Episode Transcript
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0:01
My name is David J. Harris
0:03
Jr. Join me and millions
0:06
of Americans around the country as we
0:08
embrace liberty and freedom. This
0:11
is the David J. Harris Jr.
0:13
show.
0:18
Hello friends and family from around
0:20
the country and literally around the world. This
0:22
is another episode with your host,
0:24
David J. Harris Jr. and today
0:26
friends, I have probably one of the most
0:29
controversial guests that I've
0:31
ever had on my show I'm having them
0:33
on today. Dr. Zev
0:35
Zelenko is an individual that
0:38
his story needs to get out there. He's tried
0:40
to tell his story of what took place
0:42
when COVID hit his his
0:45
community. His family immigrated
0:47
to the United States when he was four years old.
0:50
He's 46 he's been practicing medicine
0:52
for 20 years, friends,
0:54
his family. He's
0:56
a family physician for 35,000 people
0:59
and when COVID hit in Brooklyn,
1:01
we all know it would seem like it hit New York the
1:03
worst. When it hit he literally had
1:05
nobody sharing any information or giving
1:07
him any details on how to try to adjust
1:10
and help save his patients. So
1:12
he came up with one he prayed he found
1:14
an answer and he began to implement something
1:17
that absolutely worked. What we're going
1:19
to cover today is not only the absolutely
1:21
just in my opinion nefarious way
1:24
that he's been shunned from trying to get this
1:26
information out. We're literally talking about
1:28
information that can save people's lives
1:30
and has saved lives and
1:33
yet the mainstream media big tech they've silenced
1:35
him. He's been banned on most every major social
1:37
media platform. They're
1:40
trying to silence him they don't want him to get this
1:42
information out, and he also has
1:44
information and insights on why he believes
1:47
they are pushing the vaccination so
1:49
hard.
1:50
Friends, a quick word if you
1:52
like my show if you want to support
1:54
me, check out my shop David Harris
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Jr. store. It's Olympics week.
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I'm always rooting for the United States. I hate that
2:00
we've got individuals that don't love the United
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States that are representing us But we still
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have to champion in our American beliefs So
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American strong brand new shirt always
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comes out with the flag got my logo on the back
2:11
Check out what I've got over there at
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David Harris Junior dot store. All
2:16
right now to bring up my guest. Dr.
2:18
Zev
2:18
Zelenko, dr. Zev my brother.
2:21
Thank you so much for being with me today. How
2:23
are you doing? Thank God. I'm done.
2:25
Great. Thank you so much for having me two corrections.
2:28
I'm 47 And
2:30
it was an upstate New York not
2:32
Brooklyn in Monroe,
2:34
New York But
2:36
everything else practices that Yes,
2:38
I apologize you migrated. I think your family
2:41
migrated to Brooklyn, but now you're right upstate,
2:43
New York correct so
2:46
family physician 35,000 people
2:49
will live within a mile one square mile
2:52
and that is your uh, those are
2:54
your people That's your community.
2:56
It got hit and ravaged with kovat Before
2:59
we get into the vaccine and all this other controversial
3:01
stuff, you know Big tech is
3:03
is trying to silence all of us from
3:05
even talking about this kind of information Which
3:08
is why I think it's that much more important
3:10
that we do talk about the information that
3:12
you have first-hand knowledge
3:15
of especially when it came
3:17
when it comes to saving lives and when it
3:19
comes to Trying to avoid
3:21
what seems to be pushed on us. So let's just
3:23
go back for a minute go back and just share with
3:25
us What happened when covet hit?
3:28
Uh your community in New York
3:31
So it was the first week of march And
3:34
it's 35,000 people but it's a very rural area but
3:38
this community has a very high population
3:40
density and it's
3:43
the covet infection spread
3:46
through the entire community within a few days
3:49
And my office which usually saw 50
3:52
patients started seeing 250 patients and
3:56
A day. Yeah, and it was
3:58
a mass casualty event
3:59
And people were very sick,
4:02
they couldn't breathe. At that time, there
4:04
was no treatment. We were being told to send people
4:06
home. And when they get into breathing
4:08
difficulty, respiratory distress, send
4:11
to the hospital, they would get intubated
4:13
on the ventilator. And at that time, 80% were dying. So
4:17
it wasn't a very satisfying treatment
4:19
approach. So I, and these
4:21
are patients that I've taken care of for 20 years, you know?
