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tv   Laurence Fox Replay  GB News  February 25, 2023 12:00am-1:01am GMT

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to you. our top story on evening to you. our top story on gb news. at one minute after 7:00, the uk has marked one year since first invaded ukraine with a minute's silence. today . a minute's silence. today. and at downing street today, the prime minister reflected on the country's losses with ukraine's ambassador to the uk . britain ambassador to the uk. britain has also imposed sanctions, including an export ban on equipment russia uses on the. whilst president putin's closest allies have also been targeted. and in kyiv president volodymyr zelenskyy attended a ceremony with families of soldiers killed in the conflict, describing the last 12 months as a year of pain and sorrow. but also of faith and sorrow. but also of faith and unity . and tonight, world and unity. and tonight, world leaders have come together to ramp up sanctions against russia in a show of what they're
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calling unwavering support for ukraine. the g7 group who've met virtually today says they're taking further steps related to russia's economy to undermine its capacities , assuage its its capacities, assuage its illegal aggression . it's now illegal aggression. it's now calling on third parties that have weighed its measures to stop materially supporting president putin's war or themselves face severe costs . in themselves face severe costs. in other news today. police in northern ireland say they're treating the shooting of an officer in omagh in county tyrone as terrorist related. with the new i.r.a, their chief of inquiry stormont's says it's unhedin of inquiry stormont's says it's united in standing with the psni after wednesday's shooting. the man who was shot, after wednesday's shooting. the man who was shot , detective man who was shot, detective chief inspector john caldwell, remains in a critical but stable condition in hospital after being shot by two masked gunmen at a sports centre. his injuries are said to be life changing and are said to be life changing and a fourth man has been arrested in connection with his attempted murder. sinn fein's vice
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president, michelle o'neill , it president, michelle o'neill, it as an attack on the entire community. i think it's important that we continue to send a united message to wider society. we this year celebrate 25 years of our good friday agreement and so much that's been achieved over those past 25 years. our society has been completely transformed and we're not going to allow anybody to reverse any of that progress that's made. that's why that's been made. so that's why it's important that we do it's very important that we do put across today. but this isn't attack on the community, this is an attack on all of us and this is attack none of us is an attack that none of us will tolerate. junior will ever tolerate. junior doctors are to stage three days of strike action next month. the british medical association has announced. they'll have their doctors job from doctors walk off the job from the of march. nearly 37,000 the 13th of march. nearly 37,000 bma members voted in favour of industrial action. that's the largest ever turnout for a ballot of doctors. and it follows a strike by nurses and ambulance workers . that's news ambulance workers. that's news headunes ambulance workers. that's news headlines at seven. i'm back .
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headlines at seven. i'm back. at eight. if it is true , as a man once if it is true, as a man once said that , depression is merely said that, depression is merely anger without enthusiasm , then anger without enthusiasm, then it can be said that the whole of the united kingdom is in a state of national depression. everybody you turn there reasons not just to be angry, but to be downright furious. and yet, in a parallel continuum , there are parallel continuum, there are people to speak their people fearful to speak their minds public or in most cases minds in public or in most cases , even their mild , even register their mild dissatisfaction in private. such as the fear of the repercussions of exerting a right to free expression , or to challenge the expression, or to challenge the assembled narrative . the crucial assembled narrative. the crucial co—dependent relationship . all co—dependent relationship. all human beings require with reality has been utterly undermined and in its place is a
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new unreality with its own un enlightenment values. a vortex from which no one can escape . from which no one can escape. all the scenery is the same . the all the scenery is the same. the trees, the rivers , the valleys trees, the rivers, the valleys in the mountains. but reality as we knew it , is in the mountains. but reality as we knew it, is a fading memory for those who cannot see. life continues on in ignorant bliss. and for those who do see, we are left with a choice to go gently into that good night or to rage . rage against the dying of the light. i envy those i deeply envy those mainlining propaganda and comforted by deceit . they and comforted by deceit. they are the happy ones, happy to receive an intermittent text from their gp, telling them that it's from their gp, telling them that wsfime from their gp, telling them that it's time to be a good citizen again and go and book their appointment to be experimented upon for the of their upon for the good of their fellow man . the warm sense of fellow man. the warm sense of satisfy that by potentially poisoning themselves they will in some way be serving a greater good.i in some way be serving a greater good. i envy the blind smugness
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of it all, but more than that i am angry , as are so many , that am angry, as are so many, that this regime and its unelected leader have not come to the country or to their fellow men and women and sincere apology for the harms done so many in order that they may be unshackled and free, leave their own homes , surely there must be own homes, surely there must be a reckoning coming. i ask myself . the excess bodies continue to pile up as a result of the catastrophic , failed public catastrophic, failed public health experiment of lockdown cessation of society and trade. the near shutdown of the health service, education an and the hurriedly introduced novel medications which were mandated guilt tripped , coerced and some guilt tripped, coerced and some might say outright lied to the pubuc might say outright lied to the public with the promise of a far off and normal christmas quest with scant regard to the scientific method , or in many scientific method, or in many cases, a deliberate refusal to even apply the scientific method in the name of expert , cautious
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in the name of expert, cautious profit . and what does the regime profit. and what does the regime do.7 like profit. and what does the regime do? like a canny hypnotist from a well—worn pocket. it once again produces the trusty gleaming watch and gently swings it in front of our eyes, drawing us in and away from the shredded social fabric and onto the next thing to terrifying , subdue us thing to terrifying, subdue us with a climate crisis, perhaps, or far fights which lead us a obedient sheep, incapable of opposition towards the inevitable consequences of playing chicken with a fully, fully tooled up nuclear madman . fully tooled up nuclear madman. the population can't be blamed for this. how can we, after years of fretful sleep, gather our thoughts enough to resist when we aren't even on our own side anymore? when we are too tired to fight the fight we must for the truth , else there will for the truth, else there will be no reckoning over the covid catastrophe . there won't even be catastrophe. there won't even be a truth and reconciliation committee where the regime supplicating selves before the people in full humility , rictus
