Examining Rising Deaths: Who's Really Responsible? | The Way I Heard It

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Mirrored from >>> https://youtu.be/No3dCh2mWcI?si=S1VQKIE-59zwg4Sd
Jul 24, 2024 The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe
Mike Rowe and Gavin de Becker delve into the realities of excess mortality in America on this episode of The Way I Heard It. They explore critical issues surrounding unexpected deaths and examine the factors contributing to this concerning trend.

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The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe
Mike Rowe

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Transcript

0:00
Society is moving toward people not
0:04
having personal responsibility for their
0:07
behavior for their choices for their
0:09
safety uh there's a great Wordsworth
0:11
poem that he said in ourselves our
0:13
safety must be sought by our own right
0:16
hand it must be wrought we have to do it
0:19
and and it won't be corporations and it
0:21
won't be government uh and it won't be
0:24
the police department none of those are
0:26
present in your environment in the time
0:28
that you're facing uh the kinds of risk
0:30
that we face and even in the airplane
0:31
it's your responsibility right it's you
0:33
I'll give you a really interesting
0:35
example that after
0:36
9/11 uh there was a uh you know they
0:38
they improved the the security of the
0:41
cockpit and uh and various screening
0:44
processes changed and uh they put US
0:46
Marshals on board some flights but
0:48
there's 20,000 flights a day and there's
0:50
not 20,000 US Marshals on board and I I
0:52
actually opposed it because what happens
0:55
is that when you were if you were going
0:56
to be facing somebody trying to get into
0:58
the cockpit I want the passengers to get
1:01
up and participate I don't want them to
1:03
think oh the government's going to take
1:05
care of it in fact I wanted it in the uh
1:08
in the uh in the pre-flight uh
1:10
instructions from the say that if
1:12
somebody tries to to get into the
1:13
cockpit we rely upon the passengers to
1:15
participate I want flight3 protect the
1:17
cockpit that's right protect the cockpit
1:19
door but governments don't do that
1:21
because governments are in the total
1:22
business of we'll take care of it we
1:25
protect you in every regard it's the
1:27
infantilizing of course of grown-ups
1:30
yeah and and the and so you brought it
1:32
up in the in the in the context of
1:34
skepticism and there's a great uh quote
1:36
in that book by the way from uh from who
1:39
was the great uh astronomer oh
1:44
uh Carl Sean Carl Sean and it's a it's a
1:48
beautiful quote give me the book real
1:49
fast actually I'll find it so fast it's
1:51
it's intentionally I know the quote on
1:52
the very first page I know what you're
1:54
going to I know what you're going to say
1:55
list know how great this is if we are
1:57
not able to ask skeptical questions or
1:59
to interrogate those who tell us that
2:01
something is true to be skeptical of
2:03
those in Authority then we're up for
2:05
grabs for the next charlatan political
2:07
or religious who comes along it wasn't
2:09
enough Jefferson said to enshrine some
2:12
rights in a constitution or a Bill of
2:14
Rights this the punchline the people had
2:16
to be educated and they had to practice
2:18
their skepticism otherwise we don't run
2:21
the government the government runs us
2:23
and that is where we're living right now
2:25
the fact that that's in this book which
2:28
I haven't nearly plugged sufficiently uh
2:31
and the fact that that came from a
2:32
scientist of course is wonderful yeah
2:35
it's wonderful the book He's quoting
2:37
from us called cause unknown and even
2:40
though Gavin won't take credit for it he
2:42
uh he's mostly responsible for it
2:44
there's an intro by RFK Jr the book
2:47
itself uh was written by Edward
2:50
Dow famous Financial guy uh Black Rock
2:54
ran A4 billion fund and good God man
2:59
this book I mean I I know we're free
3:02
associating and I know we're over an
3:03
hour Chuck so but strap in it's going to
3:06
go for a while um I uh I've never read a
3:10
book like this I've never seen so many
3:13
pictures in such a serious book I've
3:17
never seen I've never seen such
3:21
footnoting I've never seen such backup
3:25
folks this book has QR codes yeah
3:29
hundreds of QR codes next to virtually
3:31
every claim yeah and I scanned a dozen
3:33
of them and it takes you down rabbit
3:37
holes you probably don't want to explore
3:40
but one of the things D does that's so
3:42
great is he he basically says what I've
3:45
tried to do in every crazy endorsement
3:47
relationship I've ever had which is say
3:49
don't take my word for it right just
3:51
don't take my word for this I I'm not an
3:54
idiot I did my homework you do yours
3:57
yeah and you you give people the
3:59
resources
4:00
and I mean I'm probably going to do a
4:02
poor job of summing this up but you're
4:04
just making a very
4:08
compelling you're not even making a case
4:10
you're you're asking some really
4:12
uncomfortable questions about why 60,000
4:18
