- 2 days ago
Grey Whale annual calf births plunged by 95%, dropping from about 1,600 to just 85.
Severely emaciated dead Minke whale found washed up on Irish Cork beach
Emaciated Minke whale beached near Carnoustie Leisure Centre Scotland
Are Cascadia Research Collective and NOAA Misleading the Public About Emaciated Whale Deaths?
Nearly two dozen emaciated gray whales have already died of strandings this year on the coast of Washington starvation was the most common finding
23rd gray whale death reported along Washington coast like all the others was severely emaciated
7 grey whales have been found dead off Vancouver Island this year “They’re basically a bag of bones,"
61-foot fin whale that died on Samish Island was emaciated
North Atlantic Right Whale Health Updates
Animals starving as food chain continue to collapse - Mass starvation events plague West Coast north America
Fukushima Forecast : Uninterrupted line of radiation stretches across Pacific tracking towards West Coast of U.S. , Canada
Fukushima radioactive plume contaminated entire Northern Hemisphere during a relatively short period of time
In the history of science we've never seen anything like this fukushima plume heading to U.S. and Canada - Why is Japan allowed to get away with contamination ocean
Sailor : After we left Japan, it felt as if the ocean itself was dead - Nothing alive for 3000 miles - No longer saw turtles , dolphins , sharks , birds .
The Fukushima Crisis Comes To The U.S.A. - Professor: New and improved version of the original atomic plague is spreading . The truth is so incomprehensible it's easier to pretend it doesn't exist
TV: Fukushima is the most important issue going on in the world- everyone should stop what they're doing and work together- newspaper editor- government afraid to look into Fukushima as it could lead to destruction of fishing industry on the West Coast
Radiation expert - it's terrifying how Pacific ecosystem has collapsed since Fukushima - plutonium and uranium suspected of spreading through the food chain
They're all gone: shock sardines vanish off California- fishermen didn't find a single one all summer- scientist this is about the entire Pacific coast Canada Mexico USAA NOAA we don't know why the young aren't surviving
Senior scientist: Unprecedented event for Pacific Ocean largest ever release of radioactivity into the ocean levels will continue to rise for years
Gov't Expert: " astounding" levels of radiation measured in the United States from Fukushima - around 500,000 ... " We Never ever have ever seen anything even Close to that . concentrations went up and up and up every day times our normal levels
Hot particles bombarded the west coast of US and Canada contaminated food sources and US drinking water
Ocean already contaminated from Deluge of Fukushima toxic water
Anti Nuclear Music https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KFWB2qIL_g&list=PLY3MxERsAkZILwKX1G7HMbj9asn-VYD9x&index=10
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LearningTranscript
00:02:31Hello, everybody.
00:02:35We're almost up to speed here.
00:02:37No emergency, no debate.
00:02:42Just a moment where the defense is no longer required.
00:02:56It can happen to lead.
00:02:57It can happen to lead, it can happen to Nokia.
00:03:00Nokia is not your friend.
00:03:04Nobody's friend.
00:03:13Sweet.
00:03:15Wow.
00:03:17Hello, everybody.
00:03:19Anyway, we'll come back to the shittiest show on the planet.
00:03:27According to the nuclear industry, anyway.
00:03:31I'm Dana, your host.
00:03:34The most hated man on planet Earth.
00:03:40Nuclear's got a big reach, a lot of influence.
00:03:44And they're not your friend or anybody else's friend.
00:03:47They're no species friends, certainly not whales.
00:03:53It's kind of sobering news today.
00:04:00They're finally admitting it.
00:04:02Now starvation is the catalyst behind the extinction event.
00:04:10We've been able to document it.
00:04:12We've been able to document it and verify it for over a decade straight now.
00:04:15We're the only people on the planet running an educational program, trying to inform policymakers and investors and the stragglers
00:04:26that do find me, the wonderful stragglers that do find us.
00:04:33Great whales are dying off as the Arctic warming slashes birth rates by 95%, so I think it's 5.3%,
00:04:43but that's the assumption.
00:04:49So 2016 and now, annual cath birth rates plunged by 95% from 1600 to just 85%.
00:05:00Well, it wasn't 85% last year, it was around 60%.
00:05:03So now you have about 3.7%, 3.5% or something.
00:05:10That's an extinction event.
00:05:11That's, I'll just walk you through this, I mean, my goodness.
00:05:16And this scumbag media is all about the climate change narrative, which is radioactive folly.
00:05:25So suggesting it has to be, there's no reason to think it's not a response to climate change, the starvation
00:05:32event.
00:05:32Yeah, there actually is a reason.
00:05:34This all started, this extinction event went into overdrive post-Fukushima.
00:05:44You can't, you can't just pretend Fukushima didn't happen.
00:05:4936 reactor cores at the top of four reactor buildings and eight fuel pools over three decades of reactor cores.
00:05:59Each reactor core is equal to about 100 Chernobyls because Chernobyl was a small reactor, was a graphite reactor, was
00:06:06a new reactor.
00:06:07These are older reactors, these are pure uranium plutonium, they have decades of reactors at the top of the buildings.
00:06:15Right?
00:06:15Now the reactor core doesn't have infinite or a endless life, right?
00:06:21It's, after just a year and a half at most, that's like stretching it.
00:06:27You're going to take at least one third, if not more, out of the reactor core and it goes at
00:06:31the top of the buildings.
00:06:32We lost all of that in four buildings.
00:06:36The plume covered the whole planet, there's so much of it.
00:06:40You see Berkeley, I mean, the schools of mass destruction wasted no time cutting everybody's throats.
00:06:48The industry only exists because of the schools of mass destruction like Harvard and Yale and Stanford and Oxford and
00:06:55MIT.
00:06:57The gray whales are known for undertaking one of the longest migrations of any mammal on Earth.
00:07:03This spring, many of them have been washing up dead.
00:07:06No, they've been showing up dead.
00:07:08They're so emaciated, they die at sea, they'll sink.
00:07:12They can't open their freaking pie holes without a lie.
00:07:15Climate news.
00:07:19Reports.
00:07:20Climate news.
00:07:22There's no reason to think it's not a response to climate news.
00:07:27To weather changes.
00:07:29Well, climate change is real, but it's caused by 80 years of emissions.
00:07:33Carbon doesn't cause climate change.
00:07:42Radiation does.
00:07:43So imagine a visible snowstorm for 80 years.
00:07:47And every flake is pulsing energy at the speed of light in every direction up to, say, 600 feet every
00:07:53second.
00:07:54That's climate change.
00:07:56And there's not a species on the planet that has an autoimmune trigger that it can defend against.
00:08:00So it's an annihilation machine.
00:08:03And 80 years later, this was a big planet.
00:08:06We had a lot of species.
00:08:07Can you imagine what this planet would look like if nuclear never showed up?
00:08:11It would be amazing.
00:08:13It would be amazing.
00:08:16It was amazing.
00:08:18And shit for brains, nuclear showed up.
00:08:2122 gray now is 23.
00:08:24Carcasses found in Washington State so far this spring.
00:08:28As of yesterday, it's 23.
00:08:31And that's what we find.
00:08:32So you can assume $230, because you're only going to find 10%, right?
00:08:35At best.
00:08:38Well, 1 in 10, right?
00:08:40That's the consensus.
00:08:53Here we go.
00:08:5522 gray whale carcasses were found in Washington State.
00:08:59So you're seeing the same thing in San Francisco.
00:09:03Just alongside of Washington is Vancouver, British Columbia, where there's at least seven more gray whales.
00:09:08This is not just isolated to gray whales.
00:09:12That's what they want you to believe.
00:09:14That's the way they're framing this, right?
00:09:18Many showed signs of starvation.
00:09:20No, they all showed signs of starvation.
00:09:24Every one of them.
00:09:24You can't have migrating whales, right?
00:09:29Say half is emaciated, death stage starvation, and the other half is healthy.
00:09:34It doesn't work that way.
00:09:35They're all eating from the same soup bowl.
00:09:39The soup of life that was the ocean.
00:09:43They can't open their mouths without lying.
00:09:45They're very coordinated, and they're doing so much harm.
00:09:50They're doing no good by lies.
00:09:52The perpetrators of the nuclear industry radioactive fallout, and this has been going on for 80 years from 1,000
00:09:57fuel pools,
00:09:58each of them full decades of reactor cores splitting atoms from millions of homes and businesses with no containment.
00:10:0524 hours a day into your environment.
00:10:07It's insidious.
00:10:10It's unconscionable.
00:10:12And yet I'm the bad guy.
00:10:15I'm hated, and hunted, and feared, and scorned, and isolated, and kettled, whatever you want to call it.
00:10:25But I refuse to be bullied by cowards, by the chicken necks, by the straw men, by the useless feeders
00:10:37that are the nuclear industry.
00:10:39Many showed, many, many, while others appear to have been badly injured.
00:10:43So half of them starved it, the other half was badly injured by both strikes.
00:10:48It's absurd.
00:10:49Since 2007, the total number of strikes recorded worldwide is only 1,200.
00:10:58And so all of a sudden, you've got 6,000 humpback whales died of ship strikes, and 14,000 gray
00:11:05whales died of ship strikes.
00:11:07You know, it's absurd to suggest any of this, but that's the law.
00:11:10You just keep regurgitating in every direction.
00:11:15It's easy to do.
