Interview 1418 – New World Next Week with James Evan Pilato

02/14/201952 Comments

Welcome back to New World Next Week – the video series from Corbett Report and Media Monarchy that covers some of the most important developments in open source intelligence news. This week:

Watch this video on BitChute / BitTube / YouTube / DTube or Download the mp4

Story #1: New Jersey Wants To Tax The Rain
https://twitter.com/Baka_62/status/1095051093296406528

Story #2: Scientist Cures HPV With Non-Invasive Method
https://twitter.com/sapientdiaspora/status/1094674702797324288

StartPage: Photodynamic Therapy
https://www.startpage.com/do/search?query=photodynamic+therapy

Students Paid to Catch Diseases for the Republic of Scientism
https://twitter.com/sapientdiaspora/status/1094673667072684035

They Actually ADMITTED There’s No Money in Curing People
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wY-owubmfNg

Story #3: Disney News Knows Dozens of ‘National Emergencies’ In Effect for Decades
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/list-31-national-emergencies-effect-years/story?id=60294693

Interview 067 – Dan Hamburg on Continuity of Government (Feb. 28, 2009)
https://www.corbettreport.com/interview-067-dan-hamburg/

You can help support our independent and non-commercial work by visiting http://CorbettReport.com/Support & http://MediaMonarchy.com/Support. Thank You.

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  1. HomeRemedySupply says:

    Yesterday (Wednesday), after watching the TruthStreamMedia video, I read up on the photodynamic therapy. Interesting stuff which has various applications in the scientific literature. Using a chemical, which when ‘activated’ by a certain light wavelength, it releases oxygen. It is a great alternative towards targeting certain specific areas in the body.

    Again, I want to mention Ultraviolet Light Blood Therapy (aka Biophotonics or UBI). (Take out a small amount of blood, pass it through an ultraviolet light, then put the blood back into the person.)

    This simple mechanism for addressing infections and other body problems was first discovered in 1928. By the 1950’s, it was often used. But Big Pharma and the Medical Mafia came along.

    PNEUMONIA
    Last year, I had viral pneumonia. For $300, it was ‘cured’ in one day using the Ultraviolet Light Blood Therapy in combination with ozone blood therapy. (The two are simple to do at the same time.)

    FOOT AMPUTATION
    A friend of mine went to specialists for 7 years trying to address a bacterial infection in her leg. Just weeks prior for surgery to have her foot amputated, she did the same protocol which I did above. When she went in to have her foot cut off, they decided to do another test. They could not find any infection whatsoever. The protocol saved her foot.

    When you scroll to the bottom portion of this webpage, you will see a lot of information about Ultraviolet Light Blood Therapy and Ozone Therapy.
    https://www.dogsagainstfluoridation.com/news-activism

    • HomeRemedySupply says:

      Some of the diseases and body conditions treated with Ultraviolet Light Blood Therapy and Ozone Therapy
      Fibromyalgia, Lupus, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Psoriasis, Psoriatic Arthritis, Raynauds Disease, Sclera Derma, Multiple Sclerosis, Pneumonia, Wound Infections, Septicemia (staphylococcus,streptococcus, pneumococcus), Lymphatic Infections (lymphangitis), Peritonitis, Severe Acne, Recurrent Skin Infections (furunculosis, carbunulosis), E-coli, Necrotizing Infections, Lyme Disease, Lymphoma, Varicose Veins, Peripheral Vascular Disease, Gangrene, Vascular Headaches, Deep Vein Thrombosis, Claudication, Diabetic Ulcers, Thrombophlebitis, Arthritis, Fibrositis, Bursitis, Nephritis, Iritis, Uveitis, Cholecystitis, COPD, Asthma, Emphysema, Sinusitis, Bronchitis, Tuberculosis, Hepatitis, HIV, Influenza, Herpes Simplex/Zoster, Mononucleosis, Mumps, Measles Infections, Viral Pneumonia, Polio, Non-Healing Wounds & Fractures, Inactivation of Snake Venom, Fungal/Yeast Infection, Decreases Edema (Swelling), Cirrhosis, Tetanus, Chronic Fatigue, Allergies, Neuritis/Neuropathy, Chemical Sensitivity, Botulism, Malaria, Typhoid, Seizures, Blood Poisoning, Diphtheria
      ~~~

      My comment:
      Note Mumps & Measles above…
      The vaccine industry and medical establishment can not have a cure for something.

