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00:00We come to the high wire every day, into the newsroom, into our war room, and we think we are
00:06the fourth estate, along with a lot of other great journalists in this country.
00:10Are we going to be holding our regulatory agencies to account, or are we going to be applauding these incremental
00:15small amounts as they move forward?
00:17Well, the SSRI panel was a great move in the right direction, and that's Marty Macri.
00:23Marty Macri also sat down with Epoch Times, and he had an interview where he said this about the COVID
00:31vaccine.
00:32Take a look.
00:33These clunky adverse event reporting databases are not good.
00:37They can occasionally give us a signal in the data that is a screening tool, basically a flag that, hey,
00:43maybe there's something here.
00:44And that's what needs to trigger a more definitive analysis in big data.
00:50So we're committed to that.
00:52We're committed to that, and I don't want people to think that, you know, we're blowing off the safety signal
00:57that many people have described.
00:59I personally know of people who have been injured by the vaccine.
01:03I personally know of friends who have lost a loved one from the mRNA COVID vaccine.
01:10So I think it is reasonable at this time to say we want good, solid, definitive data.
01:16Ladies and gentlemen, this is the most stunning statement by any health regulatory lead, perhaps in the last century.
01:25All we have heard was vaccines are safe and effective.
01:29The COVID vaccine is safe and effective.
01:31It's no longer under emergency use authorization.
01:34It's been given to billions of people worldwide.
01:36If we know there is an issue, just two weeks ago, the ACIP committee said we have a world-leading
01:42VAERS system.
01:43Marty Macri says it's clunky.
01:45It needs to be changed.
01:47But the most important thing he said was he knows personally, personally, people that have been injured and killed, loved
01:54ones have been killed by this vaccine.
01:56Never have you heard anybody say this, not Julie Gerberding, nobody, not Scott Gottlieb.
02:02This is a gigantic admission.
02:04And think about that.
02:05One person, this is anecdotal evidence, but if one person is saying that, I know people that have been harmed
02:11by the vaccine.
02:12I know people that have lost their lives.
02:14I know people that know people that have lost their lives.
02:16Just anecdotally, it may be plausible that VAERS missed a lot of issues with this COVID vaccine.
02:23And Marty Macri just admitted that.
02:25This is huge.
02:26Now, what are you going to do about it, Marty?
02:28Well, what are you going to do about it, HHS, CDC?
02:31We all have a part in this.
02:32And one of the things we can do, we talk about this almost every week on this show, is amend
02:36the PrEP Act.
02:37Remember, the PrEP Act, this is the emergency act that we were under, and we're still under until 2029 because
02:43it was extended.
02:45This gives a liability shield to vaccine manufacturers of the COVID vaccine.
02:50And not only can you not sue them, but people that are injured or killed by these, their families in
02:56that case, would have to go through the Countermeasures Injury Compensation Program, the CICP.
03:00This is known as a black hole.
03:02You have one year to file.
03:03If you file within one year and a day, find out myocarditis hurts your son, too late.
03:08Well, while we're waiting for FDA and CDC and HHS to move on this, Thomas Massey has put forward a
03:15bill to amend the PrEP Act.
03:18And what's he doing with this bill?
03:20Well, the headline here at Reason says it all.
03:22Thomas Massey's new bill would let people sue pharma for COVID vaccine injuries.
03:27So he's asking to repeal the liability immunity for pandemic products.
03:31That is in this PrEP Act.
03:33A lot of questions on this bill.
03:35This is the start of a big conversation.
03:37And we applaud him for putting this forward and getting some press, getting some eyes on this, getting this idea
03:43floating into Congress for this bill.
03:46Now, will this bill pass?
03:47Will Trump push this bill through?
03:50We don't know any of this.
03:51But this is a conversation we need to have.
03:53Secretary HHS Kennedy could sundown this PrEP Act.
03:58Basically, if he gets congressional approval, that's going to be very hard, we believe.
04:02But there's a lot of avenues for this and compensation for people who have been hurt by the COVID vaccine.
04:08And why is this important?
04:09Well, it's not because the COVID vaccine is gone now and we just need to take care of the people
04:14that were injured during the pandemic, which is a big deal.
04:17And we should.
04:18But the vaccine is still being given.
04:20In fact, it's being given to vulnerable children.
04:22And just last week, the JAMA article with the new updated numbers of chronic health disease in children in America
04:29showed nearly 50% of children have one chronic health disease, one chronic health illness.
04:34And what does that make them a candidate for?
04:37The new Moderna vaccine.
04:39Just a couple weeks ago, we had this headline here.
04:42Moderna vaccine has been approved by the FDA for kids at risk.
04:47These are kids with a chronic health disease.
04:49They're now in the crosshairs of this.
04:51And what's interesting about this story is that was about on July 10th.
04:56Well, about six days later, Secretary of HHS Kennedy was allegedly on vacation.