00:11:16Rupert Winfield, or Rupert Murdoch, for instance, owned it at one point there, the last time I looked at it,
00:11:22it was a long time ago.
00:11:23It was over 600 medias.
00:11:25So you can have 600 medias regurgitating the same story.
00:11:29Writers have 1,800 medias will regurgitate, have spider bots will just regurgitate whatever they post in seconds, milliseconds.
00:11:37It's the same thing for AP.
00:11:40And the rest of the media is influenced by these shakers, so-called shakers and movers, which is the collective,
00:11:47is the Borg.
00:11:51While others appear to have been badly injured by boat strikes, the day is approaching when the people telling these
00:11:59lies will have to answer to their friends and their families and their loved ones and everybody else.
00:12:06That day is approaching faster than the industry and the public relations firms can wrap their minds around.
00:12:12That's why they're desperate.
00:12:16That's why the desperation is so evident.
00:12:18And they're spending so much money on this public relations campaign.
00:12:24They're ensuring their own destructions, their own destructions, and everybody else is in the species.
00:12:28It's stupid.
00:12:31It's counterproductive.
00:12:34We can't have a future and nuclear, and we can't come up, we've got to come up with solutions.
00:12:39The line we're putting it off, the worst the outcome is going to be for every species.
00:12:46They don't have a right to do it.
00:12:47It's criminal what they're doing.
00:12:48This is criminal.
00:12:51The population fell from 27,000 to 26 to roughly 13,000 last year.
00:12:56Like, there's been a mass die-off of the species for three years, and that number is 13,000, but
00:13:02they've been there for three years.
00:13:04So I would imagine, you know, the emaciation of the mass emaciations of all species is now full-blown.
00:13:14The mass emaciations that we've documented is documented in our playlist of the headlines that have showed up over the
00:13:24years.
00:13:24We have documented this relentlessly.
00:13:28I've been bullied the entire time.
00:13:30I've been isolated.
00:13:31I've been under siege the entire time.
00:13:36I've never...
00:13:37I don't have any medias out there.
00:13:40I don't have any alternative medias whatsoever.
00:13:46Jeff Rinses doesn't exist.
00:13:49David Wright doesn't exist.
00:13:51They put up...
00:13:52They don't come out with the common consensus that we acknowledge now.
00:13:57They won't come out and tell that story.
00:14:04I don't...
00:14:05There's nothing I can do about it.
00:14:06I'm doing the best I can.
00:14:07I'm doing everything I can to keep the story...
00:14:11Because if I don't come out and tell the story, nobody's going to tell the story.
00:14:15As you see tonight and last night and every other night.
00:14:19So, at best, there's maybe 10,000.
00:14:22They'll be gone, though, this year or next year.
00:14:24I won't be surprised they're gone this year.
00:14:26Because in 2023, under northerly migratory root, they were all emaciated.
00:14:33We had no concept that they would make it south again, right?
00:14:37To Basha, California.
00:14:41Over the same period, annual calf births plunged by 95%.
00:14:46Dropping from 1600 to just 85.
00:14:50But I think it was 62 last year, was it?
00:14:54And so this is an unbelievably important story you're looking at.
00:14:59That's the most unbelievable.
00:15:01That's end times.
00:15:03That's the death throes, the beginning now.
00:15:07Because all species are in the same punch bowl.
00:15:11And the nuclear industry has dropped the world's biggest herd into it.
00:15:15The trouble appears to start in the Arctic Ocean,
00:15:18where grey whales typically feed on shrimp lake crustaceans found in the sediment on the seafloor.
00:15:25So that's where you're getting into the biggest problem with the grey whales.
00:15:28They're getting a bigger dose of the radioactive fallout.
00:15:33I'll explain that to you in a second.
00:15:38I got eight or nine of them that'll tell that story coming up.
00:15:42We broke the food chain and it started off with the phytoplankton and the zooplankton and stuff,
00:15:49the microscopic animals, the bases of the food chain, the oxygen chain, the carbon sequestering chain.
00:15:56Found in seafloor sediment.
00:15:59So that's where all the radioactive debris is ending up to in the seafloor sediment.
00:16:07Normally the whales would go there and that would stir up the nutrients instead of stirring up the radiation.
00:16:13And so they're getting enormous doses.
00:16:15And the species that they were feeding on, the bioaccumulation from that was catastrophic,
00:16:22but clearly that has disappeared.
00:16:24That's also why there's billions of crabs missing in Alaska.
00:16:29All right, the Cascadia Research Collective,
00:16:34who we're seeing prom putting on a pedestal lately,
00:16:38and NOAA misleading the public about the emaciated whales' deaths.
00:16:46Yeah.
00:16:49They're trying to, they want to blame climate change.
00:16:55The nuclear industry is never going to come into this equation.
00:16:57It's not going to ever come there.
00:17:03Unless the world, like the world's not hearing an alternative narrative.
00:17:09They're just hearing this screeching narrative of climate change with no foundation.
00:17:15You know, more carbon, more birds, more phytoplankton, more insects,
00:17:23more puppies, more trees, more plants, more flora, a lot more flana.
00:17:29No carbon would look like the moon.
00:17:32But take the word carbon away and put in anthropogenic man-made isotopes and atoms,
00:17:37and now it makes sense.
00:17:40Right?
00:17:41Now climate change actually makes sense.
00:17:45Found in seafloor sediment.
00:17:48Like, carbon doesn't pulse energy 600 feet every second,
00:17:51or one millimeter a second or anything.
00:17:55Anthropogenic man-made radioactive fallout.
00:17:57Not just counting the dumping, the insidious, revolting, despicable dumping they'd done for decades.
00:18:06You know, the Manhattan Project era and the next couple of decades.
00:18:11They knew they were going to exterminate the planet in increments down the road just by that sledge of hand.
00:18:17That betrayal.
00:18:21That idiocracy.
00:18:25And the industry attracts the most nihilistic, useful idiots we've ever come across.
00:18:31There's no industry that comes close to it.
00:18:34Found in seafloor sediment.
00:18:36So there you go.
00:18:36That's why the gray whale starvation is so prominent.
00:18:40It's because they're feeding on the brutal radioactive, the original radioactive fallout.
00:18:50Scientists now say Arctic warming is stripping away the blubber reserves.
00:18:54Scientists?
00:18:55Name them.
00:18:55What's their name?
00:18:56What institution are they from?
00:19:01Instead you give us non-GOs, but you won't give us the academic, the milk pieces.
00:19:05You don't provide any kind of science, any foundations.
00:19:12Everything you're doing is a conjecture.
00:19:14What we provide is documentation, as you'll see come up in a moment.
00:19:20Stripping away the blubber reserves the animal needs to survive and reproduce.
00:19:24They're going to tell that story for every single whale now.
00:19:26Every species.
00:19:28This is not just a gray whale thing.
00:19:31My goodness.
00:19:32As you'll see at night, these are the most difficult shows to do.
00:19:43And they're heartbreaking.
00:19:45Coastal communities from California to Washington.
00:19:48I see more whales washers showing harbors and along the waterways.
00:19:53Yeah, because they're alive.
00:19:54If they die at sea, they sink.
00:19:55There's no blubber, no fat, there's no muscle.
00:19:58There's nothing there to keep them buoyancy.
00:20:00The skin is actually consumed of its nutrients values before they finally swim up and die.
00:20:09Researchers also say the malnutritious, the emaciated, the starving whales,
00:20:14are more likely to lose their bearings from a dementia, Alzheimer's type effect of starvation, right?
00:20:27And therefore, you get entangled in fishing gear or struck by ships.
00:20:32Ain't that interesting?
00:20:36So the lead ship strikes we see going on, the acceleration, is caused by starvation.
00:20:43The whales have dementia, per se.
00:20:49Shitheads at Cascadia Research Collective, these are idiots.
00:20:54These are scum of the earth, man.
00:20:56These are the lowest forms of life, these people.
00:21:00These are insidious, bootlicking lapdogs for anybody that'll pay a wage.
00:21:06These are the most revolting parasites we've ever seen in humanity's history.
00:21:13The universities are not supposed to be for these scum, these degenerates, these traitors of humanity.
00:21:19The universities are supposed to be the savior of humanity, not the fucking end of humanity.
00:21:27And shit for brains, Noah, useless, just brutally stupid, incompetent, greedy, idiotic morons have betrayed us,
00:21:43have fatally betrayed us, the entire planet now, have been tracking the population decline.
00:21:49Really?
00:21:50Really?
00:21:50Really?
00:21:51I've been covering all of their narratives, all of their propaganda, I should say.
00:21:58Monitoring strandings and studying how Arctic food webs are changing.
00:22:02Whoever writes this stuff should be in a jail cell for the rest of the loose.
00:22:07They're just, they're the problem.
00:22:12They're so quick to bend over for any government agency.
00:22:18They'll just bend over and regurgitate whatever they see.
00:22:20They'll bend over, touch their toes for anybody in the nuclear industry.
00:22:28The research links sea ice loss, prey quality.
00:22:33We've seen studies about that over the years, not very many, but usually when there's a campaign going on,
00:22:40they'll roll out the, the prey is not as healthy or nutrients values, nutritional values as it used to be,
00:22:48routine.
00:22:48Whale starvation and falling, there's not falling birth rates, you got 95% failure.
00:23:01That's, that's an extinction event, stupid.
00:23:03They already know this.
00:23:05They're just so, they're so used to being scumbags, they can't be a human for a second.