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people in full humility, rictus grin and firm and to praise the safe and effective vaccines at the same time sombrely assuring us that lessons have been learned , that protocols will be learned, that protocols will be put in place time for the next inevitable pandemic. protocols based public health rather than big pharma profits. will there be a statement issued saying that these snake venom salesmen will not be granted indemnity in future from the harms that their hastily assembled controversial medicines have caused . i doubt medicines have caused. i doubt it very much . there won't even it very much. there won't even be a helpline for those who have been denied a full life or indeed a life at all after taking their bad medicine . there taking their bad medicine. there will be no trials for alleged crimes against humanity. instead, there will be silence perman . and finally, let's not perman. and finally, let's not all drug that up again, darling. they will say there will be no rage against dying of the light unless , as in the time we still unless, as in the time we still have to stop standing idly by. we start standing nose to nose with those we foolishly
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entrusted our well—being to states fairly uncomfortable truths put an end to the britain last so fashionable in these postmodern times . we can only postmodern times. we can only begin with the restoration and defence of the primacy of free expression and end to compelled , perhaps beginning by the sensible people of scotland who read themselves as their own work and press and say loudly. there male and there are female . the end you can identify as a pumpkin . all i care. live your pumpkin. all i care. live your best life . but you will not best life. but you will not compel me into agreement that you are a pumpkin that has control our borders by promising those who enter our country illegally that they will never get their hands on a british passport. genuine refugees are welcome and should make an asylum claim from the nearest safe country from their war torn home. we can no longer have uncontrolled , unsustainable uncontrolled, unsustainable immigration without careful and considered assimilation . if we considered assimilation. if we need to leave the ehcr to do it,
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then fine. we will take article ten with us. thank you very much for new british bill of rights and let us ditch the secular religion of net zero, or at least defer it until the demands it requires don't outstrip the penury it will create . and let penury it will create. and let us say no to traffic neighbourhoods. 50 minutes cities and taxation in the name of salvation strategies , power of salvation strategies, power and control designed to you of yet more of your freedom. we must say no to a future of battery farmed humanity, and yes to the promise of the generation to the promise of the generation to make a life more prosperous, free, and wonderful for our children than the one we have. experience to ourselves . dusk is experience to ourselves. dusk is here. night is fast approaching . let us not allow the disaster of covid to be the legacy we leave to those come after that, be a lesson in what must never happen again .
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happen again. first up tonight we're talking, you guessed it covid vaccine efficacy . sorry, ofcom, but efficacy. sorry, ofcom, but especially when it comes to women's health. i've been shopping my way through a pretty in—depth report from the mhra on the subject, and joining me to pick it all apart is dr. tina pearce , consultant in pearce, consultant in reproductive health and menopause specialist with a background general practise. good evening, dr. background general practise. good evening , dr. pearce. background general practise. good evening, dr. pearce. how are you doing? hello can we start with women's health and the vaccine? because it's something that's not really discussed. no well, if you looked at that mhra report for the public , you will see that the public, you will see that they didn't do any fertility studies . they didn't do any fertility studies. pages 16 to 21 in particular interest for people to look at if they're interested. they did no fertility studies and they didn't even do fertility studies
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in animals. it wasn't they were exempt. the studies and trials were exempt , which exempt. the studies and trials were exempt, which is most peculiar . they were exempt, which is most peculiar. they didn't do any studies . pregnant peculiar. they didn't do any studies. pregnant women . and yet studies. pregnant women. and yet it was on pregnant women . and we it was on pregnant women. and we know from the pfizer studies themselves that the they said to themselves that the they said to the women in the studies you must not get pregnant, you must use contraception, you must not get pregnant under any circumstances . and human nature circumstances. and human nature being what it is, 25 women did get pregnant . and out of the 25 get pregnant. and out of the 25 pregnancy years, there were 50 miscarriages, which means 58% miscarriages, which means 58% miscarriage rate for women who were vaccinated and became pregnant . and out of the nine pregnant. and out of the nine babies that were born, five had congenital abnormalities . so congenital abnormalities. so this is a complete disaster , an this is a complete disaster, an absolute disaster. and we've seen miscarriage and stillborn baby rates go up enormously . baby rates go up enormously. actually, in scotland. they've
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rate is two in a thousand and it's gone up to 4.9 and a thousand, which is the highest level for over ten years. is this is i mean, is it just absolutely shocking numbers ? is absolutely shocking numbers? is this just one study or is this backed up? lots and lots of data. lots of data and you look at the vaers reports and the mhra yellow card and the huge vigilance . then it's all there. vigilance. then it's all there. lots miscarriages, lots of . some lots miscarriages, lots of. some centres are reporting a 78% miscarriage rate , which is miscarriage rate, which is extraordinary quite extraordinary. and infertility. there was a study in israel looking at male infertile izzy they looked at sperm count young men aged 24 to 26, which should be, you know, far and good stuff . and they had older and they had. yeah they found they did it before they had any vaccines which is the right way to do it. so you can see your baseline and then at various intervals after then at various intervals after the second dose and at six
