
22:57
we're going to pay the bills and
23:01
I'm not working. And I'm not
23:03
on social media. I'm not on Twitter. I'm just
23:05
on Instagram and I'm posting, trying to stay hopeful
23:07
and positive and you know, blah, blah. And I'm
23:09
getting really down. I'm reading all these conspiratorial things
23:11
and they're like, oh my God, this
23:13
is like going to be mandates and they're
23:15
going to be doing this and that. And I'm like, reading this
23:17
shit going, no, no. Okay, for my men
23:19
to have, I better switch off. I'm battling
23:22
to save my marriage. My wife is in
23:24
the system. She's a junior. She's believing everything
23:26
the government's telling them. I'm like, no, no,
23:28
no, no, no, the government's a bunch of
23:30
liars. The pharma companies are
23:32
evil. And she's like, no, you've got mental
23:34
problems. You're depressed. You're isolated. You're
23:36
at home. You're not working anymore. You
23:39
know, maybe you need to go see
23:41
a psychiatrist. And I'm like, I'm not
23:43
mentally insane. You know, this is bad. And
23:46
so now this is having a problem with my
23:48
marriage. She says, I'm going to take the
23:50
shots when they come out. I'm like, no,
23:52
no, no, no, no. And
23:54
suddenly, you know, we are
23:56
struggling in our household. All right, I'm not
23:58
going to, I'm not going to let you go. It was tough
24:01
me and when you're fighting a battle
24:03
a rear guard action, you can't be on the
24:05
fences Okay, you can't you can't
24:07
win two fronts at the same
24:10
time. So I'm fighting a battle at home
24:12
right now So in
24:14
the end I kind of lost my
24:16
wife took all the three shots
24:18
and the boosters and everything and I
24:22
Took one shot and again, the reason was because
24:24
she called me, you know Some names and said
24:26
it was kind of like crazy and to prove
24:28
her I wasn't some crazy anti-vaxxer
24:30
I said that I've had all the shots to
24:32
date, you know, okay, god damn it
24:34
I'll take the stupid shot and I went to
24:36
the vaccine place and I and
24:38
I went there suddenly what's in this blah blah blah And
24:40
they're like I was wearing a t-shirt at the time and
24:42
they're like look just give me your arm here And I
24:44
was like, yeah, but can you answer a few of my
24:46
questions? Yeah, sure rub it back in my arm I was
24:49
like, whoa, like I
24:51
thought you can answer some questions and like Yeah,
24:54
what is it you want to ask that was
24:56
that was how it worked and
24:58
someone who's given consent Over
25:01
years and years. I was dumbstruck Like
25:05
what I felt violated I went to
25:07
my car and I sat in my
25:09
car and cried Now when I
25:11
was a little kid like four
25:13
or five Some twice on
25:16
two occasions some people tried to molest
25:18
me and felt me and touched me up.
25:20
I remember it by distressing This
25:22
was worse than that This
25:24
was now inside me. I was totally violated.
25:26
I could not get it out of me
25:28
and I
25:31
was not given informed consent and it made me
25:34
Fracking angry made me angry
25:36
that I had no willpower to resist my
25:38
wife and the pressure and the coercion that
25:41
was gained from my Doctors and
25:43
colleagues and hospitals and went and got the
25:45
one stupid shot By bad, I
25:47
was never going to have any more and I
25:49
was gonna go on a mission to explain to
25:51
people this is wrong So
25:54
anyway, I started talking speaking up about
25:56
it and telling everyone everywhere what my
25:58
thoughts were But it
26:00
was when the mandates came, right? Now,
26:03
you know, bodily autonomy, informed consent
26:05
come together. Now, the mandates are
26:08
completely different. You can't. That is just
26:10
so wrong. To mandate
26:12
the state telling you you need
26:14
to take the shot to work.
26:16
And they were telling every employee
26:18
who worked in the hospitals,
26:20
private or public, every
26:23
contractor, every and they were saying this thing, you
26:25
know what it's like, they lie, they go front
26:27
line, front line workers. No, no, no, no, no.
26:30
They wanted anybody. So if a car
26:32
parking attendant was in the hospital, they
26:34
wanted them to get the shot. But
26:37
there's someone in administration or logistics or
26:39
whatever cleaner able to get the shot
26:42
every person, if someone came to change
26:44
a signpost in the hospital, they had
26:46
to get the shot. Anyone who physically
26:48
entered a clinic, hostel GP practice had
26:50
to get the shot. So you're
26:52
talking about millions of people.
26:56
And I was thinking, what the hell?