00:23:11And, and they, they, they've never been called a scumbag, they never, never occurred to them that they're scumbags.
00:23:17Because they surround themselves with so many scumbags.
00:23:22These are parasites on, on your countries and humanity.
00:23:27The prey base is extremely sensitive.
00:23:31Yeah, of course it is.
00:23:33That's what radiation does.
00:23:34It changes the temperatures worldwide, because it's symmetrically covering the entire planet worldwide.
00:23:41So this is to your left.
00:23:42That's, that's a 20 day model of neptunium 239.
00:23:49This is 21 days.
00:23:51At 25 days, all of it is plutonium 239.
00:23:55So every species on the planet has now been consuming, breathing, living in proximity to the, the so-called devil.
00:24:07Neptunium was named after, or plutonium was named after the devil.
00:24:12And neptunium is incredibly brutal dose.
00:24:16Absurd energy.
00:24:18There's 10 decays.
00:24:20So after 25 days, every 2.5 days, there's a 50% decay.
00:24:25So there's so many isotopes have made these particular models.
00:24:28These models are not based on the loss of the infantories.
00:24:34The nuclear industry, nuclear power in particular, is your, is humanity's mortal enemy.
00:24:42They do not have a single redeeming quality.
00:24:46And they're lethal to everything we're replicating cells.
00:24:50So it's hard to comprehend how four buildings could, you know, you heard of the four horsemen of the apocalypse.
00:24:59Well, four reactors, buildings of the apocalypse is what we're actually looking at.
00:25:10It's pretty brutal, but all day, well, after the show last night, I kind of come to the, I kind
00:25:18of come to the realization that, now that they're actually, like, blaming starvation.
00:25:29A million atoms, so a BQ is a pulse of energy.
00:25:33Think of an explosion, when it explodes, it goes 600 feet in every direction, every second.
00:25:39That's an explosion.
00:25:40Carbon doesn't do that.
00:25:42Man-made anthropogenic radioactive fallout does that.
00:25:45Carbon means more birds, more insects, more plants, more trees, more puppies, more pizzas.
00:25:50It says, radiation means it annihilates everything for millions of years that's in proximity.
00:25:58It doesn't have to be in you, it's just going to be within 600 feet of you.
00:26:03And it'll wreck the chromosomes of DNA to cells of every species within 600 feet, and you can't perceive it.
00:26:12That's why doctors in the 50s used to call it the radioactive fallout a biological weapon.
00:26:18Before, you know, they, because originally they were encouraging all the academics to do studies.
00:26:24And then when they realized the horror of it, they were locking them beyond paywalls.
00:26:29Elsewhere, Springer, and Wiley journals have over 22,000 journals between the three of them.
00:26:35So what your university gets is not going to be from any of the top-tier journals.
00:26:41They're just going to get the potato peels journals so you have a nice, compliant students and then graduate, eventually,
00:26:55that you can use to wreck whatever's in your...
00:27:02Like, they're insane, what they got done to us.
00:27:08And the truth is the only way forward.
00:27:12So, like, you can't ignore that this stuff happened.
00:27:15You can't pretend that never happened.
00:27:17You can't go pretending there wasn't four reactors like this.
00:27:20And at the top of it was the fuel pools, these 19-story buildings.
00:27:25Officially, that never happened.
00:27:27How are you supposed to have a conversation when that's the official...
00:27:30How do they turn that clock back, see?
00:27:32How does the media come out and say, oh, our bad, we lied.
00:27:36We told you it was okay, but it was actually all gone.
00:27:39They can't do it.
00:27:41So, 20 million particles per liter of iodine.
00:27:50So, it's usually counted in disintegrations at 3.7 million disintegrations per second.
00:27:59So, 20 million particles of radioactive iodine per liter represents a significant level of radioactivity.
00:28:06It's typically measured in microcurries.
00:28:10And a microcurry, one microcurry, which is, you can see the acronym up there for it,
00:28:15is equivalent to approximately 3.7 million disintegrations per second.
00:28:20Thus, a concentration of 20 million particles per liter would significantly exceed the safety limits
00:28:26for the exposure to radioactive iodine in drinking water.
00:28:29What about all the pons?
00:28:32It can't just be iodine, right?
00:28:33It's the same thing for neptunium and then plutonium.
00:28:37It's the same thing for the xenon.
00:28:39It's the same thing for the iodine-131.
00:28:41It's the same thing...
00:28:42Like, this was absurd numbers.
00:28:44None of these numbers are anything we've ever heard tell of pre-Fukushima.
00:28:51Like, if this was a terrorist attack, everybody would still be in their bomb shelters 15 years later.
00:29:00Their radioactive followed shelters, which were useless.
00:29:07220 million atoms per liter of iodine-129.
00:29:12220 million atoms of iodine-1, they got a 15 million year half-life.
00:29:16But it's also a very high radioactivity level.
00:29:20It doesn't pulse very far, but if it's in your body and because it assimilates in the water,
00:29:25your hot tubs are going to be saturated.
00:29:27But look how many, how much is falling per liter?
00:29:32It's not going to go away for 50 million years.
00:29:36There's nothing on the planet that has an autoimmune...
00:29:38So when this lands in the forest, that's the end of the bacteria, the end of the fungus,
00:29:42which is the foundation of the ecosystem.
00:29:47That's why the Earth is so hot all of a sudden, post-Fukushima.
00:29:51Because when you wiped out the bacteria, the fungus, and by proxy the biota,
00:29:55which is over a million microscopic and small creatures,
00:29:58which would have broke down the litter and the foliage,
00:30:00when you wiped that out, post-Fukushima,
00:30:03it was going to wipe out eventually anyway from the fuel pools worldwide emissions,
00:30:08a thousand fuel pools hemorrhaging into the environment.
00:30:15So when you wipe out the bacteria, the fungus around the roots, what happens?
00:30:19Well, there's no moisture, there's no ecosystem, there's no biota.
00:30:27And so now that gets replaced, that dries, it becomes tinder-dry.
00:30:30And then what happens?
00:30:32Next time you have a rainfall, it's a flash flood,
00:30:34because it can't soak up into something that's tinder-dry,
00:30:39which is not natural, right?
00:30:40This is not the evolution of the ecosystems of your meadows and your forest and your ecosystem.
00:30:48The fungus, the bacteria is the foundation for your roots of plants and trees and, you know,
00:30:55close surface soil.
00:30:57Well, there's a whole ecosystem over a million microscopic and creatures and, you know,
00:31:03small creatures living there that would break down the foliage and the litter from,
00:31:08and the dying of the insects and the scrapement of all the species and everything else.
00:31:14And you wiped all that out.
00:31:17And you knew this would happen anyway because of Chernobyl effects.
00:31:20That was well known, that particular facet of radioactive folly.
00:31:25We're in real trouble.
00:31:28And telling a lie, trying to blame it on something that's not realistic,
00:31:35because there's an agenda, but they can't back it up with science.
00:31:38They can't put my narrative, they can't defeat my narrative.
00:31:43Let's put it that way.
00:31:44I'm not trying to break.
00:31:46My narrative is based on documentation of how everything works.
00:31:50And it's well known documentation.
00:31:54CCM-137 plume forecast for North America and Europe.
00:31:58CCM-137 pulses energy 600 feet every second.
00:32:01So this is the French government, IRS.
00:32:05Government, radiation levels in the United States west coast spiked.
00:32:10It's spiked.
00:32:10So this is not a conjecture in our opinion.
00:32:16This is based on radioactive folly.
00:32:19Of just CCM.
00:32:20Not that CCM can travel by itself or something.
00:32:24Which the public is completely lost upon.
00:32:28To a million times normal.
00:32:30There was no normal.
00:32:32See, when they say what were numbers pre-Fukushima,
00:32:37they're talking about weapons folly.
00:32:39But what's not put into the equation is the fact that there's 1,000 fuel pools worldwide
00:32:44full of reactor cores that are perpetual disease factories now.
00:32:49They're perpetual machines.
00:32:51A fuel rod, when it comes out of the reactor, is a perpetual machine.
00:32:57Right?
00:32:57That was the catalyst of the idea of breeder reactors.
00:33:04So once the fuel goes through a cycle, once you take it out of the chain reaction,
00:33:11now it's perpetually producing plutonium and curium and other isotopes.
00:33:15And they can harvest that to make fuel and bombs forever and ever and ever.
00:33:22But they're greedy and they want to come up with ways to make even more all the time.
00:33:27And so the plutonium mixed oxide fuel.
00:33:30The plutonium mixed oxide fuel is to reclaim uranium plutonium from fuel.
00:33:35That's already gone through a chain reaction.
00:33:37It's an abomination.
00:33:38It's a curse on humanity and the species.
00:33:44Radiation levels on the United States West Coast spiked to over a million times normal.
00:33:48A million times normal.
00:33:50It was a million to ten million times.
00:33:53So their normal is based on weapons.
00:33:55Our normal is based on 1,000 fuel pools splitting atoms,
00:34:00each of them from millions of homes and businesses into the environment with no containment.
00:34:04That's what's going on on your planet.
00:34:06That's why you're 10 seconds to midnight now.
00:34:13We're in an extinction event.
00:34:15This is not up for debate anymore.
00:34:18It hasn't been since I started to research expeditions a very long time ago.
00:34:26It seems so long ago, right, we showed the harm effect of the radioactive fallout.
