Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistleblower, an American patriot. Prepare to embrace the uncomfortable truth, because this program has no time for comforting lies. Here is civil liberties enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI agent Kyle Serif. No time for the comforting lies. It's Tuesday, March the 12th. And we've got a great interview for you today. One of my favorite people. One of the great helps as I took my story public.
Dan Bongino was one of them. Tracy Beans was the 2nd. That's who we're talking to today. Got good? No, I got a good feeling. It's going to be a good conversation. You guys are going to enjoy it. Let me start off by thinking off all the sponsors. We're going to get them and take care of them and and appreciate them up front. Starting with my friends over at 4 Patriots, that's the number 4 Patriots. I got two choices. You got two choices. Prepare or repair?
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We've got all the things. They're all great and you guys will like it. Lastly, and certainly not least, my friends at Catholic Vote. If you're not getting the loop, you're not looped in, So solve that problem. Just go to catholicvote.org, catholicvote.org. Right on the homepage right there. You're going to see a very easy place to put in your e-mail address, your zip code, and they're not going to spam you. They're going to send you the best one minute read of your
day. You're going to get a great sense of what's happening in the world. You can also follow them on social media at Catholic Vote. Very easy to do if you watch the Dinesh D'souza show. Not too long ago, when I was guest hosting, I had the president of Catholic Vote, Brian Birch. He's a very smart guy. We have a ton of overlap in our life too. Very interesting. He went to the University of Dallas and I used to go to Mass there when I was a little kid. So I don't know, we kept finding
all these little commonalities. I think God puts us in the places we need to be. A Catholic Vote has jumped in and has been really truly a special, a special support for the Serafin family and we appreciate them. I cannot say that enough. If you guys are not getting the loop, it's free. It doesn't cost anything. Check that out. I think that's where we're going to end, that's we're going to end for now, and we're going to get into a little conversation with my buddy Tracy Beans.
OK, ladies and gentlemen, I have been talking in the background to my friend Tracy Beans. We're going to bring her on. In fact, first, let's just show you who we're talking about. We're talking about Beans with AZ Tracy Beans at Tracy Beans on Twitter, who just hit 600,000 followers. And I'm very excited that we're gonna have a chat because I haven't had her on my show before.
Tracy, I haven't had you on on the show because I had to build it up big enough that it was nice enough to have you over to our home. So welcome to the Kyle Seraphin Show. It is so good to be here. Is it stupid? I think it's regular. I think that's what we do. Your show is fantastic. I love it. I love I I try to send everybody over to it. That's far too when yours ends and people don't know this, but the time that I chose was
specifically to be after yours. It was like Beans has this weird start that is at a 30 minute mark and it's going to end, so I'm going to start after that. That's why we chose 9:30. It was very kind of you to do that because it didn't make sense for us to compete for the same people, which at the time they were the same people. Now you've grown significantly. So we're just got a lot of people that I don't. Well, for folks who don't know, let's talk about who you are.
I'm going to actually switch ears. I don't know why I'm still wearing these ears, but I'm going to switch ears. Let's start with who you are. You're obviously the editor in Chief over at Uncover DC. We broke some stories together. We'll talk about those in just a minute, but let's get a quick intro. I'm going to throw you on the screen. Tell people who is Tracy Beans and what? Why Beans? Oh, why beans?
Beans is because when I was in high school my boyfriend at the time and all my friends started saying cool beans and I hated it. So he started calling me Tracy Beans just to piss me off. So it stuck and even my in laws call me beans. My husband calls me beans. Everyone calls me Beans. It's not my actual last name, but it it just I made all my social media. Tracy Bean's because it was my nickname and then I just kept it. I am an investigative
journalist. I am and have been involved in grassroots activism since 2001. I am. I pride myself on doing like, actual journalism. It's our tagline at Uncover DC and I'm, I'm friends with Kyle Seraphin and the Suspendables. And that's a little bit about me. Are you done putting your ears on? I got the ears on. I'm. I'm throwing some stuff on the screen here. Tell me about the high wire relationships, which is relatively new.
Yeah, it's it's actually I I've known them over there for quite a while. They are probably the only other outlet that does information and reporting that I would ever stand up next to and proudly proclaim I worked with. The integrity that comes from those folks is is, bar none, the highest. They are focused in the health space. Dell Big Tree founded I Can, the Informed Consent Action Network because he wanted to raise awareness about the dangers of vaccines way back in the day.
I I I have also been on that train for quite a long time. We met at a conference. Before it was in fact. Way before it was cool, yes. We met at a conference several years back and we decided to work together. They wanted me to contribute some editorial to their growing pool of journalism, and I gladly and graciously accepted because they're absolutely amazing people doing the right thing. So what? Do you think about the idea that people in journalism now are activists?
You've said both of those words in the same sentence. Let's talk about journalist, activist, investigative. What do these things mean? It's hard because it's hard because things have become so polarized. You know, sometimes you have to report on things that go against what you want to say or what you want to.