26:59
Because if it's today, this
27:02
tomorrow, they'll say there's a climate emergency and you
27:04
need to take a pill. You need to take this
27:06
pill. You know, don't ask questions. It's
27:08
safe and effective. Why are you asking questions about
27:10
what's in it and what studies are done? We're
27:12
telling we are telling you it's safe and effective.
27:15
You know, are you are you being a problem here?
27:18
Right. You don't care about the greater good.
27:21
You know, the
27:24
right exactly. I
27:27
was going to say it's simply what you're outlining. There
27:29
is such an obvious two things,
27:32
really, the fact that the way that they
27:34
lean on good natured people like your wife
27:36
and and may and drive that to drive
27:38
their people in their in their orbit to
27:40
be forced into it. That's what I think
27:42
was the majority of people in that little
27:44
area right here. You know, and I actually
27:46
that whole outline, we this will be used
27:48
again. Parasite stress theory is something I've talked
27:50
about a lot. These have been studies that
27:52
have been done. All they need is a
27:54
threat really of a pathogen seems to be
27:56
the primary goal. But you can see how it's
27:59
very telling. even on that point, how you're
28:01
seeing how all of those converge, how
28:03
climate change increases pathogens, how war increases
28:05
pathogens. It's everything's linked. Yeah. Everything's
28:09
linked. This is why I talk about everything on my Twitter
28:11
space now about this, because it's all fricking linked. And if
28:13
you don't break it down and explain all
28:15
the spider web connections, then they get away with
28:17
it. It's all bullshit. On that note, I'll be
28:19
including all of your links for people to make
28:22
sure you check out his website. You're
28:31
frozen. So
28:47
you have a lot of great, damn
28:49
it, man. Are you there? Can you hear
28:51
me? I'm back. I'm back. I'm back.
28:54
I can just cut that out. It froze for a while. Yeah. Yeah,
28:57
it keeps happening to me here. Fuck. Anyway, so what was
28:59
the idea? You can edit it.
29:01
I'll cut it out. What was the last thing I said?
29:03
I don't know. You were saying something, check out his links. Check
29:05
out his links here, and then it went up. You
29:07
start showing your links. Oh, okay. I was just gonna
29:10
use that as a segue to show your links and
29:12
everything, but maybe I'll cut it right there. The last
29:14
thing we were, so I'm just gonna say this. So
29:16
let's get into the discussion of the
29:18
moment of your choice, ultimately. Yeah,
29:20
yeah, yeah. The real decision when
29:22
you were deciding to. Yeah,
29:25
let me explain everything. So basically now, I
29:28
went very vocal when it came to the
29:30
mandates. I went on news. I
29:33
went on something called GB News. My
29:35
face was plastered all over the internet and Facebook
29:37
and everything, all the videos. I was fact checked.
29:39
Look at this crazy RSpeak surgeon, what you're saying.
29:42
I went on marches. I handed in a petition
29:44
with half a million people saying, we're not gonna
29:46
take this shot. Suddenly, the
29:48
mandates were overturned, and I felt
29:50
great. I can go back to my quiet
29:53
life. I'm not gonna name
29:55
names, but I'm not someone who wanted attention.
29:57
I just wanted to work my two days a week, spend time. I
30:00
remember my family and my beautiful wife and my
30:02
marriage is healed. I got her to wake up.
30:04
She turned around one day and said, I'm awake
30:06
now. It's been two years. She said, I'm awake.
30:08
I'm never gonna have any more of these shots.
30:10
You know what? I was coerced.
30:12
I was brainwashed. And like you
30:14
said, good natured people believed the
30:16
state, believed the authorities, trusted them.
30:20
And now, what we need to
30:22
tell everybody is, never trust the state ever
30:24
again. Never trust these authorities ever again because
30:26
they do not have our interest at heart.
30:28
They're a bunch of liars and they're abusive.
30:31
So anyway, that's that. So now last
30:33
year, December exactly, it's an anniversary
30:36
now. I went on Twitter for
30:38
a change and I did a video. And I
30:40
said, you know what? I'm seeing a lot of
30:42
vaccine injuries, vaccine harms. And I don't mind calling
30:44
them vaccines now. I was someone who didn't call
30:47
them vaccines. Now I don't care about calling
30:49
them mRNA vaccines because to be honest, I think
30:51
the whole vaccine industry needs
30:53
to have a microscope poured on over them
30:55
and the whole thing like
30:58
either shut down or revisited and everything
31:00
stopped. Because what I've looked into it
31:02
so far, the whole shabam is one
31:05
big fraud. So
31:07
I spoke up and did this. Let's
31:09
say one thing real quick on that though. That's a
31:11
really important statement because a lot of people agree and
31:13
a lot of people would be outright angered by that.