      • HomeRemedySupply says:

        Measles, Back In The Days Before The Marketing Of The Vaccine
        (8 minutes)
        Flintstones, The Brady Bunch, Donna Reed
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mDb0ZS3vB9g

        (The comments below the video are interesting.)

        • manbearpig says:

          Well that was a blast! Friday nights when I was 8; The Brady Bunch and then the Partridge Family!! I’m gonna show this to a student who has a little baby and who asked me my conspiracy theorist’s expert advice yesterday about vaccinations! 😎

          (unfortunately no dare care center or public or private school will take his daughter if she doesn’t have doctor’s stamps on her “health care book” along with the stickers off the vaccination boxes stuck next to them…8-/and I Don’t think he’s into homeschooling… )

        • mkey says:

          I remember having the measles. It was sometime in 86 a year more or less. They were a pain in the but, both itchy and scratchy. I didn’t die. The end.

          Who knows how many illnesses got deflected by my organism due to the successful measles purge.

  2. cherub says:

    I figured out how to stop mass school shootings without violating any ones rights… (give the kids paint ball markers full of salt balls)

    See my newest video

    https://www.bitchute.com/channel/SDkZLmozRoHS/

  3. mkey says:

    Have you people noticed the new UN campaign, it’s going strong on local TeeVee. I can’t find its footprint online, but it goes somewhere on the lines of “leave your heritage to the poor children of the world”. Of course, leave it in the hands of the UN to spread the wealth. Goes hand in hand with aging western population, the final act of wealth redistribution.

    • calibrator says:

      Ha ha – cynism knows no bounds!

      Me having no family I’ll make sure that anything that is left over will go to the animal shelter of my choice.

  4. scpat says:

    Speaking of big pharma not wanting to cure diseases in order to keep siphoning money out of sick people, it makes me think specifically of cancer. Talk of curing cancer is always in our face, at least in the United States. The media, politicians, ceremonies at sporting events, and pop culture in general wants everyone to unite behind beating/curing cancer. They ask for donations toward cancer research in order to keep fighting it.

    Cancer is a very real problem, and it should be fought in a number of different ways, but I have this weird feeling about everyone uniting behind one thing, whatever it is. It reminds me a bit of the “fight against climate change.” I have never researched the possibility of the “fight against cancer” as being some type of scam, but I just get this weird feeling about the whole topic.

    Anyone else feel the same?

    • generalbottlewasher says:

      SCPat: yes indeed, have you heard G.Edward Griffins talks on the cancer industrial complex. He addressed some of that in Gootube videos some years ago promoting his book on cancer and the red pill movement…. I found it very interesting and informative but couldn’t tell you where it would be today. The cancer industrial complex reminds me of the corruption you see in
      “The big religion scamers of organized evangelicals”.

      • scpat says:

        I actually own a signed copy of his book, A World Without Cancer. It was given to me as a gift and and its been on my reading list for a while. I need to read that thing! Thanks for the reminder.

  5. HomeRemedySupply says:

    The Coming Recession – The Baby Boomers did it (by retiring)
    (49 minutes – kind of dry, but some very interesting points)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OFaZcC0lRU

    Real Vision special
    Raoul Pal presents the single most important financial topic of a generation — the Baby Boomer retirement crisis. He asks hard questions while looking at different indicators and stats.
    For example: Pension Funds and the Equity markets, how consumer spending drops as baby boomers retire, how the Fed responds, how Japan has indicators which the U.S. should look at, age demographics and economics….

    • manbearpig says:

      gosh, I thought there was some sort of miraculous Grey Dollar phenomenon that would be spent by all those rich “anti-establishment hippies-gone-conformist-yuppies” so the poorer crisis-hit generations that followed could see the gradual phase out of retirement pensions and pay less…or something like that…:

      https://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/gray+dollar

      lexicon.ft.com/Term?term=grey-dollar

    • manbearpig says:

      It might’ve been more constructive if I’d watched your video before commenting…8-/
      And since everyone’s got the flu these days, I just had another class cancelled! So I’ll watch it now!! 😎 and get back to ya!

    • manbearpig says:

      any sort of meaningful, perspicacious response to this video would require time, reflection and extensive analysis and confirmation of the speaker’s assertions.

      But that won’t stop me!