You know, feel if I find out that someone's doing something dirty, I'm going to tell people And that's the hardest truth, especially when you are your media is is is partisan and that's just the way it is now and most activists are journalists, believe it or not, even though that's not necessarily the way it should be. That's the way it is because they're the ones that are super passionate about the causes that they're trying to bring to the world. And so it's kind of like a
natural morph into that. But it's hard to stay unbiased and focused on the truth if you let that need or want for one side to win cloud your judgement. So yeah, it's bad. It's it's it's a very big negative. Do you think there was ever an unbiased journalist time? Was there ever that sort of media right down the middle giving you the unvarnished no opinion time? Probably not. They might have pretended so, but I don't think so. No. There's always propaganda, even
if it's inadvertent. At some at some point, I wanna, I wanna have you and my dad talk about that. Or maybe my dad will just come join you on my show. But my dad was in journalism for a long time and one of his papers he wrote even back in the 60s was sort of the the myth of this journalistic unbiased thing, the whole Walter Walter Cron site. Like that's the way it is
nonsense. I remember him telling me that when I was a kid and he was like, of course that's not the way it is. That's just the way that he saw it and the editor saw it. So editorial bias is the thing that we all see. We're all familiar with that. What do you do as you're looking and you're evaluating news
sources? I think so much of this, that lens, as long as you know there's a lens that's being tilted like, oh, obviously it's being slanted red or it's being slanted blue or it's being slanted green, whatever it may be. When you look at news sources, how are you evaluating them for bias? What? What's things stand out to you? Factual information that is portrayed in a certain way, even if it's still factual spin for, for a lack of a better word, are. These coloring words, is that
what we're looking for? We're looking for like emotional trigger words kind of things. Yeah. And the way you know someone's standing at a door and you can portray it as they're about to knock the door down or that they open the door and walk through it and knocking the door down is better for you and what you're trying to get out to the general public. So you say that even though someone pushed them into the. Do you see what I'm saying?
Like somebody actually pushed somebody through a door, but you say they were that they knocked the door down. That's a better analogy. The same set of facts just written in a different way. That's the same way they they maneuver polling, They ask you questions in a certain way to evoke whatever response that they would like to get. It's all about language and how it's used. So knowing a fact set at as dry as possible, you can usually sniff out the propaganda or the spin on columns.
And then the more of it you see, the more you know they're biased beyond repair. So yeah. How do you and you do a lot of editing And so I've I've been the victim or the beneficiary I would say probably of your editing because we've done a piece together, which I'll show up here on the screen here in just a second. Some people may actually even know me because we did this piece together. There it is, the the FBI doubling down on going after Christians.
The story of them going after the the Catholic Mass in the Richmond field office. Some of my, I feel like more unvarnished work. I I come at it with a lot of opinion but I try to take it out of there. Some of the stuff was you're good editing. I I actually will credit that 100% because it's like we want to try to tell facts and let everyone run where they want. Everyone's going to take a spin at some point.
How do you approach that as an editor and and and handle your writers because you've got a a handful of people with different strong opinions. We we don't really edit for that. What we'll do is like, if your article was heavy on opinion, that's what I would have labeled it, and it wasn't. And basically what we edited in your article was very minor grammatical stuff. I try to publish as unvarnished as I can, especially in the the case of this piece because you're the one with the
expertise. And I wanted to make it pristine in your words, because that was one of the things that made it very attractive and kind of like an FU to the rest of. The Well, would we? We've never told the story. Yeah, We've never told the back story of this. And I, or at least I have it on my show here. So I want to kind of discuss it because there are other outlets that would have been interested in the story. Would you agree? Oh yes, they did. They took it. So yeah, absolutely.
So we saw everybody run with the story that that we put out, but nobody was willing to let me write the story. Everyone else that I said, look, I've got this information and and I want to tell you what it is, I want to write it. And everyone said I literally had someone from Daily Wire, let's just call names out because we don't care. Somebody from Daily Wire said we can't just deputize you as a
journalist. And I wanted to head butt them, but they weren't in the same room with me, so I just had to laugh. That's a ridiculous claim. There is no, there's no pronouncement. There is no ordination to be a journalist, Kyle. I do hereby now deputize you, a journalist, for uncovered deceit so. Gross. How silly. So they didn't. Nobody wanted to run it. Let's talk about what it takes for you to to decide to run that piece back then.
And I think that was one of the big basis of our friendship too. Receipts, That's. Not what I wanted to put on. Where are you at? There you are. Receipts. That's it. Well, receipts and I had already had significant a significant number of hours of conversation with you. I I have, I've been blessed with some really good, I don't know, instinct. I have a very good sniffer. I can tell when someone's ABS artist and when they're
legitimate. And I knew how important this was, and I knew that the information behind it was really important. And I knew that it was important that you tell the story. Because first of all, who the hell is anybody to say who is and who isn't a journalist? Second of all, you acted as a journalist in your telling of
the story. And third of all, who wouldn't want to publish a piece from someone who risked everything to to to call out the absolute disgusting behavior of the FBI on their website as part of their organization? That's ridiculous to me. That somebody would tell you, no, that's that's stupid. And it shows an utter lack of courage in my perspective, too. I guess you could say I was taking a liability on by letting you write it, right? I mean technically. I think you were.
I think that's the, I think that's the story that the others had or that they, but we know that they all ended up covering it. It doesn't matter whether it was Heritage Foundation, a Daily signal, Daily wire. It was safe because it's already out there in the world, so. And I was fine. I was fine with it. I was actually ecstatic to I've published, Steve, I've published you. You're brilliant. You're really good at what you do. You care about the facts, and that's pretty much it.