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months this , sperm count was months this, sperm count was down 15.9. and the motility down 22. is there anything else that can apply this drastic change in penalty to, you know, in your view at all? i don't think so. it's you know, you can apply the hill criteria to see if something is actually causes it. and i'm afraid it ticks all the boxes. and i'm afraid it ticks all the boxes . so all the boxes. so all the epidemiologists are saying it is vaccine and it's the highly vaccinated countries that are the biggest of lower fertility. so in hungary , for example, so in hungary, for example, their birth rates are down 20, which is phenomenal. so why the national health service saying that this is and any government minister saying safe and effective? no i really don't know the. they didn't do any bio distributions studies before they , took it to the market and. they, took it to the market and. they weren't required to and
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studies have stopped. so it's just that you don't. yeah. can you talk us through that? because i'm baffled. not baffled. i'm shocked by this that they're indemnified any. yeah you know terrible side effects of these tests. but why were they not required to at the very least do these ? i don't very least do these? i don't know. i don't know . it's know. i don't know. it's baffling. there aren't any drugs we put on. we don't give any medication that's experimental to pregnant women. we don't we just don't do that. but we were told i remember being very clearly listening to on the radio being told it's totally safe effective for pregnant woman. it was and i would i mean i no medical qualifications whatsoever but i would imagine a novel drug you wouldn't whether it was safe and effective for woman because a woman hasn't even been through the gestation penod even been through the gestation period to get to give birth to a child and how that child found out exactly. you're absolutely right. and unfortunately , many right. and unfortunately, many people felt that the mhra would be regulating all of this and
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making sure it was it was safe and effective and that it was perfectly fine and had been tried tested and. people tried and tested and. people assumed that, you know, it had actually through all actually gone through all the proper but hasn't. so proper trials. but it hasn't. so why why why are mhra why the why why why are the mhra why the government why the health service? why is it pretty much every media organisation saying that these things are safe and effective? i don't know if they're captured . i don't know they're captured. i don't know the. do or do you think it's it is it is it possible that it's a sort of hangover of the covid hysteria that began and that they just they're stuck in a narrative that they just keep things safe and effective whenever there's a problem. i don't know. it might won't don't know. it might be, won't it? you know, with any it? but, you know, with any intervention you to look at, first of all, it necessary? first of all, is it necessary? and if we go back , look at the and if we go back, look at the infection, fatality rate for covid, it's actually not on average, 0.24% across all age groups . and in the under 20 groups. and in the under 20 under 18, is it 0.0003? so
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there's no way that it's a problem for young, healthy people . and it's 0.03% from an people. and it's 0.03% from an as an average infection fatality rate from . the of 0 to 59. so rate from. the of 0 to 59. so it's only the that this is an issue of a has been an issue. you know, the average age of from covid in this country is 83 for women and 81 for men, which is older than your average life. exactly. exactly so there was you know, was there a problem the did need to the first place? did we need to have this in the first place? the answer is no. and there the answer is no. and is there an treatment? and an alternative treatment? and the yes that's safe the answer is yes that's safe and effective, which is treating acute. they did that acute. you know, they did that very successfully in south africa , japan and in india, in africa, japan and in india, in uttar pradesh , a population of uttar pradesh, a population of 240 million people. in the height of the pandemic, they had 400,000 cases a day and. then they and three over 3000 deaths a day. i and then they started using proper treatment, which is
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very cheap and effective . and we very cheap and effective. and we dare not say its name and vitamins and minerals and antihistamines and within weeks it went from over 400000 to 3 and a half thousand cases a day. and from 3000 plus deaths a day to three deaths a day, which shows can be done. so, you know , was the intervention necessary? no was it were the other things that could done? yes. that was safe and effective 7 yes. that was safe and effective ? was it was it effective? no, we know that from onus . we know that from onus. actually, office of national statistics data shows that people had the vaccine are more likely catch covid and we know biologically why that is . it biologically why that is. it causes immunosuppression . so causes immunosuppression. so these people are more and the more doses they have, the more immunosuppressed they are, the less able their bodies are to cope with an infection. the more likely catch covid and likely are to catch covid and there also now there's the phenomenon we identified called igg e4. now, aged 84, is the
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type of more commonly known i've been obsessed with , you know , an been obsessed with, you know, an immunoglobulin for is normally 0.4% of the immunotherapy intense and when people have had two doses, it goes up to 20, which is very peculiar. and that means that their bodies are now tolerating the spike protein and therefore they're not going to react to it at all. so when they catch it again, the body has no defence against it. so it further people like me, the body is going this alien obstacle , is going this alien obstacle, this thing, despite protein drives, it's the cell is taught to attack it but it's a stranger and as a result it stops being able to attack else. yeah. so well what have what we think is happening is because the messenger rna goes inside cells because of the very toxic lipid nanoparticles it goes inside the cell. and so those are the fatty bits around your reproductive organs. yes, exactly. and gets it into your blood. through the blood brain barrier and through
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the central barrier. blood brain barrier and through the central barrier . okay. so the central barrier. okay. so that spike protein can into these vital organs and then the messenger enters through the lipid non a particle in the previously healthy cells and starts producing making a little factory to make trillions of spike protein . okay. trillions spike protein. okay. trillions and that spike protein is the toxic pathogen and it's in all our tissues we know from the bio distribution studies that were donein distribution studies that were done in japan ,16% of it goes to done in japan, 16% of it goes to the ovaries and the testicles. so it's no wonder the sperm count was down and the motility was down. it's no wonder that we're seeing miscarriages. it's no wonder we've seen menstrual in women a very high percentage of women over 50% of women report that they have strange bleeding either absent bleeding or all my female have had job of reporting this , but that's done reporting this, but that's done in total. sorry, i've comment i've done something wrong. yeah.