people have died in excess of that which
4:20
we could reasonably expect what's the
4:22
official term excess mortality yes yeah
4:25
excess mortality is a measurement done
4:27
by every every country that uh has a
4:31
good organized medical system and it's a
4:32
measurement of how many people die every
4:35
year which is about three and a half
4:36
million people by the way Americans what
4:38
ages are they what are the causes of
4:39
death and we we know that you that
4:42
number is going to be fairly constant
4:44
and and and when you have excess
4:46
mortality you always have to ask why
4:48
right in this case it's excess mortality
4:50
among the exact population that has no
4:53
reason to Die Young fit healthy people
4:56
working class Americans working age
4:59
Americans pardon me and and working age
5:01
Americans who are working they are uh uh
5:05
fit enough to go to work so they're
5:06
they're not in the hospital and uh you
5:08
know we had in
5:10
2021 we had 40% increase a 40% increase
5:14
in death claims with for insurance
5:17
companies it was unheard of there's a
5:19
page in there that has all these news
5:21
Australia had it the UK had it and so
5:23
one of the questions we have to ask is
5:25
did our Mass vaccination program end up
5:28
harming some people let's say that all
5:30
vaccines have the intention to uh
5:34
benefit you by keeping you from some
5:36
particular disease measles moms polio
5:38
whatever it is but all vaccines also
5:40
have adverse effects for some people and
5:42
that equation has got to be reasonable
5:44
meaning it's got to be some people are
5:46
going to be harmed by this vaccine but
5:48
millions are going to be saved for
5:49
example but that's not the way this Mass
5:52
vaccination program worked it ended up
5:54
harming a tremendous number of people
5:56
who wouldn't be harmed young people and
5:59
what that book lays out is it it asks
6:01
the question it shows you athletes for
6:04
example young athletes dying right on
6:06
the basketball court right in front of a
6:09
of people never in the national news uh
6:11
by the way always we had to get
6:13
everything from local newspapers um but
6:15
it shows you something that we've never
6:18
seen nobody you know has ever been at a
6:21
sporting event and some guy dropped dead
6:23
and certainly no 16-year-old kid but
6:26
there are hundreds of them in that book
6:28
hundreds and the where they are you know
6:30
they were publicly reported and they are
6:33
young people who died in their sleep fit
6:36
young athletes and so we just have to
6:39
ask the question about what are the
6:41
possible causes and sometimes the
6:44
possible causes uh you know are hard to
6:46
find but in this case we at least have
6:48
to be asking and I give you a fast
6:49
example of something from the Wall
6:50
Street Journal so when all these uh
6:53
insurance companies reported this this
6:55
enormous excess death among uh working
6:57
age Americans Young Americans how the
6:59
insurance companies know because they're
7:01
paying debt benefits on them and and
7:02
they're we know they're working because
7:04
they're working for companies that
7:05
provide that insurance and they're
7:07
scrupulous at this point oh they they
7:08
they are in the business they're
7:10
actuaries man they're in the business of
7:11
they want to count every single one so
7:14
the Wall Street Journal did an article
7:15
about that acknowledging that the
7:17
insurance companies were saying that
7:20
they had a 40% increase in unexpected
7:23
deaths they don't ensure expected deaths
7:25
by the way so uh they had a 40% increase
7:28
and the Wall Street Journal said they
7:30
listed nine things that it could
7:32
be um uh late diagnosis because of
7:36
lockdowns uh delayed reaction from covid
7:40
uh uh addiction uh suicide because of uh
7:44
of layoffs and and you know lockdowns
7:48
and what have
7:49
you they list nine things and they just
7:52
don't bother to list the mass
7:54
vaccination that was administered to
7:56
working age Americans so you have to if
7:58
you're not even willing to ask the
8:00
question if it's a there's an electric
8:02
fence around that topic right and
8:04
electric fence topics are always um
8:08
filled with and they are always
8:11
um not able to resist scrutiny I'll give
8:14
you some electric fence topics would be
8:17
um you know uh uh transgender surgeries
8:19
for people under 18 that's an electric
8:21
fence topic I'm not allowed to ask any
8:23
questions about it I'm not allowed to
8:25
say I don't know maybe maybe you don't
8:26
start the hormone treatment until
8:28
they're after 18 not this is forbidden
8:30
speech in America um do vaccines cause
8:33
adverse reactions childhood vaccines uh
8:36
is the balance good on and there's
8:39
obviously many different vaccine
8:40
products including many that have been
8:42
recalled so when they're when they're
8:44
recalled because they were dangerous
8:46
that tells you not every vaccine is
8:47
perfect they're different products you
8:49
need to just talk a little bit about
8:51
back to um what's the promise safe and
8:54
effective people need to
8:57
understand what that means to the FDA
9:00
