Dr Robert Malone On Covid Jab

Dr Robert Malone On Covid Jab

Robert Malone: “You are more likely to become infected, have disease, or even death, if you’ve been vaccinated with the COVID-19 Vaccine compared to the unvaccinated people.”

(Tom: I have gathered quite a collection of research articles that provide the full data that support this conclusion by Dr Malone. As well as having put together two Greens Powders to provide the nutritional support your body self-repairing. I encourage you to read the data then act on Dr Malone’s assessment to mitigate the risk of you being a Covid jab statistic.)

The video: https://x.com/joeroganhq/status/2044175112434299326?s=20

The data: https://www.healthelicious.com.au/NutriBlast-Anti-Spike.html

Elon Musk On Learning

Elon Musk On Learning

Elon Musk just put the entire university system on trial.

Not the curriculum. Not the professors. The premise.

Musk: “You don’t need college to learn stuff. Everything is available basically for free. You can learn anything you want for free.”

For a thousand years, universities held one monopoly. Access. You paid the toll or you stayed ignorant.

The internet erased that in a decade.

Every lecture. Every framework. Every textbook. Free. From any screen on Earth.

The six-figure tuition is no longer buying knowledge. It is buying a signal.

Musk: “There is a value that colleges have, which is seeing whether somebody can work hard at something, including a bunch of annoying homework assignments, and still do their homework assignments.”

That is the product. Not intelligence. Not creativity. Not vision. Compliance.

You are paying $200,000 to prove you can tolerate bureaucracy on a schedule.

Musk: “Colleges are basically for fun and to prove you can do your chores. But they’re not for learning.”

The entire system is a sorting machine for corporate HR. It does not measure what you can build. It measures whether you can sit still, follow directions, and deliver on command.

Four years of obedience dressed as education.

Musk: “If you’re trying to do something exceptional, you must have evidence of exceptional ability. I don’t consider going to college evidence of exceptional ability.”

The system optimizes for average. It rewards the compliant. It certifies the patient. It quietly filters out everyone who refuses to wait for permission.

The ones who reshaped the modern world never finished the test.

Musk: “Gates is a pretty smart guy, he dropped out. Jobs is pretty smart, he dropped out. Larry Ellison, smart guy, he dropped out.”

They did not drop out because it was too hard. They dropped out because the speed limit was too low.

The most dangerous thing a university does is convince a generational talent that finishing the syllabus is the achievement.

It is not. It is the floor.

A degree is a receipt for compliance. The future has never belonged to people who finish their homework. It belongs to the ones who never needed the assignment.

https://x.com/r0ck3t23/status/2044252562443120728?s=20

Cooking the Climate Data

Craig Kelly

See that white louvered box? Since November 2017, Sydney’s official temperatures have been recorded inside it at Observatory Hill. The screen is sited in what is the hottest available location at Observatory Hill, with heat reflecting from the adjacent old stone building and its tin roof only a few metres away directly to the south. BOM’s own parallel data shows that this new site records temperatures up to 3°C warmer than the previous location.

This has cooked Sydney’s temperature record – yet this cooked data is used in a study claiming Sydney’s summers are becoming longer.

https://x.com/craigkellyAFEE/status/2044312732984586638?s=20

Warney’s Death by COVID Jab Finally Revealed

Shane Warne

Nation First applauds Shane Warne’s son for revealing that a practically-forced COVID-19 vaccine caused his father’s death.

When Shane Warne died suddenly in March 2022, Australians mourned the loss of a sporting legend. Almost immediately, the machinery of officialdom moved to close the file: “natural causes,” we were told, and that was meant to be the end of the conversation.

But for Jackson Warne, the conversation never ended.