00:34:33This radioactive fallout is based on this model, but this is the 20-day model.
00:34:40This is 20 days out.
00:34:48So Fukushima started heavy emissions on March the 12th.
00:34:54The tsunami was March the 11th.
00:34:56March the 12th, number one fuel pool detonated, which was around eight or nine reactor cores.
00:35:02Which, you know, just on its own mirror,
00:35:04would have been worse than all nuclear meltdowns in history combined by many orders of magnitude.
00:35:10It didn't stop there.
00:35:11Reactor 2 went off. Reactor 3 went off.
00:35:14Reactor 3 went off in Reactor 2 and Reactor 4.
00:35:18Reactor 2 burnt constantly for days and a lot of it went China Syndrome.
00:35:24Reactor 1, 2, and 1, 3, and 4 had lost their entire inventories.
00:35:32I'll just bring up a picture for those who are not familiar.
00:35:37Because out of 12 people watching my show, I'm sure there's one person that doesn't know,
00:35:44doesn't have a visual concept of what I just said.
00:35:47So that's Reactor 3 and 4.
00:35:48Now, officially that didn't happen.
00:35:52Because the world is so dumbed down with the Hulk and Spider-Man and the Simpsons and SpongeBob.
00:36:01They're incapable of understanding the danger they're in.
00:36:09And marine scientists and marine biologists and all the universities in the nuclear industry, everybody, journalists are all aware of
00:36:18that facet.
00:36:19They all have to continue to lie to protect each other because they're so deep into the lie.
00:36:25So officially that never happened.
00:36:28But it did happen.
00:36:30And to convince you that it didn't happen, they put these contraptions, they built off-site, reassembled with remote-controlled
00:36:36cranes over the stumps,
00:36:37because you don't physically touch the stumps or they would crumble, right?
00:36:40Stumps should have never been left there.
00:36:43If that was your apartment building, that's a 150-foot-wide apartment building,
00:36:47it was supposed to be 190 feet tall, 19-story, 65 meters, would you have left that stump there?
00:36:52No.
00:36:52You would have razzed right to the ground, right?
00:36:55Well, it's a nuclear meltdown, first off.
00:36:58And so every time you took something out of there or grabbed it, you know, the grabbers took something out
00:37:04from the remote-controlled cranes,
00:37:05it was amazing releases, a death plume got released into our environment that ultimately covered your planet.
00:37:12Because that's how this stuff actually works.
00:37:15Nobody has this picture, only me.
00:37:18And the only reason I had the picture was because we have the whole sequence is because they had released
00:37:25a high-quality picture accidentally to the media.
00:37:29And it was so high-quality I was able to zoom in and extrapolate these pictures, which show you...
00:37:40See, every time I try to tell the story, I'm stuck with the reality that I sound schizophrenic.
00:37:54You know, I don't blame anybody for not appreciating it, because it's very difficult to work it out.
00:38:01If not impossible to work it out on your own unless you're a nuclear expert.
00:38:05And then your job is to keep your mouth shut or you'll never get funding for an academic...
00:38:15So this is just four of the major medias.
00:38:19These are big medias.
00:38:20CBS is the biggest.
00:38:21That's Senator Sunset Dorn.
00:38:23It's the biggest in North America.
00:38:25BBC is the biggest in Europe.
00:38:27ABC Australia, Cecilia Vega is the biggest on that continent.
00:38:33CNN has infiltrated all continents.
00:38:36So they're claiming they're 150 feet above the building to the left, and they've successfully done that.
00:38:41They claim...
00:38:43The people two behind me are claiming they're in these contraptions, which are empty.
00:38:49Right?
00:38:49They just...
00:38:50These are three panels that were brought, were hung in by a crane and held there by gravity.
00:38:57Nobody stood up there.
00:38:59And then they rolled out in 2013.
00:39:01I made that picture and video in 2013.
00:39:06And 13 years later, I'm still begging the world to come to its senses.
00:39:11Not because it's easy.
00:39:13Not because it's fun.
00:39:14No, no, no.
00:39:17At all.
00:39:20Very high concentrations of hot particles in the Pacific Northwest during April and May.
00:39:27As if it has ever stopped.
00:39:28And Ernie Gunnison and Helena Caldick huh?
00:39:31We didn't need them to tell that story.
00:39:35All the media was telling it, but they were put on a pedestal.
00:39:38Let me just play a couple of short clips of what they had claimed.
00:39:42and, excuse me, minus three here tonight, beautiful summer's day, minus three on the
00:39:57east coast, just think about it, that's what it was last night, frost, what was I looking
00:40:06far away at, hang on, blech, and my goodness, there we go, there's one of them, where's
00:40:21the other one, just waiting for things to populate here, they're crazy,
00:40:38let me get rid of that one, let me just do these two, one of Arnie Gunnarsson, one of
00:40:55Helen Calicott, Helen Calicott is, she wrote over 14 anti-nuclear books, so everybody
00:41:06gravitates to her, they're all, a lot of them are best sellers, she's multi-multi-millionaires
00:41:10many times over, she started up many different organizations, and these are controlled opposition,
00:41:20there's good people there, but they don't know the bigger picture, the little square
00:41:25box of Helen up at the top is the original video, I put the pictures there so you can
00:41:31see, she says it looks like that, not like this, it'll get better, it's just a short
00:41:37video, she's being interviewed, let me ask you this, you've said that if the spent fuel
00:41:43pool in number four collapses, that you would evacuate your family from Boston, do you think
00:41:47we would ever know the truth of what's going on there, and the reason I ask is because we've
00:41:51seen coverage in the national news media here in the United States from ABC News and others
00:41:56that take video cameras in, saying that they're being given exclusive access to number four
00:42:02in the removal of the fuel rods, which is said to have begun, and what we see in the video
00:42:08being shared here in America is pristine, a pristine interior building, it doesn't look
00:42:13like a building in which the top blew off in a hydrogen explosion.
00:42:17The Japanese are very tidy people, and they have by robot control and by human beings removed
00:42:23the debris from the top of building four, and it does look pristine.
00:42:30Do you think the, let me go backwards for one second, because it doesn't do it justice,
00:42:37the video, right, of the two buildings? So she says it looks like the building to the left,
00:42:42not the one to the right. So Ernie Gunnarsson, this is an interesting one, I'll adjust the volume,
00:42:49hopefully. Now, I built, the division I ran built nuclear fuel racks for boiling water reactors
00:42:57exactly like Fukushima. And Unit 4 has always been my biggest concern.
00:43:07His wife there was a public, she was a spokesperson for the nuclear industry.
00:43:17So he's been asked, and he says it looks like that, not like this.
00:43:24Radiation levels in the United States West Coast, spiked.
00:43:33Did whale found, washed up on Cork Beach?
00:43:42That was yesterday. No, yeah, yesterday.
00:43:46It's emaciated.
00:43:48They actually acknowledge all the whales now as being, what they call malnutrition or something, right?
00:43:56Some of them are saying emaciation. I think they do it in this one.
00:44:00That's a mink whale that's emaciated.
00:44:03Experts from the scumbags groups have identified the animal as severely emaciated mink whale.
00:44:11So take a look at that severely emaciated whale.
00:44:15I can show you pictures right now and make you throw up how emaciated the whales actually are.
00:44:26If that's severely emaciated, what's this blue whale?
00:44:31It should weigh 40,000 pounds. What do you call that?
00:44:37So look at this severely emaciated.
00:44:39It's severely emaciated, according to the experts.
00:44:46So then what is this?
00:44:49It should weigh 10 transport trucks.
00:44:53It should weigh 400,000 pounds.
00:44:57Anywhere you stood up there, I can still see your knees.
00:45:00That's how, it's just skeleton, organs, and skin.
00:45:03That's it. There's nothing else.
00:45:04And nobody knew they can survive that long.
00:45:07This was about six months ago.
00:45:11The blue whale was just, yeah, around six months ago, too.
00:45:16This animal is a bride's whale.
00:45:21It should weigh 80,000 to 90,000 pounds, because it's the full size.
00:45:26And all is there is the spinal column, the rib cage, the bones, and the organs, and the skin.
00:45:33And even the skin has been consumed on the inside for resources.
00:45:40Experts, experts from the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group,
00:45:45and they're just disgusting, their cover-up of the real starvation event.
00:45:50It's disgusting.
00:45:53They've identified the animal as a severely emaciated mink whale.
00:45:57Severely emaciated.
00:45:59Volunteers collected photographs.
00:46:01If I collect photographs, I'm a criminal.
00:46:03I'm the worst person humanity ever created.
00:46:05If they collect it, they're volunteers.
00:46:09Members of the public being urged not to touch the stranded marine animals
00:46:13due to possible health risk.
00:46:15Well, there is none.
00:46:18Nobody's ever been...
00:46:21You can't find a story out there where somebody was in proximity of even a rotten whale.
00:46:25We've seen them do it.
00:46:27Necropsies on rotten whales lots of times in their oilskins.
00:46:35No special gear, right?
00:46:38They're just scum.
00:46:39That's who they are.
00:46:40That's why they got the job, I guess.
00:46:42Logo's warned to stay away from a 25-foot mink whale in Scotland.
00:46:47This one was Ireland, I believe.
00:46:51This one's Scotland.
00:46:54A dead female mink whale was left stranded.
00:46:59May the 20th.
00:47:00That was...
00:47:01The other one was May 26th.