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and i have patients haven't bled to post—menopausal, haven't played for 1015 years. suddenly have bleeding very alarming , have bleeding very alarming, very shocking. so i if there's a lesson that we need to take. yes. from what these last three years have brought to us societally and medically from a medical perspective , what would medical perspective, what would what would you say when the next inevitable pandemic comes across 7 inevitable pandemic comes across ? what is your advice to the pubuc ? what is your advice to the public and, to the medical profession? we need to have more open discussion from the very beginning about what is going on so that we can have experienced epidemiologists, not just government experts . it's great government experts. it's great barrington declaration as well . barrington declaration as well. great barrington declaration, absolutely they look after the vulnerable and shield them. apply logic to life. exactly, exactly so look at things like is it necessary? what is the threat you know the modelling that went on was ten times they said the was ten times greater than it actually was and the modelling has never been right. they've always been they were
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wrong for swine flu, they were wrong for swine flu, they were wrong for swine flu, they were wrong for flu, they were wrong for bird flu, they were wrong for bird flu, they were wrong sars—cov—1 they wrong for sars—cov—1 and they were for sars—cov—2 were wrong for sars—cov—2 too. so think i would listen so i don't think i would listen to the modellers because to the modellers at all because that people might say they that some people might say they should all be fired. well, i would agree with us their fears .thank would agree with us their fears . thank you so much. and thank you so much for making that accessible to the like me . thank accessible to the like me. thank you so much. pleasure. thanks for joining me. pleasure thank forjoining me. pleasure thank you very much. dr. t in the pairs coming up next, dr. rohan salman, former director of communicable diseases for public health wales. he will give the other side the argument and his view in the data and the figures any excess deaths . we'll be back any excess deaths. we'll be back
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in three. hey so we're talking about
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vaccine efficacy and deaths this evening, as you may have noticed, we've just heard the opinions . noticed, we've just heard the opinions. dr. peers joining me now who has been listening to the entire show. so far is dr. roman roland simon. forgive me, former director of communicable diseases for public health wales. good evening . roland, how wales. good evening. roland, how are you ? what do you . clarence, are you? what do you. clarence, good evening. what do you make of what dr. piers just said ? of what dr. piers just said? well, i find myself start with very sympathetic in general from where she's come from i mean i do think we needed open discussion. i a signatory of the great barrington declaration , great barrington declaration, even though i did wonder about the wisdom of that slightly afterwards when it became highly politicised and i do believe we should looked after the vulnerable more carefully. i'm very sceptical about modelling and i've written le monde and and i've written to le monde and the london review of books to express those views. however, i end up in a rather different place when it comes to pregnant
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. we had a blizzard of topic information very eloquently presented, but there are one or two key things that i think we perhaps need to bear in mind. pregnant women are much higher risk than their non pregnant peers. when it comes to covid there at about three. if they get covm, there at about three. if they get covid, they're at about three times the risk of admission to intensive care units and being ventilated and getting extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, you know, ventilation in if you want to call it that. and they have about a 50% higher risk of dying . this was a big since the us for disease control study from the wave of the pandemic . so the wave of the pandemic. so there is a risk there and we have to ask ourselves how do we address and so it's very similar just to jumping lines. so pregnant pregnant women should not be dying. it's very unnatural for it. we know. i agree , i mean, it makes so it's agree, i mean, it makes so it's
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so it's a point here is how do we protect them against that? and it seems to me vaccine has to be part of our here now there are issues around more vaccines. one of them, of course , is that, one of them, of course, is that, as dr. peiris pointed out, are new technologies and we cannot know altogether what they're going to do in the long term. and then would we be safe and effective? why would we told? why was the public told we they were safe and effective? and then saying to from then you're saying to me from pubuc then you're saying to me from public health you're public health wales, you're turning going , we turning around and going, we can't long term data . can't know the long term data. when were told of when the public were told of today , i mean, so you know, have today, i mean, so you know, have long since been retired from pubuc long since been retired from public health. well so i have no axe to grind the government the mount hra anything else. i mean when you have a new technology that's newly introduced and as much as people told you it was safe and effective, they could only mean for the length of time that they've been able to observe in short term, observe it. in the short term, the security agency