31:15
But I think what's important is that what
31:18
I would argue in there is I agree. But
31:20
that doesn't then mean, like I would
31:22
simply point out that I think if we, as is the way
31:24
I always say it, if
31:26
what we understand about vaccination technology is correct, that's
31:29
a big if because I question everything we've been
31:31
taught. But if that's the case, I would argue
31:33
with the intent behind it, that's the problem. And
31:35
that there could be an avenue where these things
31:37
could be done in a way that might help some
31:39
people as long as it's up for you to decide
31:41
for your family and your body. But even then I
31:43
question that, like you're saying, I don't trust where this
31:45
information's come from. So I just wanna add that. Yeah,
31:48
so what I would say is there's a podcast coming
31:50
up with Roman Bristinek who
31:53
did the book, Dissolving Illusions. It's
31:56
gonna be out in a couple of weeks time. Listen to
31:58
that podcast of mine. And listen to the podcast I've already.
32:00
already done with Aaron Siri and JJ Cooy. And
32:02
what I would say is, you know, if you want to know
32:05
about vaccines, there's so many questions I'll ask about vaccines. Okay, all
32:07
the people who was thinking, oh no, vaccines are great. The
32:09
best things that sliced bread and butter, you
32:12
know, what's in a vaccine? Give me five
32:14
ingredients. What's the 1986 Vaccine
32:16
Injury Act all about? And why does
32:18
it exist? You know, why
32:20
is the vaccine schedule increasing year by year? Why
32:23
is it necessary? Why is there,
32:25
what's an adjuvant? And why are adjuvants in
32:27
vaccines? Why is aluminium in the body and
32:29
mercury? Why did they put them in these
32:32
vaccines? Is there normal physiological
32:34
processes that need aluminium or mercury? Is
32:36
there a way of detoxing your body
32:38
naturally all these heavy metals? What
32:40
harm do they do to your body? You
32:43
know, why does a young fetus,
32:45
you know, baby that's just come out
32:47
within hours need a hep B vaccine that's normally
32:49
given to people who are like prostitutes and IV
32:51
drug abusers? You know, I could go on with
32:54
the questions. I've got lots of questions. Just
32:56
what I would say is, look, it's all about choice.
32:58
If you know the answers to all of these and
33:01
you know there's no long-term studies and no
33:03
proper placebo controlled, you know, armed studies, all
33:05
these products, and
33:07
you're willing to take these products, good for you.
33:10
Good luck to you. But I
33:13
think anyone who's properly, fully informed and
33:15
consented will be like, no thanks, pass.
33:17
The choice is everything. That's all I would say. The
33:19
choice is everything. So coming back to my little
33:22
video, I went back to operating. I came back
33:24
after my operating list, one million people had seen
33:26
this video. I was like, holy
33:28
moly, wow. You
33:30
know, I had a small Twitter account, like 900
33:33
followers or something and like a million views. And
33:35
I'm like, what the frack just happened there? Within
33:38
12 hours, 24 hours, two
33:41
of the big private hostels I was
33:43
working at, their national medical directors emailed
33:46
me saying, cease and
33:48
desist, basically. Stop this. Take
33:51
down this video. Never ever post
33:53
on this topic again, or
33:55
we're gonna have to revisit your practicing
33:57
privileges. There's a contract between me and
33:59
the hostel. to allow me to work out at the hospital.
34:01
I have all the obligations of an employee
34:04
but none of the protections, their privileges, I
34:06
meant to work out of there. And it
34:08
says stick to your scope of practice. Now
34:11
I thought that was very much like bullying and I said what
34:13
do you mean scope of practice? My scope of practice is I'm
34:15
a doctor first and patient safety is
34:17
my main concern more than fixing a
34:19
bunion or an ankle fracture. And
34:22
why do you want me to stop? What
34:24
have I said that's wrong? No response. Just
34:26
same response, don't do this again. Well I
34:28
was like well I will take it from your
34:31
lack of engagement in response to my questions, tacit
34:33
approval to carry on. So I carried on tweeting
34:35
and you know what? Nasty
34:37
habit when someone tells me to stop doing something, I
34:40
double down and do it even more. So I
34:42
tweeted like a Tweety Bird and suddenly my account
34:44
got to 10,000, 20,000, 30,000.
34:47
I'm like what the hell? And I was
34:49
like clearly people are resonating with what I'm
34:51
saying. But I would keep getting
34:53
emails from one of the medical directors. Oh we've
34:55
got more anonymous complaints, you're
34:58
an anti-vaxxer, you're a
35:00
conspiracy theorist, you're
35:02
this, you're that and we want a meeting with you
35:04
and I'd be like well what do you want to
35:06
discuss in this meeting? What have I said that's wrong?