      It’s important to bear in mind that we’re listening to a banker/Fed-friendly interpretation of the state of the union. Indeed, at 25:45, in a nut-shell explanation of “why they were doing what they did”, (why the Fed bailed out the banks in 2008?) we’re told that in fact if you inverse the Fed balance sheet you get the curve for the labor force participation rate so

      the Fed, whether they were cognizant of the fact or not, he said, was picking up the slack for the the retirees and the declining work force, “this is all they’re doing, they’re trying to offset this…”

      He also made an interesting statement at 24:50: “The whole of the petro-chemical complex is tied to demographics”. Ok, but, it seems to me that If you’re just talking about gasoline consumption that’s one thing. But “The Whole of the Petro-Chemical Complex” would seem to me to be just that: slightly more Complex, as the Whole Petro-Chemical Complex is far from restricted to mere gasoline consumption in cars and this may be irrelevant to his point but…my mind blocks on this…

      “…The most important products and by-products are: petrol, paraffin, diesel, gas oil, and petro-chemical by-products – plastic, detergents, aviation gasoline, neptha, mobil, grease, vaseline, wax, butadine, asphalt, etc. In fact, nowadays thousands of products are produced by petro-chemical combinations…”

      http://www.yourarticlelibrary.com/essay/uses-of-petroleum-6-main-uses-of-petroleum-discussed/25416

      Finally, his first reference to crypto-currencies was associated with the word “vultures” even if after that he went on to imply that, even if he was not yet Bull on cryptos, regulated (bank-controlled) blockchain cryptocurrencies were indeed probably the future.

      an interesting lightening peek at the baby-boomer consumption-driven economy and its painful decline in the U.S.. (the boom having been accentuated by increased numbers of women flooding the work force as well I would imagine though he didn’t mention it)

      anyhow, time to get to class…

      • HomeRemedySupply says:

        MBP,
        Good catches.

        Like you, I don’t take everything he said as gospel.

        My take-away, after slogging through the video, is that there is a trend resulting from the shift with retiring baby boomers.
        This makes a lot of sense.
        Daily, I see scores and scores of baby boomers who are downsizing and economizing.

        Equities (stocks of Wall Street) are inflated. The pension funds and their ilk bulk up Wall Street. The U.S. corporate economy (stocks) has relied on consumers spending money…money which they don’t have (credit). At this juncture, the baby boomers certainly are going to affect spending and pension funds / stocks as they change their life-style.

      • HomeRemedySupply says:

        It pays to have sick people.

        Unhealthy people. I think this adds to consumerism.
        It also tends to jive with the baby boomer demographic.
        ObamaCare helped to mandate the healthcare consumerism. Within the last decade in the U.S., I have seen countless new hospitals and strip center clinics go up.
        Healthcare is a large portion of the U.S. economy.

        Consume.
        There is that old saying: “War is good for the economy”.
        I guess if they run out of countries to have war with, they then focus on killing people another way, just slower so they can milk out every dollar.

  6. asendzi says:

    Okay. Now I’m confused. Which one is James? And which one is James? You both look alike now.

    Top notch news as always though.
    Thanks for that!

    • generalbottlewasher says:

      James is the one with the badger growing from his jaw and James is the one with an old skunk growing from his gowls. They look as handsome as lying Ted Crews with his new animal on his chin.

  7. taxpayer says:

    No, NJ doesn’t tax the rain, they tax the pavement. Since pavement worsens flooding, at least the tax tends to discourage something bad. This makes it way better than taxes we are more accustomed to, such as sales tax and income tax, which are penalties for earning a living.

    This tax tends (imperfectly) to reduce the chance that my land will be flooded by others paving their land. I suppose an anarchist solution might be for everyone to build floodproof walls around their land, but that seems expensive and might make the neighborhood kind of unpleasant. Any better ideas?

    • HomeRemedySupply says:

      Rain run off & pollutants.
      I often shake my head at these municipalities and counties.
      They spray herbicides and pesticides all the time, and promote herbicide and fertilizer use by the private sector (landscape codes for homes and businesses).

      Nitrates (often from fertilizer or manure run off) in water supplies are a real problem with no viable solution for their removal. A baby, calf or human, can die (called Blue Baby) when exposed to high nitrate levels. Every Spring, there tends to be a rise in deaths.

      It really seems nutty to me, to watch pesticides go down the gutter and end up in the supply for drinking water.