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the uk health security agency data does suggest that actually the risks of adverse effects be that to the foetus or the mother onset any higher in the vaccine, the vaccinated the the vaccinated and, the unvaccinated. you unvaccinated. but i'm with you on this new technologies we on this with new technologies we need caution in the longer term . and need and here i do . and we also need and here i do with dr. peers as i find much that i'm in sympathy , much that i'm in sympathy, much better or more efficient systems of adverse drug reaction monitoring than the other card system that we've got. we need what used to be called prescription event monitoring, where actually we enumerate each prescription, each vaccination it's given, and then follow up each person in detail and with information technology . it seems information technology. it seems to me something that was rather ruled out because of cost 20 or 30 years ago, when it was first being discussed, becomes much more possible when you do that, you have a much better idea . the you have a much better idea. the second thing is you never talk about these sorts of concerns . about these sorts of concerns. i'm certainly not trying to do that you inasmuch as people that with you inasmuch as people are concerned about i don't
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know, myocardial in know, access myocardial in israel or excess deaths in the uk that be done by field epidemiology studies . and my epidemiology studies. and my view is that's the way to answer that question and we will either decide that we've got a substantial problem or that get to rest . but yes, and i take to rest. but yes, and i take completely on board what you're saying . but to your average saying. but to your average person has been had to live through this hell for the last three years. they were told these vaccines were safe and effective and a way out of the pandemic. they gave up years of their life . even if these their life. even if these vaccines were safe and effective and brilliant. we've got a major problem with the fact that we shut down the entire society. and now that we've dealing with these access deaths, there was absolute silence from the government those involved in government and those involved in the mongering. what do you the fear mongering. what do you have the excess have to say about the excess deaths? do you feel deaths? what do you feel about that? those matter ? i that? do those lives matter? i think there are a few things about the excess deaths. first, leap in, public health, sort of
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one over the introduction of pubuc one over the introduction of public health courses that all of us you're taught that of us did. you're taught that three give you excess three things give you excess deaths weather, excess cold deaths, hot weather, excess cold weather and flu epidemics. we've had all three of those in addition to covid. i think there are other that you can invoke. but my own view that don't talk it out, go and investigate it. it's that difficult to do. and with the modern record linkage systems that could be done quite quickly as i say we didn't quickly and as i say we didn't get a clear idea how much these different things contributed it for. lot should be to make for. the lot should be to make it all should be made sorry too, with excess deaths happening now i'm looking at the excess deaths dunng i'm looking at the excess deaths during the pandemic. should we ever have even declared a pandemic? was there ever pandemic? was there ever pandemic ? well, there was pandemic? well, there was certainly a new virus that was circulated in more than one continent of the world. and that's definition of a pandemic. and there's certainly high death rates among the elderly and the vulnerable. so i think it was reasonable call it a pandemic.
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what? it wasn't reasonable to do, stop large do, i think, was to stop large chunks of the population going about their business when they were risk and in were at very low risk and in fact, rather, our focus on those people , for example, over 75, people, for example, over 75, who were really rather high risk , you know, it seems to me our whole response since got rather out of kilter, which is, i suppose at the core of the viewpoint of the great barrington declaration originators , which which originators, which which supported the great barrington declaration . yes, i am because declaration. yes, i am because i say i do believe that focus protection rather than these more global measures where as i say, i think i differ from your last speaker is it seems to me that among the vulnerable one's got serious to consider got a very serious to consider pregnant women. so it's helped me out with that with the pregnant women because obviously i'm not a woman and i know nothing, anything to with nothing, anything to do with biology violence, no of biology, no more violence, no of my why why should we be worrying about pregnant pregnant women when , you know, obviously we
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when, you know, obviously we understand that pregnancy and giving birth is very difficult. and this is odd concept that i hear from not concepts . that's hear from not concepts. that's a very valid argument that i hear from a lot of women who say that the medical profession itself is the medical profession itself is the definition of the patriarchy, that it was designed by men , men, and is there by men, men, and is there something there that we just don't understand and how to treat women nowadays ? they have treat women nowadays? they have not been the priority in modern medicine or in nutrition. we know it well. i mean, i'd probably look like very definition of a patriarchy, so i better very careful how i express myself here. i mean, i'm simply going back to the information that we have at our disposal that tells us how much worse the outcome of covid is. and women who are pregnant compared with women who are pregnant . compared with women who are pregnant. no, i'm quite happy to put that question back to my female peers and indeed to other females generally say, well, what do you want to do about that? but my answer to that is, if you a vaccine that will offer protection during pregnancy, you might seriously having
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might want to seriously having it it causes a lot of it unless it causes a lot of miscarriage . yes, but anyway, miscarriage. yes, but anyway, thank doctor rowland salmon and a lot of common sense and some stuff we disagree on, which is what the point of free expression is . so thank you for expression is. so thank you for joining me. director of communicable diseases public communicable diseases for public health in wales. right oh lordy. ihave health in wales. right oh lordy. i have been quite emotional tonight coming up. you are putting me on the spot and i think i'll get your reaction to the first half of the show. i will be back three years .