And that's exactly what we want at Uncover DC. So why wouldn't I publish it? Of course I would. This is why we have to have Tracy on. But I had to wait until the house was nice, 'cause she's so flattering. I at least need to make sure that it was clean. We had to do the dishes. We had to, you know, clean up around her. I know you really well, Kyle. I know what you like.
Despite my despite my failure to see you when you were in Austin, which I want to say was no fault of my own, I was being, I was on travel detail and I can't handle it. But I missed a a really great opportunity to see Tracy at the well, it was on Pandemic 3, right? Yeah, I was. I was at the premiere of that on behalf of the High Wire. I was and I was the kind of grand MC of their pre show event and I invited Kyle as my VIP guest and he stood me up. Failed.
Just straight failed it. Now like literally stood me up though. Literally. He. Texted. He ignored me. Yeah, I was on a plane and then I just failed. I just couldn't get it done. Another opportunity hopefully will arise, but there'll be much more caution. Tracy won't publish my next piece. It'll be more editorial. She'll sneak some little evil line in there. Vindictively, I I'll. I won't hold it against you.
I've also come on your podcast a number of times and I've hijacked it and I've gone completely sideways. And at one point you called me out because I didn't listen to you, which is also funny. We have a really good dynamic which people can tell. Dude, I was in the middle of talking. I was telling him something important. I was telling him something important and I'm like I said this, I'm, I don't talk a lot. So I said my little piece and I said right Kyle.
And this is what I see. It's so bad, it's the only time. Sorry, I wasn't. I wasn't listening to a thing he just said. You know what? I'll say that that is a tribute to the the close sort of rapport that we have. It really is 'cause there's only a couple of people in the world that I have done that to, and they're all people that I I really think really highly of, which is such a backwards thing. I must get that from my mother. There must be, that must be what's going on here.
Tell me. There's one more thing please, that had me dying. We were covering the hearing the suspendables in in in Congress and we were doing a live stream together. Do you remember you hit the voice modulator? Yes, and just destroyed you. I have never laughed that hard on a stream before. I was literally crying it. Was so disrespectful to those members of Congress, wasn't it? It was hysterical. I gotta find it. I think I sent you the clip of
it like however long ago. We should just yeah, I should go dig that up. It's from so we can find it. It's if anybody wants to go dig into the archives, it's May 18th is when we streamed that. That's when the boys went live. Was it May or March? Might be March. I'm not going to replay it on you now. Right now because I want to dig. We we've only have a certain amount of time because you've got other engagements. So here's what we're going to do. You talked about having a good sniffer.
You talked about being able to suss out what is nonsense, what is not. You've been right on the line, whether it be vaccine hesitancy or calling out what the the shots were and you got a couple articles. So let's talk about validation, vindication and the pre instinct knowing before everyone else did apparently about how ridiculous this 2020 to 2024 journey has been. For those of us that are getting more and more skeptical of institutions, let's Where do you want to start?
So 2006? Good. A little bit before then actually, was when they released the Gardasil vaccine and the Gardasil vaccine, I saw immediately it was that the Gardasil was to protect women from HPV, which some strains of HPV, which is a virus 'cause cervical cancer in women, which can be detected very early with annual exams and so whatever. However, this vaccine was being given to teenagers, teenage girls, and there was all of a sudden an outcry of, of injured teenage girls who had been
harmed by the Gardasil vaccine. Paralysis, all kinds of autoimmune diseases similar to what we're seeing now. That was basically my light bulb moment. Ish. Right when my daughter was born and then from there on out the the ball just started rolling down the hill. So I have been very very anti vaccine since then. What? Was the what was the formulation of the Gardasil one? Because that's actually not that familiar to me. It's it's not an mRNA vaccine. It's a standard.
You know, I think it's a live attenuated it from them. I might be wrong. I don't know. All I know is there are a ridiculous number of chemicals in that damn thing, far more than we are used to seeing in
our body. And it was causing absolute harm to girls and their moms were bringing them in a shambles, some of whom died in to be checked for this and saying they just got this vaccine and the entire Pharmaceutical industry and everyone in the in the media, they actually picked it up back then because it was much different, but nobody was helping these people. Do you?
I mean, you remember, 'cause we're in the same age bracket where the people who were refusing vaccines were like the hippy dippy people in Oregon that didn't shave their armpits. And we're like, whatever, they're far left. They're they probably hug trees. They don't like medicine. Like what? They they think antibiotics are bad, even though it's the safety that brings up our world. And then slowly, those people kind of migrated into the mainstream. Now they're without a they're
without a colony. Those people have to be unmoored. They have leftist ideas. They still have their their take on medicine may not be the best thing in the world, that there's natural ways and and I feel bad for them more because we used to laugh about it and then now you're like, oh man, what did they know? Yeah, they people laughed at me often actually.
And and that's that's something that always happens when you're kind of screaming about something that everybody else thinks that is OK because the government would never hurt us, right. So they would never tell us something was safe if it wasn't. And it's, you know, it's it's an unholy Trinity between the vaccine manufacture, the pharmaceutical companies, the CDC, the FDA, and also the Congress, the the the money is just absolutely insane.