35:08
What do you agree with? And again
35:11
guess what Ryan, no
35:13
one ever answered my questions. It
35:15
just kept backwards and forwards, backwards
35:17
and forwards. Anyway eventually and May
35:19
they got me. I tripped up,
35:21
I messed up. I did a
35:23
tweet where I said is Dylan Mulvaney a woman? Alright
35:26
and I did a couple of other ones about you
35:28
know gender identity because this is
35:30
all linked. Everything's linked. I said look
35:32
this young Indian village girl identifies
35:34
as a Viking. Right it's ridiculous
35:37
but the whole point is you can
35:39
identify as anything you like but
35:42
that doesn't change reality. Reality
35:46
truth, truth matters that t-shirt.
35:48
Truth matters. A
35:51
boy is a boy. If you got a dick,
35:54
you're a boy. You
35:56
can call yourself anything you like. Don't go in
35:59
the girls bathroom. Right. It's just not right. This
36:01
was one of the first reasons I
36:03
actually reached out to you was, you know, throughout
36:06
the kind of changing of discussions between
36:08
COVID-19 and even others in between that
36:10
and now with Gaza, it's, I've noticed
36:12
that there's certain people out there who,
36:14
you know, and I, I like
36:16
to believe I'm in this topic or in this
36:19
category that choose to, you know, that you just
36:21
go up to the truth that you don't, you're
36:23
not left or right, or, you know, that you
36:25
just acknowledge what you believe is right or the
36:27
truth doesn't mean we're always correct. And I, you
36:29
know, you were talking about the COVID stuff. You're
36:32
calling out what's going on, you know, and, and
36:34
the problem is that you've seen lines drawn between
36:36
people that were all about, you know, COVID medical
36:38
freedom who now are not disregarding what you just
36:40
said, which these are static objective biological reality and,
36:43
you know, and yet they're, and now God is
36:45
the same thing. And we could talk about that today if you'd
36:47
like her in the future. No, no, let's do that another day.
36:49
I agree. I agree. What shows me is that
36:51
what you, what you're doing and other people
36:54
in that realm are, you know, there's a
36:56
unique category out there where they're not swayed
36:58
by the political parties or the current news
37:00
cycles. And I think that's important. I think
37:03
that's growing. And that's why I wanted to
37:05
talk to you in general. You know, I
37:07
see that in you as well. And so
37:09
it's, it's Absolutely. Because Ryan, it's not your
37:12
truth or my truth. Right. That bullshit. It's
37:14
that truth. Right. Right. The sky's blue. Not
37:16
my truth. The sky's blue. Fricking bullshit.
37:19
So anyway, moving on over the course of
37:21
this last year, I've been bullied and harassed
37:24
by my hospitals, bullied and
37:26
harassed, culminating referral to my licensing
37:28
board. And they turned around and said,
37:30
Oh, he's got really good records. Annoying
37:33
thing is he's a really good surgeon and
37:35
patient. I love him and staff love him.
37:37
And his feedback's been amazing. He's got nothing
37:39
on him. Sorry. Like, and then they even
37:41
wrote, we understand your concerns. He is conspiratorial
37:44
and he does go against the, you know,
37:46
government narrative and, and, and,
37:48
you know, he's anti-vaxxer. But maybe,
37:50
maybe you can explore something in
37:52
your local hospital protocols and policies.
37:55
And immediately then they suspended me on
37:57
this stupid technicality, which I disagree with.
38:00
and they suspended me where I worked
38:02
for 10 years. Then another hospital, because
38:04
I posted a podcast with Ava Bartlett,
38:07
getting her views on what it was like in
38:09
the West Bank, they said we received
38:11
an internal complaint, which I think was from
38:14
a fellow Zionist surgeon, who
38:16
basically complained about me posting something
38:19
on Instagram, the podcast episode. And
38:22
they said, we're disappointed and
38:25
this might cause problems in trusting you,
38:28
so we're gonna suspend you immediately
38:30
and investigate you. And this is
38:32
basically- And so basically- God's a discussion, right?