  • Shane Warne’s sudden death was officially labelled as “natural causes,” but his son Jackson Warne has revealed that the COVID-19 vaccine was the true catalyst behind the fatal heart attack.
  • Jackson Warne said that his father did not want the injections and was effectively forced to receive them due to workplace and societal pressures during the pandemic.
  • Government mandates and institutional coercion created an environment where personal medical choice was largely illusory, contributing to the circumstances surrounding Warne’s death.
  • Acknowledged cardiac side effects of mRNA vaccines, including myocarditis, reinforce concerns that vaccine-related heart complications were legitimate and should not have been dismissed.
  • Shane Warne’s passing stands as a powerful reminder of the human cost of pandemic policies and underscores the need for transparency, accountability, and an honest reckoning with government decisions.

https://substack.com/home/post/p-194346383

How To Treat People

“If you want someone to develop a specific trait, treat them as though they already had it.” ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Wisdom From A Fiction Writer

J K Rowling

“The Potter books in general are a prolonged argument for tolerance, a prolonged plea for an end to bigotry. And I think it’s one of the reasons that some people don’t like the books, but I think that’s it’s a very healthy message to pass on to younger people that you should question authority and you should not assume that the establishment or the press tells you all of the truth.” – J K Rowling

84.4% of Cancer Patients Taking Ivermectin + Mebendazole Reported No Evidence of Disease, Tumor Regression, or Cancer Stabilization After 6 Months

Ivermection Mebendazole Cancer Results

84.4% of the cancer patients taking ivermectin + mebendazole reported no evidence of disease, tumor regression, or cancer stabilization after 6 months.

That kind of signal doesn’t happen randomly. The key question is not just what we observed, but why.

There are now hundreds of preclinical studies—in both cell systems and animal models—showing that antiparasitic agents like ivermectin and mebendazole exert broad, multi-target anti-cancer effects across more than a dozen tumor types.

https://open.substack.com/pub/petermcculloughmd/p/844-of-cancer-patients-taking-ivermectin

Blue Zone BS

Blue Zone Warning Sign

(Tom: The view expressed in this article matches the results of a meta-survey that found as a group, light meat eaters live longer than heavy meat eaters, vegans or vegetarians.)

Dr Robert W Malone posts:

The Blue Zones concept, popularized by Dan Buettner through his books and the Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones documentary series, has captured a wide audience. It offers a clean, compelling narrative: certain populations live exceptionally long lives, and their plant-based diets are the key. It is an appealing idea. But when you look more closely, the foundation begins to wobble.

Much of the data comes from regions like Okinawa, Sardinia, and Ikaria, where birth records were historically inconsistent or incomplete. That matters. When documentation is weak, age inflation, whether accidental or not, becomes a real issue. Demographers have pointed out that some of these regions report more centenarians than in similar regions with far better record-keeping systems. That alone should make one pause.

Then there is the problem of narrative. The Blue Zones framework elevates a plant-based diet, particularly the eating of beans, as the central driver of longevity. To be fair, Buettner does equate exercise and community as important factors in longevity, but the emphasis on a plant-based diet is not based in reality. These populations lived physically demanding lives. They ate less, not because of discipline, but because food was limited. They were embedded in tight-knit families and communities. They were not consuming ultra-processed foods or large amounts of sugar. In other words, they lived in a completely different metabolic and social environment from ours. To describe a plant-based diet as the key factor to longevity is to oversimplify to the point of distortion.

Buettner takes observational snapshots of traditional societies and turns them into a modern prescription. The problem is that those societies were and are not vegan, not static, and not controlled experiments. He misrepresents their diet as being plant-based to the point of absurdity. They ate what was available, including animal foods, and they lived in a completely different metabolic and social environment.

Yes, even the diet itself is misrepresented. These were not uniformly plant-based populations. Sardinians consume sheep and goat products. Okinawans eat pork. Coastal communities rely on fish. And yes, they also eat chicken and mammalian meat, just not the way we do now. Poultry, lamb, goat, and occasional pork or beef are typically eaten in small amounts. Fish is often eaten.

What is now marketed as a Blue Zone diet is Buettner’s reinterpretation, shaped as much by ideology as by history. It is also worth noting that Buettner’s own beliefs reflect a particular set of cultural and political ideologies that tend to favor plant-forward, sustainability-focused frameworks, which may further shape how the data are presented.