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hey, i'm very glad we had those two chats. i feel they were very important. but earlier i asked you to put me on the spot with a question. it's time for fox on the spot. first up, marcus , why the spot. first up, marcus, why are our rivers and beaches so
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polluted? this an issue close to my heart, marcus. i'll tell you what, my friend matt hayes, who was on the show the other day, who's just the world's greatest fisherman greatest fisherman and greatest environmentalist, said that the reason why the river wye, which is the best bluebell fishing river the where i river in the world, where i caught specimen bubble showing caught a specimen bubble showing off is because of off is polluted, is because of fat farming. and fat free chicken farming. and they excrement of chickens , i they excrement of chickens, i think, you know and it also happened with my local river, we had the same problem. farmers would follow things different would follow things in different ways . i would follow things in different ways. i don't would follow things in different ways . i don't know as much about ways. i don't know as much about the i'm not so good. the ocean, so i'm not so good. but i think, you know, over farming, intensive farming is definitely not and we definitely not so good. and we should all of our should protect all of our waterways and our environment for right. for our children. all right. this is one from twitter. where have gone . everything is vegan. have gone. everything is vegan. i am reminded of a joke that said veggie terrians don't actually live longer . it just actually live longer. it just feels like they do vegan
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madness. i mean, except for novak djokovic , he's good vegan, novak djokovic, he's good vegan, isn't he? but rest of it just looks like i went out with girl once who had facon, and the list of ingredients were terrific . of ingredients were terrific. anyway, here's the final question from mason. how long have you been costs ? how long have you been costs? how long have you been costs? how long have you been a freemason ? have you been a freemason? what's freemason it's this is it. oh, funny. handshakes and i'm not a freemason like how can i'm not a freemason like how can i join? will it get me on council? can i be back in show business if i'm the freemason? not willing to do everything? do you roll up a leg? i don't know. i got the freemasons. if you can help me out of trouble, i'd really appreciate it . anyway so really appreciate it. anyway so earlier on i asked you for your reactions to email in after some of the discussion and some says it's my profound belief the benefits of the vaccine for far outweigh the risks go to falls . outweigh the risks go to falls. i've had fourjobs not know i'm
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in this respect. well i don't think it's i'm going to have an opportunity to challenge you dan and best of luck with your bulls. diane says i am 82 husband, 85, and we wouldn't have the vaccine are the only onesin have the vaccine are the only ones in our family and nobody. you haven't had covid getting good for you. you're like my uncle and auntie margaret . i am uncle and auntie margaret. i am glad that auntie margaret, because i know you will be watching for all your messages coming up. i am dishing my thoughts with the james dean of the conservative party , andrew the conservative party, andrew bridgen rebel with a cause for north—west leicestershire . i north—west leicestershire. i will be back .
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in three. hey every week i sit down with
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someone and discuss differences or not. in this case, it was the turn of andrew bridgen mp for north—west leicestershire . this north—west leicestershire. this week many of you will know andrew's view on the vaccine and much the same as mine. these are, and i stress out the ears, ofcom , you can draw your own ofcom, you can draw your own conclusion researching everything discussed in the show. the government and the nhs have been clear and maintain the following coronavirus vaccines are safe and effective . they are safe and effective. they give you the best protection against covid. andrew rebel with against covid. andrew rebel with a cause . cheers welcome drink to a cause. cheers welcome drink to that. a cause. cheers welcome drink to that . do you a cause. cheers welcome drink to that. do you think a cause. cheers welcome drink to that . do you think exploded a cause. cheers welcome drink to that. do you think exploded your political career by coming out and saying you did. political career by coming out and saying you did . that's and saying you did. that's depends that's debateable. if you think have a political or have had a political career and the fact that the government
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will never admit it, that they to backtrack so the beginning of december they want you to vaccinate, extend the vaccine down to chilled babies of six months of age. but by the middle of january 25th of january, there are only over 50 and the vulnerable. and they'll go further than that. and i'm hopefully going to be giving a speech next week on the efficacy of the boosters using government's own figures and i think most have delivered that speech that wrap up pretty much the booster programme and the vaccination with them all right and not not delivered yet but it's in the pipeline and i hear rumours the corridors of westminster that you know you some in peace keep popping up to you and saying maybe you're not absolutely raving mad after all. is this though there has certainly been a change the temperature monday was a warm line which there weren't many mps . but tuesday. line which there weren't many mps . but tuesday . five, five or
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mps. but tuesday. five, five or six mps, not your normal suspect from three different parties. who names i will not pass out . who names i will not pass out. they came up to me and said you're definitely onto something around the safety and efficacy of these vaccines . keep going . of these vaccines. keep going. it was not open public support yet, but if five mp from three different parties took the time to come up and say that to me. so yeah, we're winning the hearts and minds. so yeah, we're winning the hearts and minds . we've already hearts and minds. we've already got the public. i think we're finally influencing the people who could actually do something to a halt. the vaccine rollout altogether and then divert funds so we can start looking at sorting out the vaccine damage in the homes. so you what you're hoping and what you think is going to happen is that week after week after week after week, we're going to start to see we're going to have revealed more more vaccine more excess deaths, more vaccine harms. think as harms. and you think you're as you it's one way street. you say, it's a one way street. you don't need to worry. burying this under the carpet, sweeping it hiding blaming
