[00:00:09] [SPEAKER_00]: Show.
[00:00:34] [SPEAKER_01]: Pretty much. Yeah, I feel that way. So much, so much today is on our minds. And so we're
[00:00:44] [SPEAKER_01]: jumping around a little bit, but there's just so much to kind of make the point. And so
[00:00:49] [SPEAKER_01]: I like to do that quickly and get to those points quickly. And that's why last segment
[00:00:54] [SPEAKER_01]: it was they're under the opinion they want to lock you down. Boom. That's it. That's
[00:00:58] [SPEAKER_01]: really truly what they want to do. They just they just want to keep putting out articles
[00:01:02] [SPEAKER_01]: that that help you get to the same idea. So I just hope we don't do that. Please. Breaking
[00:01:10] [SPEAKER_01]: News, you want to hear breaking news from Fox News? Yeah. Here's the headline. FBI must
[00:01:17] [SPEAKER_01]: do more to fight sex crimes against children, says the DOJ. Watch doc. Yeah, you think? Yeah.
[00:01:28] [SPEAKER_01]: Captain Obvious. Oh my gosh. I can't stand headlines. Anyway, I had to share that just because
[00:01:36] [SPEAKER_00]: it was so dumb. It was it was stupid. Yeah. And they shouldn't be spending time after
[00:01:44] [SPEAKER_01]: counterfeiters. I'm just like, you think? Do you think you could concentrate on that
[00:01:49] [SPEAKER_01]: for a minute instead of just being weaponized and going after people possibly? Well, what's
[00:01:54] [SPEAKER_00]: more scary? What's up? Child abusers or teachers or parents? Which which is the
[00:02:04] [SPEAKER_00]: three years? Well, obviously the parents are the scariest. Yes, of course. It's
[00:02:08] [SPEAKER_01]: just this. That's what we're served up all the time. This is this kind of stuff.
[00:02:12] [SPEAKER_01]: So I was doing a lot of research and really like like looking at
[00:02:18] [SPEAKER_01]: what DARPA was was working on. And I just I just wanted to mention just a couple of things about
[00:02:24] [SPEAKER_01]: that as I didn't go into a lot of depth, but I want to I want to get your take on this.
[00:02:28] [SPEAKER_01]: Melty. Okay. There is this thing called lights, LITES. And my own state has a
[00:02:36] [SPEAKER_01]: university hospital that's part of this. And I think there's like 12 different,
[00:02:41] [SPEAKER_01]: maybe 15 different hospitals, lights, LITES. It's a DOD funded and it created a network
[00:02:48] [SPEAKER_01]: of these hospitals. Okay. A network of trauma systems and centers. And they do all this
[00:02:54] [SPEAKER_01]: extensive data collection and research. And they say it's to improve the trauma care,
[00:02:59] [SPEAKER_01]: of course, for civilians and military, of course, always military. Everything is kind
[00:03:03] [SPEAKER_01]: of shielded behind the military. If it's for military, everyone says yes, they don't question it.
[00:03:09] [SPEAKER_01]: And that's our one of our biggest problems right now. We don't question anything.
[00:03:13] [SPEAKER_01]: And so they had all of these different things that they were working on, of course,
[00:03:18] [SPEAKER_01]: for military. That was that's always the excuse. And it was all this emerging science.
[00:03:23] [SPEAKER_01]: And they wanted enhancing soldier protection against evolving threats. Okay. So in the last
[00:03:29] [SPEAKER_01]: hour, I mentioned that they're really into fake blood, synthetic blood, so they can give it to
[00:03:33] [SPEAKER_01]: people. You might be a recipient of some fake blood that DOD comes up with. Who knows what
[00:03:39] [SPEAKER_01]: they're putting in it? I don't know. Who knows if it'll actually work. It's really weird, you
[00:03:44] [SPEAKER_01]: guys, what they're doing, what they're really up to. Because we have enough people to give
[00:03:49] [SPEAKER_01]: blood right now. There's no reason in the world that something unless something big is coming,
[00:03:55] [SPEAKER_01]: and I mean big, there's no reason to work on this with gazillions of dollars. Okay.
[00:04:00] [SPEAKER_01]: So they had the enhancing the soldier protection. And they also had
[00:04:06] [SPEAKER_01]: the coming up with something that they could install or put on a patient
[00:04:13] [SPEAKER_01]: where they basically could say whether this patient is going to die or not, just kind of
[00:04:19] [SPEAKER_01]: based on a quick look see and then putting something on them that would be programmed. Very
[00:04:25] [SPEAKER_01]: strange stuff. And then also it was the of course shelf stable whole blood substitute
[00:04:32] [SPEAKER_01]: because it's so needed, right? And then it was the repair funded project. And then they also
[00:04:41] [SPEAKER_01]: had a project where they give Cavalier. It's calcium and vasopressin following injury
[00:04:48] [SPEAKER_01]: in early resuscitation. And it said, can I opt out of this study at one of these hospitals?
[00:04:53] [SPEAKER_01]: Because most people going to the hospital do not know they're going to be part of a study, right?
[00:04:57] [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah. And it said, it said, yes, you can opt out. You can opt out. And it gave this explanation
[00:05:03] [SPEAKER_01]: about how to do it. And then at the very end, it said opting out will not prevent you from
[00:05:06] [SPEAKER_01]: getting these products as part of your normal care. So no, really, you can't opt out.