4:24
So they're like family to me.
4:26
Someone told me I'm a family member for 4,000 families.
4:28
So I had skin
4:31
in the game, you know, I really felt, it's
4:34
a terrible feeling to see
4:36
dozens of people that you care about
4:39
and they're dying and you have nothing to do for them.
4:42
And everyone's looking at you,
4:43
please help me, you know? So
4:47
I learned three years ago, I was diagnosed with a very
4:49
rare form of cancer and
4:52
open heart surgery and I lost my lung.
4:54
And there was no treatment for it. And
4:57
I learned very quickly
4:59
that if there's no treatment, you better find one.
5:02
So I ended up innovating my own treatment,
5:04
which thank God I'm still talking
5:06
to you, right? And- So
5:09
you innovated your own treatment for yourself
5:12
over a rare diagnosis, a
5:14
rare form of cancer that they didn't have a treatment
5:16
for. So you created a treatment
5:18
for yourself. That was three years ago, you're still here. So
5:20
it must've worked.
5:23
Well, the cancer I had is 100% lethal,
5:25
so.
5:28
It's 100% default? Lethal,
5:30
lethal, it kills 100%. It was 100% lethal.
5:33
So you really had a death sentence and they
5:35
didn't have a treatment for you.
5:37
And you created, came up with
5:39
a treatment for yourself.
5:41
But we're still talking to each other, right? And we're still
5:44
here. So, thank God. I
5:47
think you know, yeah, I think
5:49
you're gifted and blessed in the area of
5:52
bringing healing to the body through medicine
5:54
and whatever is necessary. And you,
5:56
yeah. So you're living proof of that.
5:59
But that experience- taught me two things. One
6:02
is if you don't have an answer, fine. And
6:06
that was exactly what was needed, right?
6:08
We had a global crisis. No one was
6:11
being told what to do, except
6:14
economic shutdown, world shutdown, travel
6:17
shutdown, fear mongering. Everyone
6:19
was losing their minds.
6:21
So I
6:25
started like two o'clock in the morning, when
6:27
I get all my ideas. So I'm like, I couldn't
6:29
sleep. And I'm like, talking to
6:31
God, basically, I was like, what do I do here? And
6:35
an idea came into my head. I started
6:38
researching it.
6:39
And basically, I surveyed
6:42
what other countries have done,
6:43
South Korea and
6:45
France, I saw that they were using
6:47
hydroxychloroquine. I wasn't sure
6:49
even how it works. So I did research on that.
6:52
And I saw that it's a zinc ionophark.
6:54
I said, wow, this really makes sense to me. Now
6:56
these drugs, I knew, I've been
6:58
using my whole entire career. Azithromycin
7:01
is the most common antibiotic and hydroxychloroquine
7:03
I used hundreds of times for my rheumatological
7:06
patients. And zinc is just the mineral.
7:09
So what I did was I combined the South
7:11
Korean approach with the French approach,
7:14
I tweaked the dosing
7:16
to reflect less acutely ill patients.
7:18
And then I said, well, let's try it
7:20
and see what happens. You see, this
7:23
was World War Three. This is
7:25
battlefield medicine. We don't have there's
7:27
no no one
7:29
is telling me what to do. Bullets
7:31
are flying at me. And I have to
7:33
innovate to stay alive. My patients
7:36
stay alive. Yeah. So it was that
7:38
trial and error.
7:40
You know, there's a saying like if you're drowning in
7:42
the ocean, you see a piece of driftwood. Well,
7:45
I don't have a clinical trial to tell me that that driftwood
7:47
may save my life. But
7:48
I'm going to hold on to it. Right. And if
7:50
it does, if it does save my life, I'm going to
7:53
tell other people about it too. Great
7:55
analogy.