00:47:04Let me come back and check that, actually.
00:47:08Yeah, this was yesterday's.
00:47:11And this story was from the 20th.
00:47:18And it was a week ago, right?
00:47:20And that's another mink whale.
00:47:22Well, it was just a large mammal could be a youngster because it's emaciated, see?
00:47:29But it's length indicates it's an adult.
00:47:32So those...
00:47:34They're going all around the place rather than say the word disturbed or emaciated.
00:47:52It's just...
00:47:53They're just unlikable people.
00:47:57But when you look at the shape of its body, you can see the whole spinal column.
00:48:04It's emaciated and severely.
00:48:10It's not the right...
00:48:12If it was on its stomach, right, you would get a better...
00:48:15You would see it more definately.
00:48:16But we asked the public to stay away from the carcass.
00:48:21Locals warned to stay away.
00:48:22Right in the headline, the very first five words are,
00:48:26Locals warned to stay away.
00:48:29Every time a whale goes up, this is what you'll see they're saying.
00:48:33Residents were warned to keep their distances.
00:48:41I've never seen anybody ever get sick from being in proximity to a whale.
00:48:45And what's interesting about it is they'll say, you know,
00:48:48stay away from it because of pathogens and bacterias.
00:48:52And they'll walk right up to it and lean on it.
00:48:54Pick their nose.
00:48:55Because the so-called...
00:49:04The SSPCA confirmed it was aware of the stranding and said,
00:49:06Members of the public, we would ask the public to stay away.
00:49:11They don't want you taking pictures.
00:49:13They don't want you being in proximity to it.
00:49:15They don't want you talking about it.
00:49:16They want you to sit in your house and watch the news.
00:49:21Go to bed, get up, and go to work, and don't ask any questions.
00:49:25Leave them alone.
00:49:26They're better than you.
00:49:28You're pukes.
00:49:30Nearly two dozen gray whales have already died of strandings this year
00:49:33at Northwest Beaches, which is Washington State, right?
00:49:38Emaciated.
00:49:42Severe emaciations you're looking at.
00:49:45Malnutrition.
00:49:45So lately we've been seeing that word almost constantly.
00:49:50If the animal...
00:49:52If there's a clear picture, then that word's going to show up, right?
00:49:56Well, as soon as you see that shape right there, that's...
00:49:59You can't pretend it's not emaciated anymore.
00:50:03That's death stage derivation.
00:50:08That's death stage derivation.
00:50:13And you can tell...
00:50:14You see his whole spine sticking up if you know what you're looking for.
00:50:18The whales are suffering from malnutrition.
00:50:21No, they're suffering from starvation, you kooky, wacky weirdo.
00:50:27Just useless people.
00:50:29These people that work in that medias and in those institutions, those universities,
00:50:33are the most worthless humans we've ever come across.
00:50:39They're the worst humans imaginable.
00:50:42They're the people that should have been sent to Fukushima.
00:50:49They're great for the propaganda machine.
00:50:52They're a blessing to the public relation firms.
00:50:56But they're a curse for humanity and the 8 million species and our oceans and our fresh water
00:51:02are wonderful, incredible, amazing water that is all now tritiated and worse.
00:51:09All water on the planet is tritiated.
00:51:12That means all species or lifespans are on a permanent extinction list.
00:51:24It's researchers believe, believed, which is a conjecture, malnutrition, malnourished.
00:51:36Showed signs of malnutrition.
00:51:41This is starvation, just without saying a word.
00:51:45And blunt force trauma for the very last sentence.
00:51:49No, it's not actually, is it?
00:51:52Aside from climate change, you've got to put that in there.
00:51:55Gray whales, entanglement of fishing gear, marine debris, ship strikes, and human-generated marine sounds.
00:52:03The ship strikes and entanglement are a cause of dementia from starvation.
00:52:13Fish and wildlife scum, degenerates, the worst humans imaginable.
00:52:18The slaves to machine and a curse on humanity.
00:52:24In 2019, Washington documented 35 gray whale strandings.
00:52:30Noting researchers said this year's totals already surpassed that number,
00:52:34which was considered a record-breaking year, which meant 350 whales died.
00:52:40Because we only find 1 in 10%, we find 1 in 10, basically.
00:52:45That's the consensus.
00:52:47Now we've got the 23rd gray whale death reported along Washington coast as of yesterday.
00:52:56I missed that yesterday.
00:52:58That's a severely emaciated whale right there.
00:53:03You've always got to struggle to get a really good picture with these people.
00:53:07They'll give you a close-up here and a close-up there and a weird shot here and a weird
00:53:11shot.
00:53:13And they always give you...
00:53:14Now you can see the tail up there.
00:53:16Holy crap.
00:53:17Look at the head.
00:53:18Look at the tail, though.
00:53:19The tail and the spinal column back there.
00:53:21Holy shit, eh?
00:53:26That's severe starvation right there you're looking at.
00:53:30This is one of the favorite pictures I'd like to give you where it's really hard to determine, see?
00:53:36Because it's on that weird angle.
00:53:37So when you look at this angle and you look at that angle, look at the head on that angle,
00:53:42you can clearly see, right, the mass, right, the muscle and the fat and the blubber is all gone.
00:53:49But on this angle, it's very difficult to tell.
00:53:53And this is an angle we see a lot of.
00:53:55You've usually got to read, you've got to go to three, four, five stories to find a decent picture that
00:54:01can tell the story, right?
00:54:04That's a terrible person right there.
00:54:06That is a terrible, that's a terrible human right there.
00:54:09That's a traitor, a traitor to his job description and a traitor to humanity.
00:54:20Both of those are.
00:54:21They're a curse on humans and the animals and the species.
00:54:25So when you look at this, I don't need to see any more pictures.
00:54:28We know that's, because we've been at this a long time.
00:54:32Oh, I have.
00:54:33I've been at it 25 years.
00:54:34Going on 26 years now.
00:54:37When you see this picture here, that's all she wrote.
00:54:43Starvation of the worst.
00:54:45And even these pictures here, you can start to see bones, very defined bones.
00:54:53But that whale is so emaciated.
00:54:57That's just, that's a gray whale, by the way.
00:55:01Especially that picture there.
00:55:02There you go.
00:55:07When you see the tail, it's so disproportioned to the rest of the, the remains.
00:55:17That's severe starvation.
00:55:20And that's, we've been looking at this so much, now I have nightmares constantly.
00:55:26It's nasty.
00:55:27Anyway, leading most of these whales to starve to death.
00:55:32Well, what happened to the rest of them?
00:55:33They were, they would have died next week, but they got hit by a ship in San Francisco Bay, right?
00:55:38The ones that died in San Francisco Bay by so-called ship strikes.
00:55:42Have you ever looked how big that bay is?
00:55:43Like 50 miles long.
00:55:45How do you hit a whale in that kind of a bay?
00:55:48Because they're floating around, almost dead.
00:55:51Just barely sustaining life because they're so emaciated.
00:55:56Seven gray whales in Vancouver, just on the other side of Washington, Canada.
00:56:04Researchers, which they never name, of course, believe no food is to blame.
00:56:14They're just unlikable as humans.
00:56:17They're a curse on humanity, these people are.
00:56:21They're so willing to stab everybody in the back so they can pretend to their friends and families that they're
00:56:26special or important.
00:56:29You can imagine what kind of schizophrenic personalities they actually have.
00:56:34Four gray whales had died off Vancouver Island in just 10 days in April.
00:56:41Basically, a bag of bones.
00:56:45And I'm laughing.
00:56:46I'm laughing at the fact that they're, they're actually coming out and telling this.
00:56:55They're trying to acclimate the population and desperation because they're at end times.
00:57:02Because the world, in about two years' time, the world's going to say, why didn't you tell us?
00:57:05Why didn't you warn us?
00:57:06Why wasn't there any urgency?
00:57:09And they know that's coming.
00:57:10And they know they've got no way out.
00:57:12And they know that my voice is eventually going to trickle out.
00:57:16And, oh shit, the nuclear industry is in for a rough time.
00:57:20There's nothing they can do about it.
00:57:21Killing me.
00:57:22Can I hope I'm going to make it worse?
00:57:26And they deserve whatever's coming.
00:57:28And I hope it's, it's hideous what happens to them.
00:57:37These are just disgusting maggots.
00:57:39They have no right to be on our planet.
00:57:41They're a curse.
00:57:42They're a curse to everything on this planet and the planet itself and the 8 million species.
00:57:47They're a curse to their friends and their families and their loved ones.
00:57:50They're a curse.
00:57:54And that's what your university professors are made up of, these people.
00:58:00You don't get that job in university as a professor unless you're willing to go and tell lies for whatever
00:58:06industry needs you.
00:58:09Yeah, they're nice people to their friends and families, but they're not nice people.
00:58:12They're pretending they're nice people.
00:58:16They look in the mirror every morning and they call themselves every name in the book, six inches from the
00:58:22mirror every morning, because they know what they are.
00:58:25They hate themselves.
00:58:31They know what they're doing is evil.
00:58:34We've seen enough of them over the times now.
00:58:37There can be no mistaking.
00:58:39There's a bag of bones.
00:58:45That's starvation, severe emaciation.
00:58:48That's death stage starvation.
00:58:57Four gray whales washed up dead off California Island just 10 days back in April.
00:59:02They're basically a bag of bones.
00:59:04They're starving to death as they migrate back north.