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it away, hiding it, blaming it on you think on statins. you don't think this, you know, and i sometimes wonder i wonder if the government just sit there and say, excuse say, what is today's excuse or this excuse the this week's excuse for the excess it's excess deaths, whether it's statins lack appointments? statins or lack appointments? but i mean, it just doesn't stack numbers. it stack up against the numbers. it doesn't stack up against the science. and i as i said in my speech on the 13th of december, you know, we i think we've we've sacrificed enough of our citizens already on the of ignorance and on unfettered corporate greed. and the sooner it's stopped, the better. i can't stop it on my own. i can only stop it when enough. colleagues in the of commons we have a majority and force the government to it. what i think is happening is there's an increasing pressure coming on every mp from their constituents in their inbox and i would encourage gb news viewers and their friends and family to email their mp , their elected email their mp, their elected representatives, putting this aside, you're at war with your party in a way with the
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government, you know, because you're you you are saying something and saying the government have done this. the government have done this. the government have done this. the government have done this is your own political party. and i was i was warned in was i was, i was warned in a meeting a couple of weeks ago that by a colleague who was trying to recruit to the cause, um, told me that i could um, who told me that i could well be right in 20 years time, rather like the thalidomide. well, that won't do. and he also said that you need to be aware that you're taking on the most powerful vested interest in the world the me personally, my vested interests health vested interests is the health and wellbeing my in and wellbeing of my in north—west and north—west leicestershire and the public because you've the wider public because you've done great job in such an done a great job in such an avenue. mean , you know, if avenue. i mean, you know, if i do say so myself , they get the do say so myself, they get the getting a brilliant getting away from a brilliant place are brilliant. place the people are brilliant. yeah got the highest yeah we've got the highest economic in country economic growth in the country converting the probably converting what was the probably the in the poorest seat in leicestershire in 12 years to the it's only part the richest. it's the only part of leicestershire leicestershire, leicester and rutland uk average. rutland that's above uk average. we houses keep we build enough houses to keep house prices about 20% less than you can average. so that's the sweet we've also working
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sweet spot. we've also working with the conservative controlled district council we've district council. we've delivered council delivered the longest council freeze in the history of the uk 15 years and we're hoping to do more. so yeah, we've got a 1.2 jobs for every person of working age.the jobs for every person of working age. the constituency, the biggest the biggest retained business rates in the country why didn't have the whip and why didn't you have the whip and because broke the narrative and i'm absolutely convinced that i will be vindicated as will the scientists and doctors who had the bravery to speak out and tell the truth to the public . tell the truth to the public. and as as orwell said, you know, in a time of universal deceit, even the act of telling the truth is seen as revolutionary. and what do you think public are going to want once they find out should you be? i mean, i obviously have to provide a level of balance. should you be proved wrong. i proved completely wrong. what i wish would be honestly wish for my for the wellbeing of everybody that i was going to be complete. nothing would make me happier than to be proved completely wrong . and could completely wrong. and i could bow of politics and say, look, i
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made a big mistake. i'm out of this. made a big mistake. i'm out of this . and really that the world this. and really that the world is safer and everything's fine, but i'm afraid that's not the case when you talk about this, about democracy. so there was no democracy. was i found democracy. but what was i found so chilling about what happened in the house wasn't so much the allegations made against you it was the fact that you had spoken and you had the stand to response to anyone who's asking legitimate question, which is to be a racist in some and that in your house of commons is chilling because you can't have free speech in a house of commons. you don't have it in the country. and if you don't have free speech, the democracy and we saw the pile on from the usual suspects, but quite honestly, the jewish community of absolutely stood up for we've got the open letter 25 of the world's leading jewish doctors and scientists which just gone
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to rishi sunak that i'm immediately reinstated the party dismissing claims of antisemitism and indeed questioning the prime minister that you know, shutting down of free speech in a parliament of elected representatives is it's a first sign of a totalitarian regime. um i'm not as easy to silence . i've noticed some what silence. i've noticed some what l, silence. i've noticed some what i, what i would notice is apart from gb news is i mean, i used to do a lot of media mischief pnor to do a lot of media mischief prior to the 30th of december, and i gave that speech. i probably would do, you know, newsnight once fortnight newsnight once a fortnight a lots of local news itv sky channel 4 news quite regularly not been invited on one since thatis not been invited on one since that is trying to i don't know something must have happened or what happened and i just i'm thinking i don't know, you did something. i did something. something yeah. and you know, i used to get asked to make a lot of comments on sort of, you
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know, i comes in the news of political interest. so what are you doing as well now? okay. so i'm i'm doing a lot more on social media, so since, since the 13th of december, my twitter followers more than followers have more than trebled. i'm doing lots of podcasts . i'm trebled. i'm doing lots of podcasts. i'm going to go and do one this afternoon. i'm doing those and my reach on social media has ballooned so , you media has ballooned so, you know, as i said to chris hope, who's just come to gb news when he was still at the other week at at the telegraph , i've known at at the telegraph, i've known him there for over a decade . i him there for over a decade. i said, how many newspapers do you sell ? a said, about quarter sell? a you said, about quarter of or so. don't of a million or so. i don't really need you to do one to cover my story because, you know, that would be a bad tweet. yeah, it's a would be a bad tweet. is it the end of the legs c media day? i think i think there's going to be 90. the politicians who've have known what going on either what was going on and either didn't stop it when they should or have allowed it to proceed. i