7:56
So that's exactly what happened. And the second
7:58
I started getting my patients and stuff, they
8:01
just stopped
8:02
going to the hospital, they started getting better within six
8:04
to 12 hours. And I thought,
8:06
okay, maybe
8:09
five times it's a fluke. Okay. But
8:12
when I saw that we're getting out to three,
8:14
four dozen patients,
8:16
I
8:17
couldn't believe it myself.
8:20
And I was like, it was working that good. Yeah.
8:23
So and I realized
8:26
two other things that the sooner you treat someone, the better.
8:28
It's pretty pathetic when
8:30
common sense is considered genius. Because
8:34
since one is treating early, consider
8:36
the novel idea, isn't
8:38
it easier to put out a small fire
8:41
than a big fire? If someone has cancer,
8:43
don't you want to treat it while it's in one place and
8:45
doesn't spread? So it just
8:49
made sense to me that the sooner you
8:51
intervene,
8:52
the better it is. And then there
8:55
was another issue. I didn't have resources.
8:58
Half my staff were sick. The outpatient
9:00
radiology and blood draw
9:02
services were closed. The hospitals
9:05
were near
9:06
acid. So and
9:08
I had my hallway filled with patients
9:10
like a bomb went off. So
9:12
I called up my colleagues at the intensive
9:15
care units and I said, who
9:17
is dying?
9:19
They said to me the older patients and the ones that have
9:21
medical problems. I said, what about
9:23
the younger people? No, we're not seeing
9:26
them. You see, that's all I needed
9:28
to know that
9:29
this virus doesn't kill people.
9:32
And so it was basically what I started to do is
9:34
triage, I would take
9:37
the younger, healthier people and send them home
9:40
and devote my limited resources to the people
9:42
that were in the high risk category. And
9:44
then I tried to make started treating them early
9:47
with
9:47
a
9:49
three drug approach.
9:52
And
9:52
I'll make it very simple. Out of 6000 patients who
9:55
were treated, we had three died when
9:57
the expectation was over 200. So
9:59
What was
10:01
it prior to that? Did you have any deaths prior
10:03
to you implementing that new formula,
10:05
that new plan? Well,
10:08
we had more patients die also, but those
10:10
are the patients that came
10:12
after three weeks of being sick, you
10:14
know?
10:14
I'm, when I say treated,
10:17
I mean, they came within the early stages
10:19
of the disease and
10:22
then we intervened. But
10:24
see, those numbers are miraculous. As
10:28
bad as it was during all of 2020,
10:31
when nobody knew what the heck was going on or how to
10:33
treat it, nobody was answering anything. It was
10:35
ventilators. You're hearing Cuomo ask
10:37
for more ventilators. You're hearing all these governors talk about,
10:39
you know, PPE. Nobody
10:41
was talking about anything that worked. And I remember when hydroxychloroquine
10:45
and zinc and eryximinothrin,
10:51
first, I'm gonna talk about that one. What's
10:54
it called? What? E-Zithromycin.
10:57
E-Zith, yes, E-Zithromycin. That
10:59
combination, I remember hearing about that combination,
11:02
but the mainstream media immediately wanted to shun
11:04
it. They made fun of, they even
11:06
downplayed. I remember they even won.
11:08
They was CNN played that some couple
11:11
went and put, you know,
11:14
toilet or not toilet, but fishbowl
11:16
cleaner.
11:18
And they tried it
11:19
because it was, because they heard the president talking
11:21
about it. They went full battle to
11:24
try to downplay anything that worked.
11:27
And you did something very interesting. You
11:29
actually made a video about your
11:31
discovery and you maybe are getting there, but I wanna
11:33
make sure you get to this video that you share
11:36
your results that actually did wind up leading
11:38
to getting connected to the president
11:40
or his administration, President Trump at that time.
11:42
But go ahead.
11:46
I realized that I discovered the
11:49
most important piece of information
11:51
in the history of information.
11:53
Wow.
11:55
If you think about it,
11:56
there was no solution to a global crisis.