00:59:09See, that's wrong.
00:59:10They were starving to death, all of them, three years ago anyway, in 2023.
00:59:16All of them were starved under migration north and south and north and south and north and south and now
00:59:22north again.
00:59:24Nobody thought they could live this long.
00:59:26And that's why they look, that's why they have nothing.
00:59:30They're just bags of bones now.
00:59:32We didn't know the ocean because the ocean, that flotation, right?
00:59:37Like if this was a land animal, it could never live that long because of the, you know, the gravity.
00:59:43But in the ocean, they have that buoyancy and the ocean is life.
00:59:47The ocean is trying to save us.
00:59:49The ocean is, the water is fighting to keep us alive.
00:59:53But the nuclear industry has poisoned all the water, every pond, every mud puddle, every mud puddle.
01:00:02Every flower cup with water in it is poisoned.
01:00:06All your pollen is poisoned by radioactive fallout.
01:00:13I will fight to the dead for water.
01:00:16That's what I do every day anyway.
01:00:19To their feeding ground, they can't say that they just started starving to death, which is what they're trying to
01:00:26do there.
01:00:28It's immoral.
01:00:30It's just rude and evil.
01:00:34We're not surprised given the pulse of the gray whale we had a couple of weeks ago, Cattell, who we've
01:00:39covered quite a few times, Cattell.
01:00:42Another useless feeder that is selling out humanity so they can be quoted in a newspaper.
01:00:52A total of 36 gray whales were found dead in the Pacific Ocean, according to the tallies from officials.
01:00:58So the media likes to use these research biologists at Cascadia Research Collective.
01:01:07And so the poll tonight is about these people and NOAA are the Cascadia Research Collective and NOAA misleading the
01:01:15public about emaciated whales' debts.
01:01:18Now, the original poll was a lot more harsh than that.
01:01:22I can't say that, I suppose.
01:01:24I've got to try to tone it down a little bit.
01:01:30But the useless, disgusting feeders at Cascadia Research Collective confirmed a total of 70.
01:01:37They're being put on a pedestal because that's their public relations firm, GOTO, right?
01:01:43They've been found dead this year, 17.
01:01:45The common findings examined whales has been malnutrition, starvation.
01:01:52We call it malnutrition.
01:02:00This is starvation.
01:02:01The food chain is broken.
01:02:04And the nuclear industry has done it.
01:02:05And Fukushima was a pulse event, which was the strata broke humanity and the 8 million species and Earth's waters'
01:02:14backs.
01:02:15Never have they come at this pace this early, so we're really worried about where this is headed.
01:02:19So there's still minus 3 down here at night times.
01:02:22Wait till summer strikes and they start showing up, populated areas.
01:02:26That's why you see all these propaganda machines out there because when they're showing up, populated area, beaches, people go,
01:02:32oh yeah, well, they're malnourished.
01:02:35They feel all smart and they go home and take their pharmaceuticals and sit in front of the TV and
01:02:41drool.
01:02:42The Marine Mammal Center and the California Academy of Science, these are the worst humans imaginable, confirmed 10 gray whale
01:02:50deaths in San Francisco Bay.
01:02:51NOAA Fisheries, the other are useless feeders, confirmed two dead gray whales off the Oregon coast.
01:02:58These people are useless feeders that work for these industries and these organizations.
01:03:03They're the definition of useless feeders.
01:03:05Their job is to betray you and betray the species and betray their friends and families and communities and countries
01:03:12and their atmosphere and their water.
01:03:15Their job is to sell it to everybody because they're barely functional, autistic creeps.
01:03:24He expected more whales to be found dead as they migrate north till June.
01:03:29They're not migrating anymore, they're just out there wandering around, shit for brains.
01:03:36They're not on their migration route at all, which normally, you know, millions of generations have done the migration route,
01:03:43but they're not doing that no more.
01:03:45It's over.
01:03:48It's over.
01:03:51This is an extinction event, it's over.
01:03:55They're just wandering and fucking around out there.
01:03:59I'm going to remember every one of your lies.
01:04:03That's my fuel.
01:04:04And go ahead and attack me all you want.
01:04:06That's more fuel for me.
01:04:07I don't give a fuck if you attack me.
01:04:10I don't care what you say about me.
01:04:11I don't care.
01:04:14I'm not fucking here for you.
01:04:16I'm here to go to war for the species and our planet.
01:04:22I'm doing it by educating people.
01:04:26We'll continue to sample these animals where we can, hopefully, get more data and determine just how bad it is.
01:04:32You little tiny bit behind the fucking eight ball here, Coutrell.
01:04:37You shit for brains.
01:04:39The gray whale population has been dwindling, estimated under 13,000.
01:04:43That was three years ago.
01:04:47If you found 33, that means 330 died that you didn't see.
01:04:53And you haven't adjusted the number for several years.
01:04:56How convenient.
01:04:59Oh, well, we don't know where they're gone.
01:05:01That's what they're going to be saying next year.
01:05:03We're not sure.
01:05:04The food moves somewhere else.
01:05:07They must be over wherever they're till.
01:05:08We don't know where they're till.
01:05:10We don't have those resources.
01:05:16I think they should all have to answer publicly to why they choose that path in their life to be
01:05:22the monsters that they are.
01:05:24Sixteen dead gray whale washes ashore.
01:05:27This is a couple of weeks back.
01:05:31Blob.
01:05:33The blob.
01:05:35James wrote a song about the blob.
01:05:41Maybe we'll finish with that tonight.
01:05:43James put up some whack of good music, folks.
01:05:46You got to go to his playlist.
01:05:47He's got no views.
01:05:49I don't even know what to make of it.
01:05:51It hasn't stopped him.
01:05:53Hasn't slowed him down at all.
01:05:57He's experimenting.
01:05:58He's learning.
01:05:59He's trying new stuff.
01:06:02And it's the 61-foot fin whale that died at Samish Island was malnourished.
01:06:08I don't need them to tell me that.
01:06:09I just need to see that picture right there.
01:06:10I can tell.
01:06:13Any marine biologist, except for the ones that work for NOAA and everywhere else, or universities, can tell.
01:06:19They all know.
01:06:19Jesus.
01:06:23Texas.
01:06:25Hello.
01:06:27Hello, Mr. Biden.
01:06:32That's Calm Down, Charlie.
01:06:37Trying to get me off my roll.
01:06:39This is a stalker now for 15 years from Tetco that interferes in our shows.
01:06:49He called me a few days ago in the daytime.
01:06:53In the morning or something.
01:06:56I wonder what that was all about.
01:06:58There it is, dear.
01:07:00Just hang out.
01:07:01It's a different number, too.
01:07:04From Texas, though.
01:07:08The 21st of May at 9.18 a.m.
01:07:16Like, I got hurt 11, 12 days ago or something, so even when I wake up in the morning now,
01:07:22it's really hard to get out of bed.
01:07:26And my show's usually in, like, midnight.
01:07:33And so I'm not up out of bed at 7 a.m. anymore because I'm still recovering.
01:07:39I got hurt real bad.
01:07:42But I don't have a right to take any time off unless I'm not able to do it, right?
01:07:47If I'm hurting too much, I can't do it.
01:07:48I can't do it.
01:07:49But if I can get my ears in the chair, then I should do something at least as many days
01:07:55as I can.
01:07:57Because the planet deserves somebody talking back.
01:08:02Fin whale found dead on Samish Island.
01:08:06Oh, that's right.
01:08:07I'm looking for better pictures.
01:08:08We got them coming up here right now.
01:08:10No officials confirmed Tuesday that a fin whale died after being found stranded near Samish Island,
01:08:16marking the first recorded fatality of the species in Washington this year.
01:08:21Of fin whales.
01:08:23Every species of whales post-Fukushima now is showing up in severe starvation.
01:08:31Emaciation.
01:08:33After you put the word starvation out there all the time,
01:08:35because I know my personal experience is when I say,
01:08:38when you think of all the whales being emaciated,
01:08:40they look at you like you've got six or seven heads there,
01:08:42and they don't know which one to look at,
01:08:44and they're like, what's emaciation?
01:08:47And you're like starvation, like, oh.
01:08:52I heard there's lots of salmon out there,
01:08:54and it's like, go away.
01:08:55Get away from me.
01:08:57Go away from me, stupid.
01:08:59Go watch your SpongeBob or your Simpsons or your Superman or your Hulk.
01:09:05Stay the fuck away from me.
01:09:08Shifting feeding habits and coastal currents.
01:09:11Coastal currents.
01:09:13The British come out with their worst excuses,
01:09:16but the British said, well, the emaciated, starving, dying whales
01:09:20are washing up because of storms.
01:09:24They don't say emaciated, starving,
01:09:26but when they show you pictures, that's what you're looking at.
01:09:28Oh, no, they were okay.
01:09:30They were healthy.
01:09:31They were caught in a storm,
01:09:32because whales have never seen storms.
01:09:35They're not genetically able to deal with storms, Dana.
01:09:38Don't you know?
01:09:38Well, this is a very emaciated whale.
01:09:43When I look at this one here,
01:09:44I don't think it's a real picture.
01:09:47This, to me, looks like an AI picture.
01:09:53Whereas this is a real picture.
01:09:57That's a real picture.
01:09:59That doesn't look like a real picture to me.
01:10:02Remember when we covered a...
01:10:05Was it a sperm whale?