      Permits and Fees
      Typically, most county and city codes demand inspections and fees when any type of construction occurs. Now-a-days, these costs are ridiculous. My son is a supervisor for a mega-company which contracts construction projects…he tells me stories.
      City codes and planning usually have their design for rain run off infrastructure. Codes also mandate how many parking spots a business must have in a parking lot.
      Property taxes are supposed to support the infrastructure.

      Rulers love to make the rules, as long as the rules are for everyone else.

      • taxpayer says:

        I did not intend to imply that municipalities are blameless, nor in general helpful. Merely that the NJ rule could be used constructively, and I’d like to know how anarchists approach the problem. Maybe that information is not available in this forum.

        • HomeRemedySupply says:

          I gotcha.
          My think…anarchists would probably approach the run off issue much like roads.

          • taxpayer says:

            Local roads are more straightforward, as we all use them regularly, or benefit when others use them (so, for instance, we get things delivered). I doubt our anarchist community has a big expressway, but if it does then we must have made arrangements when we decided to build and share it.

            With paving, some of us want the paving and benefit from it, whereas others are injured by the floods. And quite a few of us aren’t sure, until the record-breaking rainfall occurs. Also, in a community of smallholders, any one’s paving probably won’t have much effect, but at some point — 10 properties? 100 properties? — the impact becomes serious.

        • mkey says:

          If, as an anarchist honoring the non aggression principle, you had a neighbor who has paved so much of his adjacent land that the runoff water from his paved estate was flooding yours, you’d have the option to negotiate with said estate owner over their installation of a storm drain.

          Without exuberant property, pavement, water, air, income and outcome taxes they’d likely be able to afford it. Having a vested interest, you’d probably feel inclined to pitch in, some of the other neighbors as well.

          Failing that, you’d have the option to install the storm drain yourself to protect your estate, treating your neighbor as a natural calamity.

          Failing that, you’d have the option to put up a wall, if built high enough it could help with moving the floor from your estate to the neighbors’.

          Failing that, you’d have the option to farm a marshland on your estate hosting a trillion mosquitoes doing their earnest to drive the neighbor away.

          Failing that, you’d have to move.

          Either way, the resolution to the issue would arrive far, far sooner than if you waited for Moms&Pops gubment to fix it for you.

          • taxpayer says:

            “…you’d have the option to negotiate with said estate owner over their installation of a storm drain.” A storm drain could move the problem “away,” which might be an expensive complicated proposition. And unless there’s a handy ocean nearby, somebody is still going to get flooded, tho I suppose you could negotiate with someone distant in a different circumstance. A detention pond could be a more realistic option in some cases.

            “Without exuberant property, pavement, water, air, income and outcome taxes they’d likely be able to afford it.” Actually no, since the price of land moves inversely to the taxes to which its use is subject. But even if the flooder can afford it, the floodee will have to rely on persuasion and social pressure to protect herself.

            The other options cited seem actually more expensive and disruptive than a possible local government, but I do like the mosquito idea, perhaps combined with some large fans.

            My limited experience indicates that, because floods usually affect a large number of properties, it’s typically cheaper to solve the problem at the community level. Doesn’t have to be by a municipal government but that’s the way it usually works out. Maybe your experience is different.

            • mkey says:

              I think you’re overcomplicating it a bit. Ditches have been dug in the past. Any storm draining system can be brought down to its knees, there are no 100% guarantees. Unpaved land can flood easily. There are rivers and places that are “down hill” to which the water will go gleefully.

              Actually no, since the price of land moves inversely to the taxes to which its use is subject.
              Are you suggesting that with lower taxes people would have less cash in hand?

              The only realistic options in this scenario are a combination of 1&2 and 5. Option 3 is doable with heavy machinery at hand and depending on the size of the property in question may be a large intervention in the environment, but so is the paving. Option 4 is partly a joke.

              There aren’t solutions to every problem in life. My experience states that floods often occur in diluvian areas, near river beds and on porous lands rich in underground waterways. These areas are typically very well known (for centuries so, I’m talking about very specific local areas, some of which have been even named after their propensity to hold water) to be flood prone, but there are always some very intelligent people who think they’re very smart to put real estate on such land, after nothing had been built there for hundreds of years. When it floods, they of course point their wet finger at Mom&Pops gubment dispensing my tax funny money to cover their abject stupidity.