11:59
Right. And here
12:01
this was working. You know,
12:04
my results I published internationally
12:06
renowned peer review journal, showed
12:09
an 84% reduction in hospitalization and death. Those
12:12
results were then
12:13
corroborated by dozens
12:15
of studies from around the world that
12:18
if you treat high risk patients early,
12:20
you have an 85% reduction
12:22
in mortality. What that means is out
12:24
of 600,000 dead Americans, we could have
12:27
prevented 510,000 from even going to the hospital. You
12:31
have to understand the scale, the
12:34
scale of what we're discussing here. This
12:36
is the end of the pandemic, if it was taken
12:38
seriously. Now, when
12:41
I realized what I had found
12:44
that God had given me, not
12:46
that I found, I don't want to take credit for it. I just have
12:49
a big mouth. So I decided to publicize
12:51
this. So I made
12:53
a video with the help of my son, because I didn't even know how
12:55
to make a YouTube video and put
12:58
it up. And the next day, Mark Meadows calls
13:00
me and my cell phone. Mark Meadows being the
13:02
president's chief of staff. Yep. He
13:05
said, Dr. Zelenko, I heard you're looking for the president.
13:08
I said, yes, I have some very important news. This is
13:10
what I'm seeing.
13:11
But again, it was very early in the process,
13:14
less than 100 patients. They were very
13:16
interested and they said, please keep me updated.
13:19
I had their contact information. I had Mark Meadows
13:21
cell phone and email. And I did
13:23
every like 25 to 50 patients. I
13:26
would give them an update. Then
13:29
two weeks,
13:30
a week later, Stephen Hahn,
13:33
the commissioner of the FDA, calls me and my cell phone
13:35
and he wants to know what I'm doing.
13:37
I tell him he's kind of interested.
13:40
And then he refers me to the top people at the NIH.
13:43
And that's when I hit a brick wall because the NIH
13:45
had no interest and I have
13:48
no way, even no precedent to process
13:50
real world evidence. You see, I wasn't doing research.
13:53
I'm not a researcher. I was treating my patients,
13:56
but in the process of treating my patients, I
13:58
generated some information. that
14:00
was very valuable. My way of analogy,
14:02
a frontline soldier finds a map of the enemy.
14:05
He realizes this map tells him everything
14:07
you need to know. He also realizes this map has
14:09
to get to the five-star general immediately to
14:11
win the war.
14:12
That's how I felt. I had important
14:15
information and that information
14:17
went nowhere. So then a week
14:19
later, Rudy Giuliani called me on my cell phone.
14:22
Love Rudy. Yeah,
14:23
me too. I
14:26
just spoke to him Friday and he
14:30
invited me to do a podcast, which I did and
14:32
that went viral.
14:34
And since then my life has never
14:36
been the same. And
14:39
for example, when the president announced that he took
14:41
a drastic chloroquine,
14:43
he said that he got a letter from a doctor
14:45
from upstate New York. So I
14:48
had sent him a letter and I had basically
14:50
influenced the president of the
14:52
United States
14:54
to take a harsh
14:56
chloroquine for himself to show people
14:58
that it's safe. And
15:01
so what happened
15:03
was then all the
15:06
vilification started, all the prosecution. I
15:10
got death threats. I got vilified.
15:12
My reputation was attacked. A quack
15:14
for what?
15:18
For helping people. I mean, it's like,
15:20
you're helping people, you're saving lives. You're trying
15:23
to share the information
15:25
that you've collected that is helping
15:27
people survive what
15:29
was otherwise known as no
15:32
answer to a global pandemic.
15:34
And who were these individuals? Who were some
15:36
of the people other than just the nobodies?
15:39
Did you know it wasn't certain networks?
15:42
We could say it all here. New
15:44
York Times at the front page had traveled on
15:46
me. Right wing star
15:49
doctor treating,
15:52
touting
15:54
White House associated right wing doctor
15:57
touting unproven
15:58
treatments.
15:59
stuff like that. Then
16:02
Vanity Fair did a hit job on me. Washington
16:05
Post. I got
16:07
a real schooling, I have to tell you.