with with regard for instance and the
9:02
CDC take small pox yeah what what
9:06
qualifies is safe and effective for a
9:09
small pox vaccine well it's the it's I'm
9:12
glad you're asking because it's the
9:13
perfect example so the if you go to the
9:15
CDC website right now and you look up
9:18
small poox and you look up the small
9:19
poox vaccine they will tell you it's
9:21
safe and effective if you go to the
9:22
scripts Medical Center and look up small
9:25
pox they will say it's not safe and
9:27
effective uh the and so there's a
9:29
there's it's not a consensus on this
9:31
thing but in the case of the um CDC
9:34
website they then list the people who
9:37
are most likely with a small pox vaccine
9:39
which is a very bad vaccine by the way I
9:41
mean it's it's got a lot of Adverse
9:42
Events uh the list for you on the CDC
9:45
website right now the people who are
9:47
most likely to experience an adverse
9:50
event from the small poox vaccine and I
9:51
want to give you some examples of who
9:53
those people are MH um people with a
9:55
family history of heart
9:56
disease in other words 80% of the people
10:00
in the United States um uh people with
10:02
diabetes in other words 44% of the
10:05
people United on and on I'm not going to
10:06
give you the actual stats here but it's
10:08
in that book uh by the time you're done
10:10
with them telling you who it's not safe
10:12
for nobody left nobody left and and yet
10:15
they will use the phrase safe and
10:16
effective for that and that phrase is
10:19
like a you know a hit single that they
10:21
can't stop singing the CDC is in the
10:23
vaccine business they only they never
10:26
tell you about a vaccine problem they
10:28
only tell you and by the way way just to
10:31
correct myself on something they did
10:33
tell us about a vaccine problem with the
10:35
Johnson and Johnson covid vaccine but
10:38
they didn't didn't pull it all they did
10:40
is they put it on the package insert yes
10:43
this can cause blood clots now they have
10:45
on the package insert that this vaccine
10:47
can cause
10:49
myocarditis Mna and and fiser can cause
10:51
myocarditis in young people well the
10:54
problem is no consumer of a covid
10:57
vaccine ever SE the package insert right
11:01
you go to a pharmacy and they give you
11:02
the injection nobody says would you like
11:05
to see the package insert before you
11:06
make this decision and we weren't coming
11:08
out of a time when people were reading
11:11
the fine print people were desperate for
11:14
an authoritative figure to give them the
11:17
truth and what they found was they were
11:20
living in an expert or an age where
11:22
experts simply didn't agree on really
11:25
anything at all I think about um I think
11:28
about VI do man and and what happened
11:31
with MC I I'll ask you about that but by
11:35
way of explanation I'll tell you in
11:37
another life I was the Tylenol guy I did
11:39
30 ads for Tylenol right this is back in
11:42
the uh God I wasn't in the '90s I guess
11:45
it was in yeah mid 90s and you know they
11:50
they had the line share of of the market
11:53
and so it was a zero sum game everybody
11:55
was taking any kind of aspirin is
11:58
already taking it so the only way to get
12:00
new share is to attack one or the other
12:03
right so it's a knife fight in a in a
12:05
phone booth right and uh and I remember
12:09
in the midst of all that learning that
12:11
if aspirin came onto the market today as
12:15
a new product it would never make it
12:17
onto the Shelf because what 80,000
12:21
people a year wind up in the hospital
12:22
with stomach bleeding I'm one of them
12:25
yeah so that's where that's that's why
12:29
this book matters and that's why that's
12:31
why the Vio story is people mustn't
12:35
forget that but what hope do we have of
12:38
remembering that when we're currently in
12:41
the process of trying to put Co in the
12:44
rearview mirror yeah we're not curious
12:47
and we don't want to be skeptical it
12:49
seems well I think people look
12:51
governments are very sophisticated
12:53
throughout history this is not a comment
12:55
on the American government this is just
12:56
governments and and people in power in
12:58
general are in the business of saying
13:00
we'll take care of it right we scare you
13:02
first uh so it would be the you know the
13:04
the witch doctor saying oh you have the
13:07
snake in your soul and only these beads
13:08
and he shakes it and he scares you and
13:10
and you listen and nobody says go and
13:12
learn right everybody wants you to
13:14
listen to Authority be it the chief of
13:16
the village or the king or the president
13:17
or whatever and so in the case of Vio as
13:20
an example uh you know Vio there were 16
13:23
very important studies done on vix that
13:25
were published in advance of it being
13:27
put out they were favorable they they
13:29
were all all written by people who
13:32
worked for MC the manufacturer if you
13:35
like what you
13:37
heard won't you
13:41
please
13:43
sub I to and I hate to plead but please
13:47
pretty freaking
13:50
please
13:52
please oh please subcribe
13:58
[Music]

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