That's always been flowing. Among these this this Trinity of of terribleness are. We right to trace that back to Reagan. Well, yeah, Reagan. Reagan, they actually did a big interview with the woman who was behind trying to get the liability protection, trying to trying the the bill that actually ends up stripping liability protection or giving liability protection to vaccine makers was actually the opposite of what they had brought forward
to start. They wanted they wanted more government oversight over the harms that were going on and they they flipped it all around and and Reagan made a mistake. But what they basically did was there was there was many vaccine injured children and many parents speaking out. And this is how RFK got involved in it way back then. Too many children and many moms speaking out about what happened
to their kids. Autism, all kinds of other issues, deaths, SIDS, which is actually dropped precipitously in the in the time period where people weren't going out to the doctor to get their shots. Kyle, I don't know if you've ever seen those. Or not. But that doesn't surprise me. It also is horrifying to think about. Yeah, yeah. No, don't. Don't put your kids down, face down to sleep, because they'll suffocate to death. Meanwhile, it's actually vaccine injury.
Absolutely. Meanwhile, my daughter sleeps face down every day. The minute that she's able to move herself even a little bit, you're like, OK, cool. Like she's fine. She can put her head where she needs to go and maybe seek out oxygen. That's what they do. It didn't and and there's probably my wife and I are deep in this because we've got a six
month old right now. But one of the things that everybody sort of assumed right about the time when they started putting kids on their back, they also said you shouldn't have a bunch of soft things and items that are smother capable. So we cleaned up the crib environment and we flipped them on their back at the same time and there was no way to say which one was the solution. They both seem to work good. That's how they do most experiments.
But yeah, so they there were a bunch of kids getting backs injured, and parents went to Congress and what Reagan basically did, nobody was taking the vaccines. So they they made it so that the vaccine manufacturers couldn't be held liable for the vaccines. And then they formed the Vaccine Injury Compensation Fund, which is supposed to have the government come in and compensate people who are harmed
by vaccines. But the problem is, as we see today, no, there's no the pharmaceutical companies are are genius because they can say any of these things are not caused by the vaccine and there's no good way to quote prove they are. So it's a very, it's a very profitable arrangement for them. We flipped the the burden of responsibility. It used to be that the assumption is, is that your drug, which is a foreign thing that we are going to put into the body, must be proven safe.
And now they're like, well, you can't prove it's not safe, which is that's not science, by the way. That's not how we do science historically. No. And you know, like you just mentioned with adding two variables to an experiment before, you know what causes what, they did the same thing. They do the same thing in all these trials.
If you're really, really super into this kind of thing and you're a legal nerd, you can go and take a look at the work of Aaron Siri. He's an attorney who's been fighting this for years and years, and he's actually the attorney for ICANN and the high wire who's been doing all of this. I don't know, is that on your end or my end? Yeah, it was my end. I was like something is happening and I don't know what it is but I like. It it was an e-mail notification
anyway. Anyway, so he's been doing amazing work defending families against this and and getting some compensation for them. But even with the COVID vaccine trial, this is how I knew and and you know Gigi from uncovered to see. I've known her for a long, long, long time. Ago, and I got her on the screen too. Check that out. There she is. She lived in New York with me.
I met her at around 2009, 2010. She sadly, sadly, sadly lost her daughter to suicide when her daughter was 16 because she was prescribed Zoloft. And Zoloft was off label and should never have been prescribed to to kids and her doctor was getting kicked back to prescribe that medicine, to quote depressed children really just going through their teenage
years. And so because of Gigi, she taught me so much about, gosh, so much so it was really back then that it all started and we we fight alongside each other today, still all these years later. But the the COVID vaccine, they did the same thing, Kyle. They unblinded their trial and asked their unblinded participants if they wanted to get the actual shot. So you're in the middle of A of a trial, You've got Group A and group of placebo. Group A gets the shot, placebo
is placebo. About halfway through they look at the placebo group and they say, you know what, we want to offer you the opportunity to actually get this thing. Would you like it in the middle of the trial? Right. So the data is now corrupt. Look, one of the things that blew my mind, and my father actually called my attention to it, having a lifetime in the news business, is that there are certain types of data that we
can only get in arrears. And it takes like a lot in arrears, Like if we want crime statistics or how many people were murdered in a city we keep up generally running tally. But the official things don't happen until, you know, a couple months into the next year. And if it's stuff from the government that's federal, it's even longer because the federal government is awful at it. So that's pretty normal.
And then we saw real life up-to-the-minute tickers of how many people had died from a disease that we couldn't even properly ascribe the cause of death by that time. And it's running like the national debt counter, which is based on an algorithm that we can actually do real math and know what the national debt is at any given second. That actually is how banks work. They were doing bank counters on COVID deaths under President Trump.
What on earth did anyone like? How did How did that fool anybody? It did fool a lot of people. Didn't. Because I'm convinced at this point, if you really look at this, there's a third of people, probably a little less in this country, who actually have thinking brains who can think for themselves. It's very, very sad, but it's true. And part of me wonders, Kyle, I don't know. This is completely just my brain working like in my personal
time. Do you feel like in like 3 or 4 years, maybe 5, there's going to be some like Overlord that comes and and says you guys made it, you are the winners, like we were in some weird effing Hunger Games experiment or something. Like, let's kill the part of let's call off the part of the population that will do anything we say and just keep these people who can think for themselves.
I I feel like it's more likely they try to kill us off, because thinking for yourself is not historically good for those who have power. I don't know. I mean it's just I feel like, I feel like honestly it was a big test and we what was that experiment that RFK talked about that they did where they had somebody turning up the the electric. It's the Milgram experiment. The Milgram experiment. That's it.