16:11
Now I'm pretty good at it, but before I didn't know
16:13
how this world, I don't like your world, by
16:15
the way. But the media
16:18
is tough. Especially if they're coming after
16:20
you, because they'll say everything they want, they'll
16:22
interview you, they won't include anything that makes
16:25
sense, and they'll twist your words to use
16:27
it against you just to create the narrative
16:30
that you are, don't know what you're talking about, you're insane,
16:32
you're quack, just to discount something
16:34
that again
16:35
was saving people's lives. It's insane
16:37
to me. Well, they were,
16:40
they are, they were, they are spewing a narrative
16:42
of death, which we'll get into, because
16:45
this is a narrative war.
16:47
So what happened was that the hydroxychloroquine
16:50
got vilified, it became politically
16:52
radioactive.
16:54
No one wanted to touch it.
16:56
And then there was a shift in policy away
16:59
from pre-hospital care to vaccine
17:01
development. You see, there's four components
17:03
to treating a pandemic.
17:05
There is spread prevention.
17:07
There's pre-hospital care. There's
17:09
hospital care. And then there's
17:11
the vaccine approach. And all of them
17:14
are important. You can't favor one over
17:16
the other. So what was done
17:18
was a, the pre-hospital care
17:21
component was marginalized.
17:24
And emphasis was on hospitalized care
17:26
and the vaccine development, which we
17:28
can talk about that in a minute. But
17:32
so what happened was that there
17:35
was a
17:36
very deliberate,
17:38
corrupt mechanism
17:41
that led to genocide. And I'd like to tell
17:44
you, I have information that very few people know
17:47
that when president Trump made an order,
17:50
made an executive order, that hydroxychloroquine
17:53
should be made available to every American.
17:55
That task
17:57
was given over to the secretary Azar
17:59
from Health. and Human Services. Azar
18:02
gave it to Larry Kudlow who was
18:04
the head lead counsel for the HHS and
18:07
he gave it over to
18:08
Dr. Rick Bright. He was the
18:11
head of BARDA which is a division of the HHS which
18:14
was there to
18:16
involved in vaccine development. And
18:18
Rick Bright was supposed to use the right
18:20
to try legislation or
18:22
a compassionate access program
18:25
to
18:26
open up the national stockpile
18:29
of medication to every single
18:31
America. That was the president's wish.
18:33
What happened was completely different. By the way, how do I
18:35
know this?
18:36
So there was a documentary called Totally
18:39
Under Control. I was in this documentary
18:41
and the segment before mine is Dr. Rick Bright
18:44
who gleefully admits, these are
18:46
his words, step by step he walks
18:48
you through the pathway to genocide.
18:52
And yeah, you
18:55
have to look it up. By the way, people
18:57
do not believe a word that I'm saying. Don't
18:59
make the same mistake like you do with the government. Listen
19:02
to what I'm saying. That's what
19:04
I'm saying.
19:05
Go test, make sure that I'm
19:07
not not and I'm not lying to you
19:09
and then reach your own conclusions.
19:12
Anyway, so I'm a big proponent
19:15
of that. Do your own research. If
19:19
every single person before jumping on
19:21
some emotional bandwagon over any topic
19:23
would just go do their own research. We'd
19:26
be a different country overnight. Most people
19:28
just don't. They want to be spoon fed the information
19:31
so they can feel good about their position and then go about
19:33
their lives. And that's going to lead to the ultimate
19:35
demise of our country because they're taking
19:37
it away. And we're going to get into
19:39
the genocide in a minute.
19:41
If what this vaccine looks
19:43
like could be what it looks like to me,
19:46
I'm going to ask you what it looks like to you. Then
19:49
we're going down the fiery tunnel right now.
19:53
So Rick Bright, instead
19:56
of using the pathway
19:58
that was designed for this
19:59
purpose to make the
20:01
national stockpile of medication available
20:04
to every single American because
20:06
our nation stockpiled hydroxychloroquine.