              Of course not all flooding is down to human errors in judgement, but the “social security net” sure seems to spur bad decision making.

              On the communal level, floods are a matter of public health as well. Much could be done with shovels and some elbow grease.

  8. manbearpig says:

    Trying to get perspective (not definitive answers) about this hip and green sounding “Rain Tax/Fee” I came across the following May, 2016 article:

    NJ Tourism Brings in Record Dollars

    The big news at the two-day conference was that the industry reported an economic impact of $43.4 billion in 2015, a 3.3 percent increase over the previous year. Visitations to New Jersey increased by 2.4 percent with 95 million people enjoying a plethora of destinations all over the state, versus 92.8 million in 2014.

    “For everyone involved in the state’s tourism industry, a repeat of last year’s excellent weather and a wish for even more warm rays of sun hitting the sand and surf is top of mind…”

    (But wait! I thought Global Warming was Bad?!)

    “…The NJTIA is also concerned about the referendum to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour. The majority of tourism businesses in the state are seasonal mom-and-pop establishments that may be “forced” to lay people off. With the laying off of staff comes the decline in customer service.

    “The tourism industry is very dependent on delivering quality service,” Clark said. “These are discretionary dollars that visitors are spending. They save their money and look forward to a vacation. They could go anywhere, but they choose to come to New Jersey. If they have a poor experience because a venue is understaffed, that will definitely have a negative impact on all of us.”…”

    (But wait! I thought minimum wage was Good!?)

    “…The state’s tourism industry is a great revenue generator for the 500,000-plus people it directly and indirectly employs. It also provides a tremendous source of tax revenue for the state, counties and local municipalities…”

    (This question is certainly naive but why can’t these tremedous tax revenues be used to improve the stormwater run-off systems?)

    https://njbmagazine.com/monthly-articles/nj-tourism-brings-record-dollars/

    anyhow…

    • HomeRemedySupply says:

      Casino Online Gambling is now legal in New Jersey.
      The keynote to qualify for playing is that your location must be in New Jersey.
      I wonder if this factor contributed to tourism dollars.

      • manbearpig says:

        Casinos contributing to tourism revenues…?…Geeee…I wonder… 😉

        • generalbottlewasher says:

          We have here in the Heartland an enormous number of
          ” degererate gamblers”. Many I know place wagers on sports in N.J. . I wonder if they , N.J. tourism officials are counting each transaction as an out-of-state tourist visiting the Garden State? Knowing the ilk of Guv’ment, I wouldn’t put it past them. ( it may be routed through Panama, but the players think its destination / origin is in N.J. from what I hear )

        • mkey says:

          Italy started counting hooker and cocaine (and illegal betting?) proceeds into GDP years ago. Hookers and cocaine, the signature of a healthy economy.

  9. NES says:

    Isn’t Oregon a US state that already regulates water flow? I understood there was an OR law that stated you could not capture water for reuse on your own land. Making a cistern unlawful and permits to build a home with such as un-gettable. The law may be governing a specific area of OR, I’m not sure. But I remember the discussion from a couple of years ago.

    That OR pumping gas thing? Been there. It’s was beyond strange. As well as having people pump gas for you, those who grab the pump from you when you are attempting to gas-up your car never feel it necessary to explain the situation when you are clearly unfamiliar with the practice (out-of-state plates blaring), as if all states have the same law. I asked for the reason I was ‘not allowed’ to pump my own gas. Not a single gas pumper knew the answer. Says a lot for the ‘Progressive’ political perspective in OR.

    • HomeRemedySupply says:

      Interesting anecdote on pumping gas. I was wondering about that.

      I remember the 50’s, when the station attendant would come out, pump the gas, and ask to check the oil. It was standard protocol.
      I think their main revenue came from repairing cars. Cars often had maintenance issues.

      On those old gas stations, typically the restroom entrance door was outside around the back or to the side. Boraxo powdered soap dispensers. The sink was always greasy grimy (from the guys working there) and the place was probably cleaned once a week, if not yearly. The flies loved it.

    • mkey says:

      30 Days In Jail For Collecting Rainwater.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trkCdyGU_Oc

      Snopes called fake on this one, didn’t read through though, snopes is the authority when it comes to fake stuff. (James did a video on snopes, but I can’t find the damned thing)

  10. ChaosNavigator says:

    This is the correct one:

    VERY few alternative websites have the story of Trump declaring national emergency. It’s as if it’s a non-issue.