Yeah, you've talked about that. Before For sure it's it's a it's a perfect view into human psychology given given an appropriate authority, people will do horrific things, even to the screams of the person that is in front of them. We all live through it like a like a massive Milgram
experiment. We also live through another version, which is known as the Stanford Prison Experiment, which was essentially where arbitrarily people were decided whether they were going to be guards or inmates in a fake prison. And almost immediately the guards took their roles to their heads and they started acting incredibly crappy and doing horrible, torturous things to the people that were arbitrarily assigned to be inmates.
The minute you give people just a tiny modicum of authority, these are the people that are now in charge of telling you where to where that you have to wear a mask when you come into the grocery store. Excuse me, Sir, the Karen personality that we saw, you must walk only northbound on this lane. Like, what are you out of your damn mind? It's. I'm getting jam, OK, I'm going to get a I'm getting some jam or preserves. Like piss off, lady the. The. Flight attendants, Yeah, you can
only eat with your mask down. You have to. I mean, it was like, I'm always eating then like, I'm eating gum. Like as my kids like to say, 'cause my kids don't understand what gum is. They're like, are you eating gum? Yeah, I'm always eating gum. When I walked around at the FBI, I carried a cup with me. At any moment, I was imminently going to be drinking out of my cup because screw you and I, where's your mask? I don't need it, 'cause I'm
always drinking this water. I live in the desert. I have to hydrate while you're looking for UFOs. Well, I'm looking for UFOs. Strangest moment to to literally see a population wide experiment. Answer me this 'cause I know you've done a lot. And then we'll go into one of these stories here. How on earth did the United States have markedly worse outcomes for COVID despite having the most advanced medical system we're told in the world? How did we do worse for per
capita deaths? Oh, there are so many reasons why #1. The CDC put down a deathly protocol to treat, quote this disease. In hospital, they told everybody to stay home until they were too sick to breathe anymore, then come into the hospital. And then when they were in the hospital, they treated them with poison to try and make them better. They ventilated patients when it should have been
contraindicated. And then they spat all over the doctors and people who stood up trying to tell them why that was killing people and it wasn't working. Could they never identified, even though the the information was freely available, that COVID is really not necessarily a respiratory disease but a a blood disease there.
There were a gazillion reasons why, but mostly the treatment protocols, the fact that hospitals ended up turning their wards of ICU into prisons where they wouldn't tend to pick patients properly and then again poison them with medication. Wow. We started vaccinating mid pandemic with a novel technology that decimated people's immune
systems. We started vaccinating in the middle of a pandemic where they had told us for years that the thing that was killing everybody Kyle, was spike protein. And then they injected us with a substance that made your body produce in perpetuity spike protein. Another reason they inflated the death count ridiculously. From this, they We will never know how many people actually died of COVID or from COVID. They inflated the death count for dollars, for money. They inflated the death count to
make us more scared. There is no good death data coming out of this whatsoever. If somebody tested positive for COVID but died of a heart attack, it was COVID so that they'd get paid. Should I continue? I mean the the reasons we did more poorly go on and on and on for pages and pages and pages. Instead of adopting early therapeutics and treating people with with things that we knew worked, we demonize those medicines as course pace and bleach. There's a gazillion things.
What? Is there a good historical analogue to this kind of behavior in modern history? In the last 100 and 5200 years? Is there anything other than this, or are they going to be looking at this era, going like, what? The shit happened? Not on this scale and and I I think it's important to to note too that the reason we did lockdowns in the 1st place if you remember and I don't know if you do, is because the Chinese started broadcasting video of themselves welding their
citizens into their homes. We fell for Chinese propaganda. What? The Chinese are locking everything down and who knows how bad this really is? And the rest of they locked the the Chinese got the entire world to lock their citizens inside their homes. Think about that. And meanwhile, the world continued as some of us were outdoors. And I I I had some of the weird I'm just going to share with you because they were so strange. First of all, I'm an FBI agent
at the time. I'm on a surveillance team that primarily does counterterrorism work. And so I watched Virginia lock down. And that was surreal because we lived right outside of Washington. DCI remember driving in. I had vividly remembered this. I could actually picture the sign. I could picture the road that I was on. And as I drove in, there was nobody on the road. It was just me. And there was like litter blowing across and leaves. And I went like, this is really weird.
And there was a big sign and it was an orange sign that was like, you know, divert traffic left or like, don't you know, stop ahead or yield. And what it said was stay home, don't contaminate, you know, we're all in this together, a couple of other crazy zombie movie things, and I'm driving. Like The Division. The Game. The Division. I've never seen this. Oh the yes, yes. Yes, yes, yes. OK. So there's another Tom Clancy connection we'll go to in a second.
But I I remember driving and seeing that crap and going like this is the part that they don't show of the zombie movie. They skip this part and they show like 6 months from now and they'll show the the Part 3 weeks ago. It's like the newscast of people being scared. Then there's what I live through and you live through. I don't know why you keep fading off, but it's kind of fun. I. Don't.
Either it's really weird to watch, so I just kind of am enjoying it. It's because of your high speed computer doing your high speed backdrop. So and then after all of that craziness, then then shows the real zombie plague and then we have to fight the zombies in the streets and they're, you know, we're dropping bombs. It's 28 days later or 28 weeks later or whatever, I don't know, but that's what I remember driving through and seeing.