20:09
What he did was he
20:11
collaborated with Dr. Janet
20:13
Woodcock, who is now the acting
20:15
head of the FDA. And
20:18
this information I have from Dr. Stephen
20:20
Hatfield, he was an assistant to
20:22
Peter Navarro, the president's economic
20:25
advisor, and he wrote an article and gave interviews
20:27
about it. So
20:29
Janet Woodcock, who belonged
20:31
to the FDA
20:34
in a very unusual way, called
20:37
and collaborated together with
20:40
Rick Bright to craft
20:42
an emergency use authorization, we have to pay
20:44
attention, an emergency use authorization
20:47
that restricted hydroxychloroquine
20:49
use to only hospitalized patients.
20:52
What in the hell would they do that for? I'm
20:56
sorry, but that just doesn't make any sense. If
20:58
hydroxychloroquine is being proven to work, why
21:01
would they wait until somebody's in the hospital
21:04
and not allow any other person to use
21:06
it? Well,
21:09
I'll tell you why. There is what they
21:11
say. And then there's the real reason why they did it. But
21:14
for now, I just want to tell you a story of
21:16
horror, a horror story. So
21:18
then the Rick Bright, he gleefully says, yes,
21:20
we crafted it. And my team at
21:22
Bardot felt so proud
21:24
that we had saved the American public from
21:27
such a dangerous medication.
21:29
Hydroxychloroquine?
21:31
Yeah. So
21:34
now, now
21:37
listen to this next chapter,
21:39
the academic fraudsters begin the
21:42
academic. See, there was there
21:44
was a I have to describe to you the pieces and
21:46
then put the puzzle together. It's absolutely
21:49
the crime of history.
21:52
This is the worst crime in history. Just
21:54
to tell you, this is a biblical
21:56
scale, the amount
21:58
of damage that this has done. And
22:01
so to fully understand the depth
22:03
of what's going on, I need to,
22:06
because I was there every step of the way.
22:08
By the way, it's not like I chose COVID, it chose me.
22:10
God has a sense of humor. I never
22:13
asked for this. But
22:16
anyway, so,
22:18
by the way, another interesting thing,
22:20
when I thought I was dying from cancer,
22:22
and you really believe that you're going to meet
22:24
God, something interesting happens.
22:27
You stop fearing human beings.
22:32
And
22:33
when God said, because basically I
22:35
don't want to see you yet,
22:37
but that lack
22:39
of fear
22:40
stayed with me. And that became
22:42
very useful
22:44
when you're dealing with the most lethal
22:47
and I would say even evil
22:49
forces of the planet. And
22:52
I resolved that I'm going
22:54
to see this through to the end, whatever that may mean,
22:57
because I really believe that we're fighting for
22:59
the consciousness, God
23:02
consciousness, the soul of man
23:05
and freedom from tyranny.
23:08
So, I can just concur,
23:10
I continually say that this fight to me
23:13
is becoming far less about
23:15
right or left
23:16
political party, and it seems
23:19
that it is honestly becoming a fight. I
23:21
think it has been all along, but now it's more even
23:24
observed on the surface it's a fight between good
23:26
and evil.
23:26
It's nefarious what's trying to take
23:29
place, what is taking place in our country right now. And
23:32
if the United States goes the way of
23:34
these elites, that's in
23:36
game.
23:38
So, what you what you into it.
23:41
I'm going to give you the details and information
23:43
that needs to be brought
23:45
to the surface. And then people need
23:48
to act on it because
23:49
there's criminal actions here.
23:52
And there's
23:55
crimes against humanity here
23:56
on the scale that should be taken up
23:59
by the United States.
23:59
the Hague or Nuremberg.
24:02
So anyway, so what happened was like this, then
24:04
the academic fraud began. There
24:07
was a coordinated effort to
24:10
marginalize and fearmonger
24:13
the use of agropsichloro.
24:14
And part of that was
24:17
the
24:17
use of academia,
24:19
which put out fraudulent information
24:22
that became the basis
24:24
for disastrous policy. So for
24:27
example, Lancet, which
24:29
was considered the most prestigious
24:31
medical peer reviewed medical journal,
24:34
published a paper
24:36
that a meta
24:39
analysis of 96,000 patients
24:41
and concluded that hydroxychloroquine kills
24:43
people. It was a database from a
24:45
company called Sergisphere. So WHO
24:48
heard this and they put
24:50
a global moratorium on the use of hydroxychloroquine
24:53
and research on it. Then there
24:56
was one problem with that paper.