38:34
Yeah, yeah, this is not God. Wow, that's- But
38:36
look, but the thing is, look, the
38:39
thing is, so overnight, right, I found
38:41
myself in the beginning of December, 95% of
38:43
my income is gone, my patients are gone,
38:45
and there's no point in me trying to
38:47
hold onto my 5% practice. You need to
38:49
earn like 40, 50% to
38:52
meet your overheads. There's a massive
38:54
indemnity, your secretary of cost, your
38:56
room hire cost. Without
38:58
going into the details, when you
39:01
see patients and say you make 100 bucks, you
39:04
don't keep the 100 bucks. 50 bucks
39:06
is to pay everyone else, and then the other 50 bucks, you
39:08
have to pay tax on, and then you maybe take home 25,
39:10
30 bucks. That's how it
39:12
works. So I got to a point where financially, I was
39:14
not viable. I was not
39:17
making money, I was losing money, and I'd
39:19
been canceled from these private hospitals. They don't want me
39:21
working in there, they've kicked me out, and no other
39:23
hospital wants me. And I'm thinking, hold on one second,
39:26
last year, last December, I was this very
39:29
well-renowned, respected surgeon,
39:31
loved by everyone. And
39:34
now a year later, I'm out of work, and
39:36
my 25-year career has ended. And
39:38
what's happened in that one-year period? Well,
39:40
I'll tell you what's happened. I have
39:43
been very vocal on social media, on
39:45
my Twitter account and my podcast, about
39:48
facts about how the COVID narrative was
39:50
bullshit, how we didn't have a pandemic,
39:52
it was a plannedemic, how the
39:54
military industrial complex and
39:56
the medical industrial complex are
39:58
ruining us. destroying our
40:00
civilization, how we have this
40:03
banking cabal that is at the root
40:06
of all evil, how climate
40:08
scam is a scam and a
40:11
way of impoverishing us and empowering
40:13
the elites and removing our freedoms
40:15
and liberties. I've been
40:17
exploiting the big pharma lies and
40:19
corruption. That's what's changed.
40:22
I'm still an excellent surgeon. I have
40:25
no patient complaints. There's no patients who
40:27
are upset with me. Who's
40:29
upset with me? The government's upset with
40:31
me. The media's upset with me. The
40:33
vaccine industry's upset with me. Big pharma's
40:35
upset with me. The regulatory boards are upset
40:37
with me. My colleagues are upset with me. Why?
40:40
Because I'm calling them out. Not
40:43
really though. I mean, maybe in some regard,
40:45
but ultimately what you're doing has nothing to
40:47
do with your practice, as you just said.
40:49
You're expressing your opinion on your
40:51
own personal platforms. That ever became
40:53
a thing, that was
40:56
a very jarring thing in and of itself, where you
40:58
suddenly saw businesses start saying, well, what you said
41:00
on Twitter is going to cause you to lose your
41:02
job. That is social credit. That's exactly what
41:04
that is. It's just in a different name. We've
41:06
got it. But we've got it already with that
41:08
social... Because you've got this DESG, environment,
41:11
social governance, and then underneath
41:14
that, the DEI, diversity, equity,
41:16
inclusion. The thing is, all
41:18
these corporations are now being
41:22
told to follow this. If they don't follow
41:24
this, their ranking and ratings will drop and
41:26
they won't get their loans and they won't
41:28
get this and they won't get that. Who's driving
41:30
that? It's the banks and the who
41:32
and these super
41:34
national bodies, cracking,
41:36
pushing this forward. I'm telling you right now, Ryan,
41:38
I grew up in the 80s in Scotland. I used to
41:41
feed on your American Hollywood movies.
41:43
I loved them. I was in the
41:46
popcorn and the cinema. I
41:48
don't want to be part of the Soviet Union
41:50
and the big bad Russkies. I wanted to be
41:52
part of America watching tips
41:54
and being in California and having a great
41:56
time because that was freedom. I
41:59
think now... in 2023, 2024,
42:01
we are in a worse
42:03
place here in the West than ever in the
42:05
Soviet Union. Because in the Soviet Union, you knew
42:07
who the baddie was. You knew it was state.
42:10
You knew what you could say. You knew what
42:12
you could not say. Here
42:14
now in the West, you
42:17
don't know what you can say. Because
42:19
even in the private sector, in your
42:22
private domain, nothing
42:24
is now private. They scrutinize
42:26
everything and you could get into
42:29
trouble over anything. And
42:31
you're just tiptoeing around, not
42:34
free to say anything, not free to speak
42:36
your mind. And, you know,
42:38
like most of my doctor colleagues,
42:41
they're either buying into the bullshit narrative, I
42:43
think about 80 percent of them do. But
42:45
20 percent of them know it's wrong. 20 percent
42:48
of them know it's wrong, but are
42:50
too scared to say anything. Because guess what? If
42:52
they do, you get an mnemonic
42:54
number on you and you have a job and
42:57
you can't pay for your mortgage. And you've got three
42:59
young kids and a wife to support. And you're like,
43:01
what the hell am I going to do now? It's
43:04
that contradiction right there that's the most confusing is that
43:06
it's not necessarily that we don't know. I mean, it
43:08
is that we don't know, but it's that we're being
43:10
told on one corner of their mouth, you
43:13
have the Constitution, you have freedom of speech, you've
43:15
got free right, everything's there for you. But then
43:17
we bump against that wall with everything we do
43:19
online. So we don't really. And so that's the
43:21
confusing. That's that's the the cognitive
43:23
dissonance in a way. Like people just choose to check
43:25
out. It's the very kind of brave new world style of
43:27
it where people just go, you know what, I'm confused.