I did that in Virginia. Then I flew out to Albuquerque, and then I got to experience again, not very many people moved W during that time because a lot of people weren't going anywhere. And I got to the lot to see another lockdown in Albuquerque while we were watching another CT subject. So I saw in DC then my wife is like, hey, it's kind of creepy here. Are you sure you really need to get on a plane? And I'm like, yeah, I do. I got to go do this job.
There's like a bad dude who says he's going to be part of the ISIS team and he wants to kill people. So we went out and watched him and they shut down everything to the point where there was like, no restaurants. And like, I'm sitting by myself and I can come in and as long as I'm standing I can order a pizza. But if I sit down at the table, they kick my ass out like insanity, like the crazy. And I'm like, this is so weird.
This is the weirdest thing I've ever lived through in my life, and we're just acting like it didn't happen. Kind of. Yeah. And it's it's. I'm not gonna ever stop talking about it because this will happen again. You know what? Maybe it won't happen again, Kyle. Maybe it won't. Only because if there ever really is a truly deadly pandemic. We're all dying. Nobody is going to believe anything that they say.
Exactly. Because it's like they burned out our our trust in the institutions and they can't use that again. OK, yeah, it keeps happening. We'll just deal with it. It visually goes, but the audio's still good. So here's here's the NSA. I just, I just throw that in because why not, Tracy, there was a book called Rainbow Six. You familiar with it? Oh yeah, Rainbow 6, Yes. OK, Do you remember the plot? I know the video game. OK, that's not the same thing.
I saw the movie, Kyle. I didn't read the book. I never read. It I just want to I want to tease you. The plot was time to. Read that stuff. This is the second. Well, this is an old book. I actually bought it for my wife. And it's the second time that I brought this up in the last couple days because it just keeps occurring to me. The basic plot is there's this multinational counter terrorism team, that's what the video game is. You're going to kill them bad
guys, right? But the bad guys developed this viral technology that is incredibly infectious, that they release at a global event. I think it's the Olympics, but it's something similar, OK? And then it spreads to all the countries. And the goal is that everyone is going to die because they're the only ones who have the antidote to this poison, and they're going to kill off the whole
world. They're going to get it down to a population that they've predetermined is good, and then they're all going to live in the New Eden. They're going to do what we would call in literature, the myth of adenic possibilities. They're going to pursue that.
And it's a bunch of billionaires that have a ton of money and these Biosoft companies that are going to destroy everybody so they can live, you know, and they want to see the Arctic the way that it was meant to be. They want to see, you know, major fauna and flora reef taking over the American continent. And they think the cities will be all reclaimed into this like, I don't know, Omega Man scenario. OK, that's the story. That's from like 2006 if my memory started it's way back.
Yep. We almost lived through that, I feel like. We we we did. As a matter of fact one of the first pieces that we wrote on COVID was in March of 2020. And I I got the CD CS influenza like illness data and I was able to get a friend, former former NSA to chart it for me, make it like interactive so that I could pull up different graphs and we could make all kinds of pretty things that I couldn't do. And we were able to show that influenza like illness, illness ticked up in late October of
20/20/19. And it started in Washington. And then I was able to find the Olympics in Wuhan and I was able to show the airport where most of those flights. Was it the Olympics or was it the World Military Games? It was the World Military Games. The World Military Olympics is what they called it. Got it. I don't know why I I remember it being a military thing in my head. I just don't. But. It was. It was the military of every single country in Wuhan, the last week of October in 2019. Big.
Deal that works out fine, it'll be. Pretty. Yeah. It's OK. Like it's it's the dog and the burning kitchen. Yes. It'll be OK. Everything's on fire, your coffee cup's on fire, but you're still gonna drink the mug. Literally. The the Tom Clancy thing was that they built in a very long delay into the symptomatic the the what do they call incubation period of the of that infection And and then suddenly everybody was a virologist. Do you remember how many virologists we met in 2020 and
21 everybody knew. Nobody understood that like literally the virus is the size of a mosquito flying through your chain link fence. They all are wearing bandanas. I'm like, you can smell a fart through it, can't you? You wear jeans, don't you? You've been in an elevator with like some dude who had beans before. What are we doing here? One of the things that the COVID grand jury in Florida is doing is this very exercise that
you're talking about. I think it's actually genius of them to have to lay the whole groundwork before they give whatever smackdown they're going to give. But one of the things they said is that it was, it is now proven, and we all knew this, that they knew COVID was aerosolized. I was. I was on social media, the droplets. I heard. Well, yeah, you don't want spittle. You don't want spittle getting
everywhere. That's that's why Alyssa Milano was crocheting masks with big giant holes in them. And and it was so stupid. It was the world's biggest circle jerk virtue signal that could ever be imagined. It's like, you know, the IT was worse than the flags in the BIOS, but I went through this whole big thing with this guy, he said. Oh, we do an experiment sometimes in my in my science class. And we have everybody with N95 like the respirator ones that
they have. And they have the, the people put that on and then they release some kind of noxious fart spray gas into the room. And they, you know, they use that as an example of how masks that that respirator mask works. And he was trying to like say, oh see, this is where people should wear masks. And I said, have people put a cloth mask on and sitting there? Or how about one of those surgical masks? Let them let them see how well those work to keep that noxious gas out of their nose.