As an example, In Live to 100: Secrets of the Blue Zones, Dan Buettner highlights an elderly man from Costa Rica as a kind of living proof of the Blue Zones thesis. It makes for great television. But as evidence, it is thin.

What you are seeing is an anecdote presented as if it were representative data. One man, however vigorous, does not establish causation. He is, by definition, a survivor. We are not seeing the many who lived under similar conditions and did not make it to that age. That is classic selection bias.

Then there is the bundling problem. His life reflects constant physical activity, a tight family structure, limited exposure to processed foods, and historically lower caloric intake. Those factors travel together. You cannot isolate one, such as eating beans and corn regularly, and declare that the explanation. Yet that is exactly how the narrative is framed.

The diet itself is also cleaned up for the camera. Yes, in this region, beans, corn, and local produce often center on the traditional “three sisters” of corn, beans, and squash, but that is just one element of their diet. This population was not and is not vegan. They eat a lot of animal protein, particularly beef.

Cattle were introduced in Costa Rico by the Spanish in the 16th century, shortly after colonization began in the early 1500s. From that point forward, livestock, especially cattle, became a central part of rural life, particularly in regions like Guanacaste and the Nicoya Peninsula.

Over time, this evolved into a distinct ranching culture. The Costa Rican sabanero, essentially the local equivalent of a cowboy, has long been a recognizable figure, managing cattle on horseback, working open pasture, and living a physically demanding, outdoor life. That tradition continues today.

So when the Blue Zones narrative highlights elderly men from Nicoya working the land, it is not a recent phenomenon or a plant-based agrarian system. It is a long-standing mixed agricultural and cattle culture, where animal foods, including beef, have been part of the local diet for centuries.

That historical context matters. It reinforces the point that these populations were never purely plant-based. Their diets reflected availability, seasonality, and a working landscape that included livestock, not an ideologically constructed eating pattern.

Yet the presentation subtly shifts toward a plant-based ideal that is a more modern interpretation than a historical reality. This also reflects a climate-change ideology, not based on fact, but on propaganda.

The climate argument is layered on, drawing on separate modeling studies rather than the Blue Zones themselves. So what you get is a narrative that sounds coherent, but is actually stitched together from different domains and presented as a single unified truth. The link between longevity and climate change gets inserted into your brain before you even have a chance to analyze the logic gaps.

And there is the quiet issue of age verification. In parts of rural Latin America, record-keeping has not always been precise. That does not invalidate every case, but it does introduce uncertainty that rarely makes it into the storyline.

What you end up with is a familiar pattern. A compelling individual is used to anchor a broader claim. Observation is turned into prescription. Complex, interlocking variables are simplified into a single takeaway. It feels coherent. It is easy to remember. But it is not how rigorous evidence works.

And this is where the comparison to the Mediterranean diet becomes instructive. The traditional Mediterranean pattern, the one that earned its reputation, was not built on refined carbohydrates. It was grounded in vegetables, legumes, fish, modest amounts of whole grains, and liberal use of olive oil, with refined carbs typically making up perhaps 10 to 20 percent of calories, often less. It also included poultry and mammalian meat, but in limited, context-driven ways, far from the daily, center-of-the-plate servings common today. Bread and pasta were present, but they were not the centerpiece of every meal, and they were far less processed than what we see today.

Contrast that with the modern Mediterranean-style diet, which can easily push 25 to 40 percent or more of calories from refined carbohydrates, including white bread, large pasta servings, and packaged foods carrying a Mediterranean label, and the metabolic profile begins to look much closer to a standard Western diet than to anything traditional.

The pattern here is consistent. Whether we are talking about Blue Zones or the Mediterranean diet, what gets marketed is a simplified, sanitized version of a much more complex reality. The common thread in the original settings was not a specific macronutrient ratio, such as beans, or even a plant-based diet. It was whole foods, lower caloric intake, minimal exposure to industrialized diets, and physical work.

JGM

https://open.substack.com/pub/rwmalonemd/p/blue-zone-bs