    THE ISSUE OF NATIONAL EMERGENCY akin to Martial Law IS THE MOST PARAMOUNT ISSUE FOR THE TRUTH MOVEMENTS OF THE UNITED STATES! ‘Just’ because there were 31 emergencies prior to this one, the issue is downplayed completely.

    Rex 84 was revealed during Reagan (Iran-Contra). The continuity of the police state (FEMA camps, COG, Main Core) up to and including Trump remains BUT IS radicalized – there is no difference in the nature of characteristics, only degree of difference – and that degree has become overkill radicalized.

    While lamestream Trumpists and anti-Trumpists, Qanus bots, et al. are looking at the orchestrated Trump theater, happily unaware that the cross section is lying in a very different place, death by a thousand cuts continue, where TSHTF one day, many people FORGET the original blueprint; that the American people must be subjugated and lose their rights, especially the 2nd amendment that William Cooper and many others warned about.

    ‘The terrorists attacks which will be launched in the United States will be blamed upon middle eastern religious fanatics, Christian fundamentalists, white supremacists, Patriots, or Militias. A more immediate result of these operations will be the increased use of military forces, weaponry, and equipment such as tanks and armored personnel carriers in civilian law enforcement, the suspension or elimination of Habeas Corpus, the elimination of jury trials, the attempted disarming of the American People, and the institution of MARTIAL LAW with SHOW-TRIALS conducted by a tribunal of judges.’
    – William Cooper, 1998 (killed 2001), ex-member of the Office of Naval Security and Intelligence

    This IS intention of the elite (among other things) – if things go the way they want, the totally obvious draconian state on steroids will occur sooner or later unless people wake up faster

    WITHIN 24 HOURS THESE 2 THINGS GOT ANNOUNCED:

    1. TRUMP WILL DECLARE A NATIONAL EMERGENCY

    AND at the same time:

    2. William Barr is confirmed as AG. (1)

    It’s no coincidence Barr, the CIA monster behind Iran-Contra and Bush Senior AND Clintons has been chosen by Trump as Attorney General when military tribunals can be unleashed.

    The timing is thought-provoking as Rex 84 (FEMA, Martial Law, etc.) was revealed during the Iran-contra hearings where Barr played a PIVOTAL role. He also pardoned Elliot Abrams btw. Barr would be the ranking official in charge of MILITARY TRIBUNALS UNDER NATIONAL EMERGENCY if they are unleashed (while Oliver North at the same time is president for NRA – coincidence?)

    “REX 84, short for Readiness Exercise 1984. Through Rex-84 an undisclosed number of concentration camps were set in operation throughout the United States, for internment of dissidents and others potentially harmful to the state. Existence of the Rex 84 plan was first revealed during the Iran-Contra Hearings in 1987, and subsequently reported by the Miami Herald on July 5, 1987

    [SNIP: Comments are limited to 500 words. – JC]

  11. ChaosNavigator says:

    Continued:
    TRUMP – NATIONAL EMERGENCY & DEEP STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL ANNOUNCED WITHIN 24 HOURS
    https://paradigmet.blogspot.com/2019/02/trump-national-emergency-deep-state.html

  12. HomeRemedySupply says:

    Vaccines
    Wednesday Feb 20, 2019 – CNN
    FDA chief: Federal government might step in if states don’t change lax vaccine laws

    https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/20/health/vaccine-exemptions-fda-gottlieb/index.html

    EXCERPT
    “Some states are engaging in such wide exemptions that they’re creating the opportunity for outbreaks on a scale that is going to have national implications,” FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb said Tuesday in an interview with CNN.

    Del Bigtree talks about this article at the 10 minute mark.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6drRAme1Zg

    ~~~~~
    What is weird (or maybe not so much considering this is a MSM CNN article) is that I cannot find the full interview that CNN had with Scott Gottlieb. I can only find CNN’s “cutouts” of quotes within the article.

    I hate that shit. No context. That alone smells.
    It could have been a phone interview, an email exchange, a video interview, or ‘no real interview’.

    I did find a where Gottlieb talked about vaccines briefly on CNBC a month or so back.
    https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/21/fda-head-says-federal-government-may-take-action-if-states-dont-adjust-lax-vaccine-exemption-laws.html
    The CNBC article also talks about pending potential mandatory U.S. vaccine legislation.