So that that that thing that you're talking about, that that respirator 90 N 95 filters out whatever particulates they do that in the healthcare setting too. Anybody who's ever been fitted for a mask, that's the term. It's part of your employment interview. Usually when you work in a healthcare setting and also the military does stuff like this too, you learn that there has to be no gaps. Because if you find the gaps,
you have to have the right size. You have to have the right fitment, and you have to know how to put it on properly, how to dawn and doff the respirator less to do nothing. And most people, and when I look around, I'm like, I can see daylight where your face hole is. I don't know if you know how science works, but, like, viruses don't go like, oh, I'm not going to creep around those holes. That's all they do. They just go where the air flow is.
And it's much easier to go through where there's no respiratory barrier. They're going to just draw in through all the open holes, which is why you can smell the fart smell, which is actually not farts. It's just something in a can. But yeah, it's. Sulfur or something like that. I don't know what they mean, but we wrote that. We wrote one of the first Mask Don't Work columns too. It went absolutely ridiculously
viral. And then all of a sudden, I don't know what happened, we were banned like everywhere. When did you first? Where were your big bands 'cause you had big presence on social media? I wasn't tracking social media. I didn't know you then, but I know you you guys paid a heavy cost for basically calling out
bullshit in real time. Yeah, I I well, the the first big band that I got was in January of 2020, Facebook and Twitter. Then it was February, early February. It was PayPal, Venmo, Patreon, and there was one other one that banned me. I don't remember which one, and that's basically where I I was banned from. I wasn't banned from YouTube or Instagram, but I was banned from everywhere else.
And what did you do 'cause you're demonetized at that point and they're taking away your banking options to make profit, and you guys are a full profit entity. Yes, it was really hard. What didn't I do? I didn't whine and cry about it, Kyle. I Because that has no effect whatsoever. Nobody cares. Nobody. I hate that. If I hate that, it just I had to. I had to keep my business going, right? That's what I had to do. You know who was largely responsible for helping me with
that? Citizen Free Press. They aggregated all of our work and got it out there. And then I was also still doing media and stuff like that. And it was, it was just I didn't have my megaphone on the biggest platforms that there were, and I had almost 1,000,000 followers on it on Twitter before I was banned. I know it was. Devastating. People have no idea what that means. It doesn't mean you're wealthy, it just means people might be able to see the stuff you do. That's what I care about.
I'm not making money off of it, that's for damn sure. Well, there's no. If I was. Yeah. I should be. It's a lot of work. It's a lot of work. It takes so much work to do this kind of stuff just just to be honest just to be intellectually honest and and you have some of the fastest turn around time of anybody having worked with other reporters have to work with other people that have other
editorial type things. Look I've had stuff that showed up in New York Post. I've had it in Daily Wire. I've had it in trying to think Washington Times. There's like a dozen other places that are that the things
that I've shared. But there's a lot of there's a long run up to that and you guys do it really quickly because I think one you're willing to take, you're willing to take honest people that have done honest work as sort of like the there's no reason they would lie to me now that's that's a risk. But you do. It's the way that by the way that law enforcement uses sources like we have no reason not to trust them. They've given us accurate
information in the past. This has that much credibility. We're going to go with it and then we'll see what happens. Well, it's not like you came to me, Kyle, and said I'm. Listen, somebody told me that on Thursday at 2:00, there's going to be a massive event at X Place. Trust me. Write an article about it. I would tell you, no, that's not what you do. That's not how you operate. It never is.
And if you do, like, excuse me for fixing my positioning here, if you do do something like that, it's never like, oh, go run with this. It's like, hey, just keep your eye out. Something, something, something, something. And we just have a standard that we don't shipped from. And when you follow that standard and you develop good relationships, there's no reason
it should take that long. Like, I'm not going to take your receipt you got from a whistleblower inside the FBI and then go to the FBI and be like, hey guys, just real like, is it? The FBI was reached out to for comment, and they declined to comment. I mean, come on. Did you really say this? Like, yeah. OK, listen, Peter Strzok blocked us. That's all that matters. Was it? Was it that time that he blocked us? Yeah, it was when we released the the emails.
Oh, and we so and that's the other thing. So we've done it. We've done some other things. This is, this is the way that by the way source work happens in the intelligence industry. So it's worth knowing that Tracy does it the way that that the federal government does it. And we, our lives have a lot. By the way, you had no idea
about this, but this. Look, what you do is, you say, a credible source who's had good reporting in the past and is in a position to know the information reports, the following. You can run with that with a high degree of confidence that that person is likely not shining you on. Does that person have an agenda? Yes. But I told you what my agenda is. I told you I wanted to punch the FBI. You were OK with that?
That seems reasonable. But end of the day, even if it was like, look, the FBI has incredible credibility, I'm going to bring you a story that shows that everything we thought was actually not right. In fact, they actually were getting wagged by DOJ. That would be a story too. And and for the sake of fairness, you'd be like, oh, that's pretty interesting. It's pretty interesting if we got it wrong, right that, like, that's actually a better story in some ways. It's not that.
It's never. It's happened. I've gotten things wrong twice, twice. Both times. Both times it ended up being a better story. Wrong. That's right. And it was right. And then I've I've, let's just say this and the whole body of work that I've ever done. I've only ever made one actual. I don't even think I've made a retraction. No retractions, one correction. I've never it. It's just it works. Yeah that's but. And that comes from not being ready fire aim.