05:03He comes back.
05:04And then the headline is this coming out of New York Times.
05:07Kennedy fires two top aides in health department shakeup.
05:10Now, I'm not implying both are related, but what I am saying is within one week of each other, it's
05:17a very interesting timing from A plus B.
05:20So what does that equal?
05:22I don't know, but I'm pointing that out right now because within the health agency, within HHS, CDC, FDA, and
05:29even EPA, there is a push-pull battle right now for the agendas that have been put forth, not only
05:35by President Trump,
05:36but the mandates that Trump has given to Kennedy to put forward to end childhood illness in this country.
05:42So this battle is happening just because Kennedy's in, just because Trump's in, doesn't mean we sit back, we don't
05:47do anything anymore.
05:48The high wire doesn't have anything to report on anymore.
05:50We're just going to go back home and maybe shut it down for a little while.
05:53No, this is the most important time we can possibly have in this country.
05:57It's a battle for the health and wellness and the soul of this entire country.
06:02What else has Secretary Kennedy done?
06:04Well, one of the things we've been railing against and trying to raise awareness for is these WHO, International Health
06:11Regulations.
06:11This is a legally binding treaty that would basically put the entire world or any country that signs onto it
06:16under the emergency preparations that we saw the WHO direct the really disastrous pandemic emergency response.
06:26So if you like that and you like any other emergency moving forward to be run just as disastrously as
06:33the WHO ran it and have them calling the shots, not individual sovereignty of our nation and our states, that's
06:40International Health Regulations.
06:41And Kennedy just said, we're done.
06:43We're not signing on to this.
06:45You fumbled.
06:45You dropped the ball.
06:46U.S. rejects amendments to WHO, International Health Regulations.
06:50So we're out of there.
06:51Remember just last week, Kennedy stepped away from GAVI.
06:54That's Bill and Melinda Gates funded vaccine repository.
06:58So we're pulling out of a lot of things.
07:00WHO, we pulled out of that as well as soon as President Trump took office.
07:04But I want to go now to the EPA.
07:06The conversation around the EPA and pesticides, hundreds and thousands of pesticides have been registered, and the safety has not
07:13been updated.
07:14In fact, glyphosate safety is still hanging around 1993.
07:19Safe and effective, no problem, doesn't cause cancer.
07:21That's what the EPA says for glyphosate.
07:24Well, there's an appropriations bill in Washington, D.C. right now.
07:27There's a fight going on.
07:28You have mothers and fathers down there watching, keeping an eye on our legislators in Washington, D.C. for this
07:34appropriations bill.
07:34And this is to give funding for 2026.
07:38Funding to do what?
07:39For the Department of the Interior, Department of Environment, and for how they move forward with their agencies.
07:46What are priorities?
07:47Well, one of the things that is not a priority is Section 453.
07:52I'm going to read directly from that.
07:53That has to do with pesticides.
07:56None of the funds, it says, made available by this or any other act may be used to issue or
07:59adopt any guidance or any policy,
08:02take any regulatory action or approve any labeling change to such labeling that is inconsistent with or in any respect
08:08different from the conclusion of,
08:10and it goes on to, these classifications by the EPA.
08:13Well, those classifications have said pesticides are safe and effective for well over two decades.
08:19So what they're saying there is you have no funds to do a reanalysis of the science.
08:25You have no funds to change labeling.
08:27And if you can't change labeling and warn people about the risk, even though the science, the updated science, shows
08:34there is a risk,
08:35you're actually keeping people from having informed consent, keeping people from understanding what is in their environment,
08:42and also taking legal action, because if you can't have the warning labels, you can't really have an effective lawsuit
08:48against these companies.
08:50So this is a big end around by the pesticide injury.
08:53It's actually, the pesticide industry is actually called the bear rider, is what people are kind of jokingly referring it
08:58to.
08:59But what they also didn't do when they voted on this, now it's moving through right now in Washington.
09:04It has not been pushed through, but they did not take a quorum vote.
09:08So a quorum vote is basically when you say, I, Jeffrey Jackson, vote yay or nay.
09:14They actually did it in a not transparent manner.
09:17It was hidden.
09:17So no one knows who was voting for what.
09:21So when people say vote them out, vote who out?
09:24It was a secret vote.
09:25So radical transparency, not in Washington, D.C., not for Section 453.
09:31This is what people should be focused on right now.
09:33There's also state level battles to complete efforts to sue these pesticide companies, give them liability, just like the vaccine
09:40manufacturers have.
09:41There's a fight at the state level.
09:43There's a fight at the local level and also at the federal level in Washington, D.C.
09:47So people, everybody should keep an eye on this.
09:49This is one of the biggest battles going on right now.
09:51And this obviously goes directly against a Maha agenda, against what Secretary Kennedy has been saying for his entire public
09:58career about pesticides.
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