[00:05:12] [SPEAKER_01]: You can't. So they went on to say yes and then followed it up with, but not really.
[00:05:17] [SPEAKER_01]: You can't really opt out because we're going to do it to you anyway as part of your normal care.
[00:05:21] [SPEAKER_01]: It just makes me wonder, you guys, if there was, if there's a big event coming and even if there's
[00:05:26] [SPEAKER_01]: not, even if it's just normal town USA, what are they doing in these hospitals?
[00:05:32] [SPEAKER_01]: And what are you a part of? And you don't know that you're a part of it. It's scary.
[00:05:37] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, the problem to me seems very obvious. We have an average lifespan of around 80 years.
[00:05:49] [SPEAKER_00]: The universe is 800 billion trillion years old and it should last another 800 billion trillion
[00:05:56] [SPEAKER_00]: years. But we're here for 80 years of it. We place too much value on human life, not quality
[00:06:06] [SPEAKER_00]: of life. Life itself is not the important thing. It's quality of life that's important.
[00:06:14] [SPEAKER_00]: You know, bleeding out is not a bad way to die if you have to die in an accident situation.
[00:06:21] [SPEAKER_00]: But who knows what this would do to you? What they're doing to you. Right.
[00:06:25] [SPEAKER_01]: One of their projects that they're putting a lot of money into besides for fake blood is just
[00:06:29] [SPEAKER_01]: like you said, it's well, it's you're looking at life, right? You're saying I want this
[00:06:33] [SPEAKER_01]: quality of life. This is for dementia and it's mobile wearable technologies, putting them in
[00:06:40] [SPEAKER_01]: patients, putting them in people. It's a solution they say for remote passive and continuous assessment
[00:06:48] [SPEAKER_01]: of all of your cognitive function based on your behavior and all of your data that goes in continuously
[00:06:55] [SPEAKER_01]: because it's in you. You're wearing it or it's in you installed in you. If they have a hint
[00:07:02] [SPEAKER_01]: that you might have a memory problem, which is happening a lot based on a lot of different things,
[00:07:08] [SPEAKER_01]: but isn't that it's creepy. It's creepy because it's going to feed data. So within what? Because I
[00:07:13] [SPEAKER_01]: was thinking the demise pill, you know, the Obama plan for older people is very strange.
[00:07:18] [SPEAKER_00]: Well in fairness though, maybe it'll be a device that when it senses you're ready to
[00:07:23] [SPEAKER_00]: crap your pants, it can close your sphincter. Thank you. That would be nice. I really,
[00:07:31] [SPEAKER_01]: really appreciate that. I really added a lot, but it's the absurdity of this. I know. I know.
[00:07:39] [SPEAKER_01]: Now here's the deal. If you were to exhibit a behavior like that and they call that normal care
[00:07:44] [SPEAKER_01]: and you go into these hospitals like University of Utah or any of these other hospitals across
[00:07:49] [SPEAKER_01]: the nation, and by the way more and more signing up because there's lots of money involved when
[00:07:53] [SPEAKER_01]: DOD gets to do research on you, you have become a lab rat. We're already lab rats,
[00:07:59] [SPEAKER_01]: but this is on a different level. This is you going in thinking you're there for a certain
[00:08:04] [SPEAKER_01]: reason or getting care for something that happens and then assessing that you might need this.
[00:08:10] [SPEAKER_01]: It goes in you in some way. If they decide to do that more than just something that you
[00:08:16] [SPEAKER_01]: wear all the time, okay? And then all of a sudden data is fed back on you so that they can make
[00:08:23] [SPEAKER_01]: decisions for you. We already have that weird, very, very strange new consent but not consent.
[00:08:33] [SPEAKER_01]: So it's a form and it basically is you're giving consent because you're unconscious.
[00:08:39] [SPEAKER_01]: So we're going to go with a yes on that, right? A big yes. You're unconscious. That means yes,
[00:08:43] [SPEAKER_01]: do whatever you want to me. I'm your lab rat. You get in an accident or something happens,
[00:08:49] [SPEAKER_01]: you hit your head, you're unconscious. If no one's around, they go ahead and sign this form for you
[00:08:54] [SPEAKER_01]: saying that you're giving consent. They're really switching things up to this which is creepy,
[00:09:01] [SPEAKER_01]: is strange. I hope that when you go into the hospital for any reason, you have an advocate
[00:09:06] [SPEAKER_01]: and make sure that this is written down, that somebody is going to be with you watching
[00:09:11] [SPEAKER_01]: like a hawk every single thing that they do. Yeah, the other option is to get a tattoo on your
[00:09:16] [SPEAKER_00]: chest that says no experimental medication or resuscitation. Like a tattoo right on your chest.
[00:09:25] [SPEAKER_01]: Well, there's one answer for you and I'm telling you that we're going to see more of this and
[00:09:32] [SPEAKER_01]: this is courtesy of socialized medicine. But oh, don't call it that. No, no. Call it healthcare,
[00:09:39] [SPEAKER_01]: socialized. This is what's coming out of socialized medicine. They're able to funnel all kinds of money
[00:09:45] [SPEAKER_01]: into this. There's going to be stuff done against your will or without your consent. And I'm just
[00:09:51] [SPEAKER_01]: letting people understand. Be right back, Kate Daly.