    • generalbottlewasher says:

      Homey; you are getting really good at this. I get the impression they are equating a measles outbreak with an ebola outbreak. That’s pretty low. If I didn’t know better, I would think “they” are panicking. On many fronts. Which will elicit a greater danger too “us” due to “us” cornering them. Push back should be expected. I say that in the strictest esoteric way. If I expressed my self in the vernacular, it would be too dark for goodness sake. You have been doing some fine work lately, like a younger tomcat. What have you been taking?

      • HomeRemedySupply says:

        We have been getting some rain and cool weather down here.
        And the chemtrail jets left. They went north towards Tulsa.
        I’ve had some down time, while procrastinating doing my income tax.

      • mkey says:

        They are actually equating an “outbreak” with “a few dozen on hundreds of thousands”. A zombie outbreak is an outbreak, 67 measles cases over 4 states, with about 0.67% chance for one of this cases to be fatal, is meh.

    • HomeRemedySupply says:

      March 5, 2019
      According to the MainStreamMedia reports…
      FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb is resigning

      I guess he got needled too much and finally got the point.
      I wonder what type of crook will take over, and if vaccines will be on the agenda.

  13. generalbottlewasher says:

    Homey: that’s nice to know and yes they did all day. South to north untill a Grey blanket woven from their spewed poison threads spread out blocking the suns warming rays. Keep up the procrastinating. The production is outstanding.

    Taxes? Lets just boycott in mass this year untill change of some substantial nature occurs. What do you say?…

    If you thank you have given all.. They think you can give a little more….Dylan

  14. HomeRemedySupply says:

    Things are getting “worser” faster.
    March 5, 2019

    The talk on the Hill today was about “combating misinformation” on vaccines.

    Headlines…
    Anti-vaxxers pack hearing as senators investigate viral epidemic — of fear
    https://news.yahoo.com/antivaxxers-pack-hearing-as-senators-investigate-viral-epidemic-of-fear-170636002.html

    VIDEO of the Senate Hearing
    “Vaccines Save Lives: Senate Holds Hearing to Stop Anti-Vaxxer Lies | NowThis”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgkFZRjKvYM

    Geez! The video is pretty scary.

    ~~~
    Interesting that today we also hear that FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb is resigning.

  15. HomeRemedySupply says:

    Lately, the “mandatory vaccine narrative” is in high gear.
    Also, I am seeing a drift towards government censorship of anyone who opposes vaccines.

    March 4, 2019
    The Canadian Health Panel discusses vaccines – Live Q&A
    (Live Q&A? Give me a break. This seems pre-scripted.)

    At the Queue (8:54), the mandatory vaccine narrative is pushed.
    At 11:44, the disguised wicked witch insinuates that people should not independently research the topic…let the government decide for them. Then it gets into “Flat Earthers” and vaccines. “Shaming” & “Frightening” doesn’t always work.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3hKCtnPQgdY&feature=youtu.be&t=8m54s

    ?
    Supposed “no link to Autism”!?
    This webpage at the Children’s Health Defense sets the record straight…
    https://childrenshealthdefense.org/campaign-restore-child-health/

    The Canadian Health Panel fearmongering of Measles?!
    Del Bigtree gives some stats on measles…Zero deaths in the last 10 years…
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6drRAme1Zg&feature=youtu.be&t=1m34s

    Safety Studied?!
    Again, Bigtree gives a 3 minute rant to authorities…
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wiq7tdaP6k&feature=youtu.be&t=5m

  16. HomeRemedySupply says:

    SUPPRESSION OF VACCINE INFORMATION (unless it comes from The Powers That Should Not Be)
    March 2019

    Congressman Adam Schiff is putting pressure on Amazon to curb the spread of vaccine misinformation in its online store…

    …Schiff’s letter to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos follows two others letters Schiff sent to Google head Sundar Pichai and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg. In all three, Schiff criticized the platforms for serving up anti-vaccine propaganda where people look for information about vaccines. He also criticized Amazon for accepting paid advertising for anti-vaccine media. “Every online platform, including Amazon, must act responsibly and ensure that they do not contribute to this growing public-health catastrophe,” Schiff wrote.
    https://www.ageofautism.com/2019/03/adam-schiff-asks-amazon-to-censor-books-about-vaccination.html

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