01:10:06Where somebody had put...
01:10:07This is a major media.
01:10:09They put a picture there.
01:10:11There's multiple pictures.
01:10:12One picture where you had a fullet,
01:10:13and it had the eyes in the wrong places,
01:10:16great big eyes with eyelashes.
01:10:19Like a woman's eyelashes, right?
01:10:25Fin whale found beached in Samish Island, guys.
01:10:29That's a real picture right there.
01:10:32And when you see this peanut head,
01:10:33but all you're looking at is bones.
01:10:34You can see the spinal column,
01:10:36ribcage is poked up.
01:10:39That's a fin whale.
01:10:40Now, they're typically...
01:10:42You know, they're the greyhounds of the sea, right?
01:10:46And fin whales are the second biggest whales on the planet.
01:10:48It was very thin.
01:10:52Well, it looks like a sub-adult because it's so thin,
01:10:55but it's actually adults.
01:10:58The Cascadia Research Collective and others' responders.
01:11:02Again, there they are.
01:11:03And this is why we have a poll tonight.
01:11:06Are the Cascadia Research Collective,
01:11:08disgusting parasites,
01:11:10and no other, the maggots of society,
01:11:13misleading the public about the emaciated whales' deaths.
01:11:18Yeah.
01:11:20I get a little descriptive sometimes.
01:11:23I'm not going to apologize.
01:11:26Grey whale graveyard growing along the Washington coast.
01:11:32The truth is it's going to come out this year.
01:11:35I'm not going to blame it on everything but reality.
01:11:39If we just had some media help us, right?
01:11:42If we had some of the big players out there
01:11:43putting us on a pedestal for a couple of months,
01:11:46we'd have some push behind us.
01:11:49I'm ostracized from everything and everybody.
01:11:54There's just a little tiny,
01:11:56less than a dozen people
01:12:00that we're seeing, right,
01:12:02that are...
01:12:08And half of them are public relation firms
01:12:10looking for ways to get after me.
01:12:15I've censored every platform out there,
01:12:18brutal censorship,
01:12:20catastrophic censorship.
01:12:24And everybody else would have quit a long time ago, right?
01:12:27But to me,
01:12:29it makes it more intriguing.
01:12:33I'm never going to quit.
01:12:34Why would I quit?
01:12:35Why would I give this up?
01:12:38There is...
01:12:40I live in severe poverty.
01:12:44I struggle.
01:12:45All my equipment is old and derelict
01:12:47and I have to fix, weld up.
01:12:51I've got three fingers sliced open today.
01:12:54Three, four.
01:12:56Nasty slices too.
01:13:01Put on some liquid bandage
01:13:02and get back to work.
01:13:04Give it five minutes to dry
01:13:07and get back to work.
01:13:10I always put three coats on
01:13:12because you know I'm going to wreck it.
01:13:16And it was so cold yesterday,
01:13:17so cold today.
01:13:18Yesterday, all I got done was wiring.
01:13:20I wired up and it took a long time
01:13:23to screw it up to switch.
01:13:25I wired up two big lights,
01:13:28two new lights that I ordered in.
01:13:31They're cheap, right?
01:13:34But they're nice.
01:13:35They'll do the job.
01:13:36I got two more to wire up.
01:13:38And I was trying to get it done today
01:13:40and I ended up slicing my fingers up.
01:13:45I got everything now laid out there,
01:13:48so I got to get some switches.
01:13:50That's all.
01:13:52They got 12-volt switches, right?
01:13:55Scientists suspect starvation.
01:13:58They suspect starvation.
01:14:00That's nice of them.
01:14:04What else could it be
01:14:05when they're all dying of starvation?
01:14:06How can any others
01:14:07not be dying of starvation?
01:14:10In many cases.
01:14:11Do you see that connotation
01:14:13over and over and over, right?
01:14:14That's not an accident.
01:14:17That's the Fort 100
01:14:18little stretch of beach
01:14:19and seven-mile run
01:14:20of ocean shores.
01:14:24Well, the whales are not
01:14:25on their migratory routes.
01:14:28They're just wandering around
01:14:30with dementia.
01:14:32And Alzheimer's
01:14:33and they're just showing up wherever.
01:14:34They're showing up
01:14:34in the weirdest places.
01:14:36They're not on their migratory route.
01:14:38That's the best way to...
01:14:40But any trained eye,
01:14:42when you're looking at these whales,
01:14:43is a clear and severe emaciation.
01:14:45Scientists don't know
01:14:46how they're dying.
01:14:47They think it could be starvation.
01:14:49When it's clearly starvation,
01:14:52their stomachs are empty.
01:14:53The ocean is empty.
01:14:55When you get a glass of seawater,
01:14:57there's normally a billion creatures.
01:14:5975 to 100 million
01:15:01of them,
01:15:0175 to 100 million of them
01:15:03are the phytoplankton,
01:15:05the basis of the food chain,
01:15:06the oxygen chain,
01:15:07the carbon sequestering chain.
01:15:08The rest are the sperms,
01:15:10the eggs,
01:15:11the larvae,
01:15:11the microscopic creatures,
01:15:14the small fries,
01:15:15and everything else.
01:15:16And a glass of water,
01:15:17a billion creatures.
01:15:18Now when you take out
01:15:19a glass of water,
01:15:20there's nothing in there.
01:15:21It's sterile.
01:15:22It's crystal clear.
01:15:23The worst water you can see
01:15:25in the summertime
01:15:26is something that's crystal clear.
01:15:28That means it's dead water.
01:15:34Three months,
01:15:3521 dead gray whales.
01:15:36Why are so many carcasses?
01:15:37Now all of these stories
01:15:38are from today.
01:15:40And I still got 2,400
01:15:42of these clicks to get through
01:15:44on top of this pile from today.
01:15:46I still got a desktop.
01:15:48I think there's almost 700
01:15:50in the desktop folder,
01:15:51but that don't mean
01:15:52that's all of them.
01:15:54I got so many bookmarks
01:15:57that I haven't got
01:15:59the screen captures of,
01:16:00which always leads into more.
01:16:02It's absurd.
01:16:06And the consensus,
01:16:07if you go back through my,
01:16:08if you go to my,
01:16:10my playlist of species die-offs,
01:16:14you'll see the documentation
01:16:16over 60 presentations.
01:16:18But the last seven,
01:16:20eight videos are like this.
01:16:24They're probably longer
01:16:25than what this one is going to be.
01:16:29Three months, 21 dead emaciated.
01:16:32Gray whales.
01:16:33Dead emaciated.
01:16:38Dead emaciated.
01:16:46NBC News.
01:16:48Dead emaciated.
01:16:50I didn't know to throw
01:16:51a bunch of nonsense out there.
01:16:53Many of dead whales
01:16:55appeared thin
01:16:55slash emaciated.
01:16:59We know it's a food supply issue.
01:17:02Wow.
01:17:02That's the Cascadia
01:17:04Research Collective.
01:17:07Mouth piece.
01:17:09We know it's a food supply issue.
01:17:12Food supply.
01:17:14You're talking about whales.
01:17:15You're talking about 12,000 miles
01:17:17where they don't find any food.
01:17:19That is a broken food chain.
01:17:25The species briefly rebounded
01:17:27in 2023.
01:17:28What are you talking about?
01:17:32In 2023,
01:17:33they were all emaciated
01:17:34under migratory route,
01:17:35particularly the gray whales.
01:17:40They're just dishonest.
01:17:41They can't open their mouth
01:17:42without being dishonest.
01:17:44The system used to work like this.
01:17:46Algae would grow
01:17:47on the bottom of the sea ice
01:17:48and fall to the seafloor
01:17:49as the ice melted.
01:17:52The algae would dissolve
01:17:53and fertilize
01:17:54the productive seafloor,
01:17:56feeding anthropods
01:17:57in the sediments.
01:17:58And whales would suck up
01:17:59the sediment,
01:18:01the dirt,
01:18:01and find the nutrition's,
01:18:04nutrients,
01:18:04and nutritious critters
01:18:06inside of it.
01:18:07But they bioaccumulated
01:18:08the radioactive fallout.
01:18:12And so the gray whales
01:18:13and any whales
01:18:14that are eating,
01:18:16like the bowhead whales
01:18:17and stuff like that
01:18:17that are eating,
01:18:18shellfish are in the same boat
01:18:21where they're disappearing quicker
01:18:23than the other emaciated whales
01:18:27because shellfish
01:18:28bioaccumulate radiation
01:18:29125,000 times
01:18:32more than a fish does.
01:18:35If you're going to eat seafood,
01:18:37eat fish.
01:18:37Don't eat shellfish,
01:18:39for goodness sakes.
01:18:40Don't eat filter feeders.
01:18:44That's cancer in a mole.
01:18:47And it may take a little while
01:18:48to manifest,
01:18:49but it's absolutely
01:18:51an election of illnesses
01:18:53and diseases
01:18:54in the filter feeders
01:18:58when you consume it.
01:18:59Right now as they migrate north
01:19:01is when they're the skinniest.
01:19:02No, they're not.
01:19:03These are just bones,
01:19:05skeletons,
01:19:07organs,
01:19:07and skin.
01:19:11Like they lie so much
01:19:13and so often.
01:19:14It's normal for them.
01:19:15This is what they do.
01:19:16That's who they are.
01:19:16That's why they get the job.
01:19:17Write a few paragraphs.