24:59
It was fraud. That data
25:01
set didn't exist.
25:02
Well, and I remember that I remember that Lancet story
25:05
being used in publications to downplay
25:07
hydroxychloroquine. It was part of the reason why
25:09
all
25:10
mainstream media downplayed hydroxychloroquine.
25:14
That paper has less value
25:16
than used toilet paper. And
25:20
what happened was it became the basis
25:23
for some very interesting policy
25:25
decisions. So the WHO
25:27
puts a global moratorium on the use of hydroxychloroquine.
25:31
Then in the first week of
25:34
June,
25:35
please listen to this. It's extremely important. The
25:38
FDA revokes the
25:41
emergency use authorization for
25:44
hydroxychloroquine, even
25:47
for the hospital patients. Based
25:49
on that study, based on that paper from Lancet.
25:52
If you look at the document, this is all documented.
25:55
If you look at the document that forms the basis
25:58
why they're actually doing this. rationale
26:00
for
26:01
why they are revoking its use.
26:05
They
26:05
quote the Lancet paper that was retracted
26:08
for fraud after it was
26:10
retracted. OK, wait, wait,
26:13
the paper was retracted for fraud.
26:15
So it was proven to be totally baseless,
26:18
fraudulent.
26:19
And after the retraction, the FDA
26:22
still used the paper as the
26:24
reason to revoke
26:25
the emergency use authorization
26:28
for hydroxychloroquine.
26:30
You said that 100 percent correctly.
26:34
Wow. And this is all documented. If somebody wanted
26:36
to go research this, where would they find the paper
26:39
for the FDA's revoking the
26:41
Emergency Use Authorization Act for hydroxychloroquine?
26:44
It's called FDA.gov.
26:47
Just go to FDA.gov, research, HQ,
26:50
revoked Emergency
26:52
Use Authorization Act.
26:54
So you've reviewed all this. I just want my audience
26:56
to know this is all verified. I'll make it
26:58
even easier for the audience. I will send you all
27:00
the links for everything that I say
27:03
during
27:03
this interview. All right. Perfect. Perfect.
27:07
But
27:07
you realize I'm risking
27:10
my life, my reputation, my career,
27:12
everything. You think I would
27:14
get to this point and do this if I
27:16
didn't do my due diligence or believe in
27:19
what I'm doing?
27:20
I don't know. No, no, you have no
27:22
there's no. Well, what point would there be? I mean,
27:24
there's no point. You're a family physician,
27:26
right, for 30, 20, 30 years. You
27:29
see a lot of people. You're happily content
27:31
with what you've got going on. COVID
27:33
hits you in your office. You find something that
27:35
works. You start digging into why they're not
27:37
allowing hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin
27:40
and zinc to be used. And
27:43
and you find all this stuff. So, no, you have no reason,
27:46
I think, to just come out and and say stuff
27:49
that doesn't make any sense or is baseless, which is why
27:51
I vetted you as well. Why have you on
27:53
the show today? We've had conversations about this
27:55
before.
27:56
But again, I always like you said,
27:58
always tell the audience.
27:59
go do your own research. It's like when somebody hears
28:02
it
28:02
and then they go actually see it,
28:04
I think it makes it even that much more concrete
28:07
if they didn't get it to begin with. Hopefully my
28:09
audience gets it, but still go do the
28:11
research so that you can show your family and your
28:13
friends. And hopefully everybody shares this
28:16
podcast to show it with everybody that they
28:18
know. Cause I truly believe this is probably
28:20
the most important. It's gotta be the
28:22
most important interview I've ever done. This
28:25
global pandemic is still threatening now. There
28:28
are new variants, which you're gonna get into. New
28:30
variants, new lockdown measures, masks
28:33
all over again, masks for our kids. Total
28:35
control of the people is what I believe that they want
28:37
and they're using this fake planned
28:40
pandemic, this
28:42
and the shunning of things that actually work
28:44
to take away our freedoms, to destroy
28:47
our country. It's what I firmly believe.
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