43:29
I don't know what makes sense. I can't trust them
43:31
or them. So I'm going to check out, watch TV and
43:34
go to Walmart. You know, like that's that's kind of
43:36
what they drive people to do. You know, and I
43:38
think that's the interesting part is our contradict or I'm speaking
43:40
from a very American perspective here, but there's
43:42
other same topics in other countries as well,
43:44
UK and so on, but that you have
43:46
your rights that they state are yours, but
43:48
then actively undermine them with every single thing
43:50
they do. You're right. That's far more insidious
43:52
and dark than just an overarching negative
43:55
entity that tells you what you can't say on the
43:57
surface. But I would argue that there was an element
43:59
of that. Union too, but your point
44:01
is well taken. I think we fail to
44:03
acknowledge how dark and dangerous it really is
44:05
today because of the stories we tell ourselves.
44:07
It's fascinating and scary. 100%
44:11
until that beast comes face
44:13
to face with you, you're
44:15
just living in denial, you put your head
44:18
down and you live this quite
44:20
censored, self-censored world. And I think
44:22
a lot of people are
44:25
deeply unhappy because they
44:27
know they can't speak the truth. They
44:30
know they're living a lie. One
44:33
of the last days I was in clinic, a
44:36
colleague of mine walked past my open door
44:38
and said, oh, what are you doing here? I
44:40
was like, I'm here now because the other hospital
44:42
kicked me out. And he went, yeah, I heard
44:44
about that. Sorry. And then he talked
44:46
about how he'd been on this holiday and he needed
44:48
to lose weight. And I said, well, just, you know,
44:50
dude, just, you know, eat less,
44:53
fast, you know? And he was
44:55
like, no, it's not the food, it's the drink. And I
44:57
was like, well, cut back the drink. And he went, well,
44:59
what will be the point in living then? I was
45:02
like, whoa, that's like your wife,
45:04
your kids. And he went, like
45:06
this, you want me? I was
45:08
like, what? And he was like, dude, I need
45:10
to drink. You know, it's the only fucking thing
45:12
that gives me pleasure. I went, what about your
45:14
work and your family? And he goes, what'd you
45:16
do for pleasure? I went to spend time
45:18
with my family, my kids, my wife. I love having sex
45:21
with her. And he
45:23
goes, yeah, I went to sex. Are
45:26
you kidding me? He goes, I'd rather
45:28
drink. Now that is
45:30
a man who's deeply unhappy. He's
45:32
got the money, he's working six days
45:34
a week, he's got the big flash
45:36
car and the big flash house and
45:39
he's just been on a ridiculously expensive
45:41
holiday in the Caribbean. He's
45:43
not a happy man. I think there's a
45:45
lot of people like that who are not happy
45:47
because they're not living the truth. And
45:50
I'd rather be poor and
45:53
free and true to
45:55
myself than bullshitting and
45:57
lying anymore. No way, man. Yeah,
46:00
I think this is kind of what we were touching on a moment
46:03
ago. You know is that that's the driving force right there Is that
46:05
you're? Genuinely seeking something and you
46:07
know not you're entirely seeking something different
46:09
than what they're seeking you know And
46:11
it's not that they it's I think it's more so that that guy doesn't
46:13
know what he needs to be seeking He's that it's
46:16
the drink. You know it's like whatever makes me that's
46:18
exactly what we just discussed It's the checkout moment. It's
46:20
him going well. I'm just gonna keep going through the
46:22
motions I know I'm unhappy and I know that makes
46:24
me more unhappy, but at least makes me forget it
46:26
for a moment So we'll just keep going through this
46:28
cycle. You know it's it's the it's the Panopticon
46:30
that we're in stepping into the technocratic version of
46:33
it right now You know it's it's
46:35
it is really I would put to put
46:37
a positive note on it I do think at
46:39
the very least that those people are now being
46:41
driven by people's work like yourself and others to
46:43
start asking these Questions now suddenly they do have
46:46
something that they can go oh, okay Maybe
46:48
I can't consider this you know and it is
46:50
uncomfortable to get there, but there's a positive Process
46:53
that I believe has begun so 100% So
46:56
even what even what's happening to me
46:58
it? I'm like I'll be honest
47:01
you it's kind of scary And I'm very nervous
47:03
about it, but like my you know
47:05