01:19:18Take the wife and the kids
01:19:20out on a world cruise
01:19:22and then go to Disneyland
01:19:24where construction's
01:19:26building a nice shiny
01:19:27swimming pool
01:19:27in your backyard.
01:19:28All you do is come out
01:19:29and lie to everybody
01:19:29and you get
01:19:30a big beautiful house
01:19:32and your neighbor
01:19:33thinks you're special
01:19:34and your family
01:19:35thinks you're special.
01:19:36You know you're a piece of shit,
01:19:37but
01:19:42it's like,
01:19:42calm down, Charlie.
01:19:43He gets a lot of money
01:19:44to make my life miserable,
01:19:45to stalk me 24 hours a day
01:19:49and deny the world
01:19:51the ability
01:19:51to have a conversation.
01:19:53He gets a lot of money
01:19:54to do that.
01:19:58And it's when
01:19:59the most sensitive,
01:20:00most vulnerable
01:20:00to dying from starvation,
01:20:02they don't die from starvation
01:20:03in their typical migration route
01:20:05for God's sakes.
01:20:09Shitwork said,
01:20:11I have no patience
01:20:12for these people anymore.
01:20:14As these animals
01:20:15become malnourished,
01:20:16become more desperate.
01:20:17They've never become
01:20:18malnourished before.
01:20:20Fukushima.
01:20:21You piece of shit.
01:20:24I look forward
01:20:25to one of these days
01:20:26spitting in your fucking face.
01:20:31North Atlantic
01:20:32right whale health updates.
01:20:35Yeah, they're all emaciated.
01:20:37Go back to sleep.
01:20:39And the biggest headlines,
01:20:41if you go back
01:20:41to the last month cycle
01:20:42of dead whales,
01:20:44for instance,
01:20:45Timmy,
01:20:46the emaciated
01:20:47humpback whale
01:20:48that was rescued.
01:20:51But it wasn't.
01:20:52It was just brought
01:20:52somewhere else
01:20:52who didn't die there.
01:20:54It was the stupidest thing
01:20:55I ever saw.
01:20:57He spent $1.3 million.
01:20:58A millionaire donated
01:21:00donated $1.3 million
01:21:01to do it.
01:21:03If he had donated
01:21:04$1.3 million
01:21:05to me,
01:21:07the nuclear industry
01:21:08would be
01:21:08on his back
01:21:10crying and screaming
01:21:11because the whole world
01:21:13would be in their faces
01:21:14for the,
01:21:14every second
01:21:15for the rest
01:21:16of their lives.
01:21:20I was supposed to
01:21:21start off
01:21:21with that story
01:21:22tonight.
01:21:24I never got to it.
01:21:29That's not a bad thing.
01:21:32I think all those
01:21:33emaciated whales
01:21:34just from today
01:21:35are insane.
01:21:39There's no shortage
01:21:40of it.
01:21:43It's most likely
01:21:44what I'll,
01:21:44if I do a show
01:21:45tomorrow night,
01:21:46that's most likely
01:21:46what I'll be covering.
01:21:54I'm just heartbroken
01:21:56yesterday and today
01:21:57in particular
01:21:58because I'm covering
01:21:58this stuff.
01:22:01And,
01:22:09this stuff is different.
01:22:12So,
01:22:12if you go back
01:22:13in my videos
01:22:13you'll see
01:22:14thumbnails like this.
01:22:15All the species
01:22:16are emaciated.
01:22:18Like that.
01:22:19Like these.
01:22:21Like those.
01:22:22Like them.
01:22:25Oh,
01:22:25I screwed up.
01:22:27Like this.
01:22:29Like that.
01:22:30Severe emaciation.
01:22:35I've never seen
01:22:36that before.
01:23:03I was on the other screen.
01:23:05Right here.
01:23:06Hello everybody.
01:23:09Yeah,
01:23:10don't forget to give us
01:23:11a thumbs up folks
01:23:12if you make it this far.
01:23:15Are the Cascadia
01:23:16Research Collective
01:23:18and NOAA
01:23:18degenerates
01:23:19misleading the public
01:23:20about the emaciated
01:23:21whales' deaths?
01:23:24Japan is your enemy too.
01:23:33They're the enemy
01:23:34of the whales
01:23:35in humanity.
01:23:46All right.
01:23:53I'm just going to
01:23:55hear a song story
01:23:56but I'm just going to
01:23:57stop it.
01:23:58I'm just going to put
01:23:58a link in the description
01:23:59so you can find the song.
01:24:05Nuclear Carolinians
01:24:05Renaissance.
01:24:09Hi everybody.
01:24:12I'm going to put a link
01:24:13in the chat room
01:24:15to this song
01:24:18and I'm going to use
01:24:19for a closer tonight.
01:24:23And if you're watching
01:24:24this after the live stream
01:24:26you won't see the chat room
01:24:29I screwed that up today.
01:24:30You won't see the chat room
01:24:32for
01:24:3612 hours or so
01:24:38before it shows back up.
01:24:41So if you go to my playlist
01:24:44you'll see
01:24:45Anti-Nuclear Music
01:24:46so you can find it that way.
01:24:49Or at the bottom
01:24:49of my description
01:24:50you'll see the music site
01:24:51link on YouTube
01:24:52and you can find it that way.
01:24:58Just give me a second here.
01:25:04Yeah, I was kind of dreading
01:25:05doing this show tonight, eh?
01:25:07It's such a terrible story.
01:25:11There you go.
01:25:12I just put it in
01:25:12the chat room
01:25:13linked to the song
01:25:15that we're going to
01:25:15close with tonight.
01:25:18And get over and check out
01:25:19James' playlist.
01:25:21He's posting
01:25:22like he's experimenting
01:25:23right now
01:25:24so there's
01:25:26there's
01:25:26an amazing amount
01:25:27of music over there.
01:25:28He's not getting no views.
01:25:29It's not acceptable.
01:25:33Download that stuff
01:25:34and put it on
01:25:35your children's phones.
01:25:36Make the world better.
01:25:39Make the world
01:25:40a better
01:25:41place.
01:25:45Okay.
01:25:46That's it.
01:25:47I'm all busted up.
01:25:50Thank goodness
01:25:51we got through
01:25:51a show.
01:25:52That's the main thing.
01:25:53I wasn't sure
01:25:54it was going to happen
01:25:55tonight but
01:25:58we got her
01:25:59we got her done.
01:26:00Have a great night.
01:26:01Hooks for everybody.
01:26:02We'll see you everybody
01:26:06tomorrow night
01:26:07hopefully.
01:26:07Take care.
01:26:14Again the empire
01:26:16names its revival
01:26:19Again the ministers draft
01:26:23renewal plans
01:26:25Where monks inscribe
01:26:28Latin verse
01:26:30Bureaucrats calibrate
01:26:32safe limits
01:26:33Both call their labor
01:26:37salvation
01:26:54Charlemagne scripted
01:26:56order into parchment
01:26:57His scholars catalogued
01:26:59the ancients
01:27:01Calling inventory
01:27:02enlightenment
01:27:03Every sermon
01:27:05promised
01:27:05Empire restored
01:27:07Every parish
01:27:08stayed illiterate
01:27:10The movement
01:27:11ended
01:27:12as it began
01:27:13Archives
01:27:14intact
01:27:15Purpose
01:27:18forgotten
01:27:20Now new rulers
01:27:23Rehearse
01:27:23The ritual
01:27:24Technicians
01:27:25In paper suits
01:27:26Praise efficiency
01:27:28They chant
01:27:28Sustainability
01:27:30Swear that
01:27:31Radiance
01:27:32Redeems
01:27:33The age
01:27:34Old machinery
01:27:35Returns beneath
01:27:36New branding
01:27:37A mirror of the past
01:27:39Polished for
01:27:39Investors
01:27:41Waste accumulates
01:27:42Like unspoken
01:27:45Confessions
01:27:46Two renaissances
01:27:48One logic
01:27:49Command
01:27:50Substitutes
01:27:51For participation
01:27:53Metrics
01:27:54Replace meaning
01:27:56Preservation
01:27:57Wears the mask
01:27:59Of progress
01:28:00Each empire
01:28:01Manages its own decline
01:28:05And calls the
01:28:07Stagnation
01:28:09Secure
01:28:12HOO!
01:28:37Our budgets collapse
01:28:39But slogans persist
01:28:41Specialists write
01:28:43Analyzers of the pause
01:28:44Repositories of promise
01:28:47Expand
01:28:47Dry casks
01:28:49Outnumber
01:28:50Dreams
01:28:51Neither faith
01:28:52Nor vision
01:28:53Escapes
01:28:54Procedure
01:28:56Each promising
01:28:58Safekeeping
01:29:01Each guaranteeing
01:29:05Delay
01:29:06So the Carolingian
01:29:08And nuclear
01:29:09Stand together
01:29:10Two empires
01:29:11Of preservation
01:29:12Two revivals
01:29:13Without renewal
01:29:13They turned ambition
01:29:15Into record
01:29:15Keeping
01:29:16Risk
01:29:16Into bureaucracy
01:29:17Hoping to half-life
01:29:18A single pattern
01:29:19Through a thousand
01:29:20Years
01:29:23Management
01:29:23Mistaken
01:29:24For miracle
01:29:42To say
01:29:42Do you
01:29:42To hear
01:29:44To
01:29:44To
01:29:44To
01:29:44To
01:29:44To
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