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mean the legacy media culpable they can't say they haven't been told because i've told them. andrea bridget thank you for joining. thank you. to finish my coffee now can . coffee now can. hello there. i'm greg hurst and welcome to the latest forecast from the met office dry and settled right throughout the weekend there will be some sunny spells but those clear skies could mean a frost for many of us at night. and the reason for this is high pressure dominates. the weather scene sat right across the uk over the weekend, meaning fronts are at bay and it will stay are kept at bay and it will stay dry. unsettled right throughout . so back to this evening time. we've clearing skies across many areas northerly breeze still bringing in showers across eastern scotland , eastern eastern scotland, eastern england, but generally dry for the vast majority of the uk under those clear skies, temperatures will fall away minus two to minus celsius
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possible, particularly the north and the west. so a frost to greet us on saturday morning. but that means that we plenty of sunshine from the word go. with the exception, though across northeast scotland eastern parts of a few showers of england, still a few showers being in from the north, being brought in from the north, though. the north philly breeze does ease we go through the does ease as we go through the day . germany does ease as we go through the day. germany dry for many through the afternoon on saturday. sunny spells best saturday. sunny spells the best of across the of the sunshine across the north—west temperatures north—west and temperatures overall generally between six and nine celsius. so a little bit lower compared to what we saw during the day on friday into the evening time, the cloud starts to melt away once more. still, the risk, one or two showers down east coast with that northerly breeze and under the clear skies overnight into sunday morning, a frost returning more, particularly across western areas. and again, temperatures minus two to minus four in the countryside hovering , near to freezing in the main towns and cities. so it means a mixed start sunday there'll be patchy frost across northern, western southern parts of western and southern parts of the uk. further east, a cloudier
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start, one two showers start, one or two showers possible through the day. the best of the sunshine holds on across seven counties of england, parts of northern ireland, and western ireland, central and western scotland elsewhere, cloud scotland. elsewhere, the cloud will times . will build up at times. temperatures similar to temperatures will be similar to saturday, so generally around if not a little below average for the time of year. and there'll be more come as we head into be more to come as we head into
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next it's 11:00 here with gb news. in it's11:00 here with gb news. in a moment, headliners. but first, let's bring you the latest news headlines. and tonight president volodymyr zelenskyy has said if the allies keep ukraine, they will win the war. this after uk marked one year since russia first invaded ukraine with a
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minute's silence. today today . minute's silence. today today. and after the minute's silence, the ukrainian national anthem outside downing street , as the outside downing street, as the prime minister reflected on the losses with ukraine's ambassador to the uk. britain today imposed new sanctions . russia, including new sanctions. russia, including an export ban on equipment they use on the battlefield . use on the battlefield. meanwhile in ukraine, in the capital kyiv president zelenskyy attended a with families of soldiers in the conflict. he the last 12 months in ukraine as a year of pain and sorrow but also of faith and unity . well, in of faith and unity. well, in other news today, the prime minister soon announce a new post deal for northern ireland
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after , holding what was said to after, holding what was said to be a positive with the eu commissioner. rishi sunak is expected to continue talks with ursula von der leyen to discuss the northern ireland protocol this weekend in hopes revealing a new deal by monday. number ten said he's had constructive talks with supermarkets and businesses about the issues. the prime minister attempting to fix. well midday on gb news. now detectiveattemptingfizz”... ,....... midday on gb news. now detectiveattempting toe-.. ,....... midday on gb news. now detectiveattempting to fix. ,....... midday on gb news. now detective attempting to fix. well ,....... in an exclusive interview with minister attempting to fix. well in an exclusive interview with gb news james told gb news how gb news james told gb news how the government is approaching the government is approaching negotiations . we remain focussed negotiations . we remain focussed negotiations. we remain focussed the outcome rather the method negotiations. we remain focussed the outcome rather the method and the outcome is to protect and the outcome is to protect northern ireland's place , the northern ireland's place , the northern ireland's place, the united kingdom to make that northern ireland's place, the united kingdom to make that people and businesses in, the people and businesses in, the political representatives of detectives political representatives of those people in northern ireland those people in northern ireland are comfortable with the are comfortable with the resolution, whilst also making resolution, whilst also making sure that we protect the sure that we protect the internal market. those are very internal market. those are very much motivations. that's what much motivations. that's what will drive actions and you see will drive actions and you see darren mccaffrey interview with darren mccaffrey interview with the foreign secretary james the foreign secretary james cleverly in full tomorrow at cleverly in full tomorrow at midday on gb news. now midday on gb news. now
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detectives investigating the attempted murder of officer in omagh in county tyrone have made a fifth arrest today. detective chief inspector john caldwell in a critical condition in hospital after being shot outside a sports centre on wednesday evening . police in northern evening. police in northern ireland say they are treating the incident as terrorist

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