six year old daughter says you can't be
47:07
brave if you're not scared Yeah, so you
47:09
know I am being brave because it is
47:11
scary. You know I didn't think a year
47:14
ago You know I was planning to quit
47:16
my 25 year surgical career and become a
47:18
professional podcaster That was not my that was
47:20
not my five-year plan or one-year plan that
47:22
was not the case right so you know
47:25
A few months. I've got you know and
47:27
then the savings come to an end, and
47:29
I'm screwed kind of like it's nervous
47:31
It's nerve-wracking, but it's also Incredibly
47:34
exciting so one of the things that
47:36
I think is really important is like that guy. We
47:38
were just talking about He doesn't actually know the
47:41
alternative. He doesn't a lot of these people
47:43
don't know what's wrong They don't
47:45
know who to trust they don't know what the
47:47
problem is They don't even know necessarily
47:50
that something is wrong Never mind
47:52
what it is that is wrong, and they have
47:54
no idea then what the answers and solutions are
47:57
Alright, so they're in the they're in the
47:59
wilderness totally in the dark. And what
48:01
you and I are doing, what I'm really
48:03
hoping to do is through
48:05
my podcast and what you're doing is
48:07
that these conversations, you talked
48:09
about we don't create a product.
48:11
I disagree with you. This is a product. We
48:14
are creating content and
48:16
information and educating and informing the masses.
48:19
Remember what I said right at the
48:21
beginning about informing my patient, educating them
48:23
and then empowering them to make the
48:25
right choices? That's what we're doing. We're
48:27
going to be empowering them to make
48:29
the right choices for themselves and their
48:32
loved ones to stay fit and
48:34
to stay healthy, which is
48:36
ultimate expression of freedom and
48:38
liberty. That's what we're
48:40
doing now. And instead of me treating maybe
48:42
a couple of hundred people a year and
48:44
making them happy, if I can
48:46
reach out and make several thousand people
48:49
happy and healthier and freer,
48:52
is that not a better job as a doctor? Am
48:54
I not accomplishing what I went into med school with
48:57
much more and a much bigger scale than what I
49:00
thought I could do like a year ago? I
49:02
think I am. And every day I get
49:04
messages. I get messages from people telling me
49:07
how they're in Australia or
49:09
Alberta or Utah, whatever.
49:11
I'm getting people from all walks of life saying,
49:13
you know what, I felt alone. I felt so
49:15
alone. You know what, I
49:17
feel part of a community now. I'm so
49:20
happy to hear what you've taught me. My
49:22
life has turned around. I've lost weight. I've
49:24
got off my drugs and my meds and
49:26
I'm exercising. Thank you for promoting all this
49:28
information and having all these guests
49:30
on. So we,
49:33
both of us, are providing
49:35
a valuable service to
49:37
the masses. And some are
49:39
quite altruistic because only a very small
49:41
proportion of them ever pay us anything.
49:44
We are just out there helping
49:46
people. But we're creating
49:48
content, which is a product, which is
49:50
something that people can go back to. And
49:52
there's a resource and a knowledge base and
49:54
a record. You know, people will go back
49:56
and say, look, you know what, there were
49:58
people calling out this bullshit. And
50:01
the authorities knew about this and chose to
50:03
ignore it. You know,
50:05
we were doing an important job here.
50:07
So yes, I'm scared about the future
50:09
a little bit, but I'm also
50:11
very excited and hopeful. And,
50:14
you know, I'm taking
50:16
on, I'm taking this on, and
50:18
I'm going to manifest a much better future
50:20
for myself. I'm very hopeful and
50:22
positive. Well, good, man. That's exactly the, I
50:24
mean, it just makes me happy to hear that, you know. And, but
50:26
I would say we briefly talked before
50:28
we started about that discussion that you mentioned
50:30
about products and so on. What I actually
50:32
was, what I felt was the point there
50:34
was ultimately that I do agree that we
50:36
have a product or a service, but more
50:39
so that it's in most cases.
50:41
And what we were discussing before we started
50:43
was where people start from.
50:45
Like, I would argue that people can start with
50:47
a lot of funding that can be or cannot
50:49
be influenced. But what I was saying from our
50:52
perspective is that it's true. It is ultimately altruistic.
50:54
You know, you're doing this to make that service
50:56
or product for somebody that, as you're saying, doesn't
50:58
typically immediately have a return for that.
51:01
It's because you believe in it. And then like I
51:03
said from the beginning, this is the value
51:07
for value, right? If you build it, they will come. If
51:09
you build it, he will come kind of a concept. And
51:11
I really believe that, you know. So I do think this
51:13
is the future of where this goes and whether
51:16
in all forms of media, really. And I
51:18
think that's what makes them so terrified is
51:20
that they're rapidly, if not already lost control
51:22
of that medium. So I'm inspired to hear
51:24
that you're not just falling into, you know,
51:26
so many other people in your position would
51:28
just give up, right? But it
51:31
speaks to your nature, you know, in my opinion,
51:33
that you're determined. Like you said before, they tell you to
51:35
stop. You're going to do it twice as hard. You
51:38
know, simpatico, man. It's exactly how I feel. So
51:40
thank you for being here, brother. I have to
51:42
rush off for the interview, but I really want
51:44
to connect again and talk about a number of
51:46
different things with you. So anything you want to
51:48
leave us with today in regard to upcoming projects,
51:50
things you want to shout out for people, your
51:52
social media links? Yeah. So
51:54
I mean, if you just visit
51:56
my website, doc.malick, M-A-L-I-K. It'll
52:00
have all the links to my podcast. It'll show
52:02
you how you can support and subscribe. Only
52:05
1% of my listeners actually support me. But if
52:07
you can be part of that 1%, that'd be
52:09
amazing and help me. And
52:12
then, yeah, I mean, your podcast is coming out,
52:14
I think in about 10 days time. We had
52:16
a great chat. I can't wait for that to
52:18
come out. And just support
52:21
people like you and me. Don't
52:25
feed the system. Don't feed the industrial
52:27
complex. Buy the news
52:29
from cable news and buy their
52:32
newspapers and listen to their garbage.
52:35
Seek out and support the alternative
52:37
media, the people who are literally
52:40
giving up everything to
52:42
do the right thing and speak up. In
52:45
terms of, I don't know when your podcast is going to come
52:47
out. People talk about
52:49
New Year's resolutions. I've never made a New
52:51
Year resolution and I've never kept one. I
52:54
think, yes, it's interesting. People
52:56
want to have a date and make a
52:59
huge statement and big change. I'll
53:01
tell you what works for me. Incremental
53:04
gain. Just shave 1% or
53:06
2% off everything. Optimize
53:08
your sleep. Go to bed
53:10
half an hour early. You know
53:12
what? Cut back on the cigarettes by two or three
53:14
a day. Cut back on the drink by
53:16
maybe one or two. Slowly,
53:19
slowly. Everything slowly, slowly. Just
53:21
get used to that for a few weeks and it
53:24
becomes a new normal, new habit for you.
53:26
Think about how these bastards have done things
53:28
to us. They've boiled us like frogs slowly.
53:31
Two weeks to flatten the curve and then look where it
53:33
led us to. Do the same in reverse for your health.
53:36
Just slowly, every aspect of your life,
53:38
just start doing things slowly. You know
53:40
what? Instead of taking that elevator lift,
53:42
walk up one flight of stairs. Simple
53:45
things. Little incremental gains. Don't
53:48
tell anybody about your resolution. Don't tell
53:50
anybody you're doing anything. Don't
53:53
worry if you slip up one day and,
53:55
oh, catastrophize, oh, there's no point. You know
53:57
what? You'll have bad days and you'll have
53:59
good days. do little incremental gains
54:01
in every aspect of your life. And
54:04
you know what, slowly over the course of the year, you
54:07
look amazing like me. No, I'm just joking.
54:09
I mean, it would be great. That's why
54:11
I would say tell everybody. I agree,
54:13
brethren. And thank you for joining me today and having
54:15
this discussion. I think it's important, and I think it'll
54:17
inspire a lot of people. And as well to end,
54:19
I think what we've said off and on this show,
54:21
exactly what you were discussing there is, you
54:24
can't solve every problem every day. You can't achieve everything in
54:26
one moment, but as long as you, you know, you just
54:28
have to be a little bit better than yesterday. And that's
54:30
all that you need to strive for. It's like, look at
54:32
what you did and you accomplished what you didn't and just
54:35
strive to be a little bit better every day. But
54:37
you know, just be better in general. So
54:39
thank you for joining me, brother. As always,
54:41
everybody out there, question everything. Come to your
54:43
own conclusions. Stay vigilant. You
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