That comes from being accurate, generally having a standard. And then you know, if you're accurate about the way you pronounce things, you also don't say, like this is obviously the case. You just say like, look, some evidence indicates this may be something that's different. And so you can do that. And I've seen you write it. Like I said, that's why I came to you guys. I actually saw Wendy's reporting when I came to you.
That's that's what drove me there, because there was all this information about me and Garrett, O'boyle, Steve Friend, all this kind of nonsense. And everybody was getting the story just this much off, which is really grading when it's your life, which I know, you know that feeling when somebody is talking about your life for an interview and they they mix your words up and they say something that is basically just the exact opposite. They did the Ronald Reagan on
the vaccine thing. They got it exactly wrong, but they were trying. It's. Not, yeah. I mean, it does get grating, but I'm so meticulous about that stuff. I would rather everything be in there and leave something out and have AU frustrated. It takes a lot more work. I mean, yeah, that's the yeah. All right. So now that we've we've done this and for anybody who that's that's new to the game and doesn't know Tracy Beans, now you do again, we're talking about Tracy Beans.
Let me throw her up on here. 600,000 of you all know who she is. You guys see her on Twitter all the time. She just hit the 600,000 mark and she is a friend of me and the suspendables, she has one of the OG suspendables hoodies that honest to God, I have no idea. Am I here? Now you are. Yeah. Could you not see me? No, you you left for a second. Well, that's weird.
It should show you. In any case, I was showing your Twitter piece there so now you have let's do this, this quick article I'm going to flash on the screen. If you don't hear me for a second, it's OK We're going to show this piece from the high wire.com where you are a contributor in addition to your own work over at Uncover. This is stuff that is more medical focus. We're going to talk about the V safe as we were talking about
off screen. Let me throw on the screen so people can see it. Again. This is a piece from the high wire.com breaking. First look at the so-called free text COVID vaccine safety data that the CDC wanted to hide Byline here by Tracy Beans and Michelle Edwards. Let's talk about what this piece is. You want to kind of give people a preview of what is this thing about? What did this data come out with? This 99 million, I think is what the number said 99 million
people studied. Is that correct or is this a different study? That's a different study. So the 99 million people studied was done by an organization that took 99 million people who had gotten the COVID vaccine and then took a look at them to see what, out of a set of 13 different conditions, how frequently they got. That that was the rare disease thing. Now who? Who's getting myocarditis game right? Yeah, who's getting that?
Or any other autoimmune disease or Bell's palsy or you know, pericarditis or any of the brain clot blood clots in the brain. That was that. It came on the heels of the release of this data. So the government, the CDC said let's bring some developers in and because we're going to, you know, bombard the public with this, tested only on 8 humans via DARPA mRNA technology on a broad scale and hundreds of millions of people are going to get this thing.
Let's have an app developed where they can report to us if anything's going wrong with them as this goes on. So they developed this app called V Safe where And this is different than theirs. That's the question most people are familiar with. Yep, and never heard about it beforehand. This is the virologist from 2020 on. As you became a new virologist, you also became aware of theirs, apparently if you were a
conservative. Yes, the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System that under reports adverse events by about 98%. Which is to say, for every hundred that are out there, only one of them makes it in. Just for for every or or every hundred, maybe two of them make it in ish. Yeah, it's a self. You know, it's a self reporting system. Doctors go in there and they're supposed to fill out a report whenever they think there's an injury tied to a vaccine.
It's very laborious to do. Nobody really ever paid attention to it clearly and still don't. And Rachel Wilensky actually poo pooed all over at the last hearing before she left the coupe. So they they, they, it take it for what it's worth, It's there. People use it, but it's not used for the reason that it should have been, which is to detect safety signals with this stuff. This is an app that you download to your phone. 10 million people
or so did. And then they were all the people, Kyle, that were very excited to go out and get this shot because it meant that then they could go on the cruise or they could go to work or they could protect their family. Whatever the reason they had is they went out and they got the
vaccine. In that app, there were a check, a checklist you know, a tick boxes where you could check off things you experience, many of which are commonly associated with vaccination, redness at the injection sites, swelling, headache, pain, you know, fever, things like that. But there was also another field where you could type in manually, things that you were experiencing after getting the shot. That's what they called free text. Is that what they called it?
The free text is literally an open response category. Yes, good. OK, I can. The high wire sued the CDC to release the actual pre-existing checkbox data and they won and they started releasing that. So if you go to the I Can website itsicandecide.org, I believe you'll see there's a dashboard there that you can poke in all kinds of variables in and get all kinds of reports
run and stuff. And then another group, the Freedom Coalition of Doctors for Choice out of Texas, sued for this free text field and it was released. It, you know, the judge ordered, yeah, you guys have to release this. The CDC had said they were planning on making that data available to the public originally anyway. And then they decided they didn't want to. We'll find out why in a second. They did. They they.
The first tranche of that data was released on the 16th of February, and there were about 390,000 entries in that data. And you can pull it up raw for yourselves as an Excel spreadsheet. And what I encourage everybody to do is sort the first column by duplicate and then conditionally format it so they're highlighted so you can see who the people are, if they're the same person. And then just do keyword searches through this stuff.
Tachycardia, miscarriage, numbness, tingling, rapid heartbeat, which is the same as tachycardia. But some people don't know that, oh, metallic taste, nightmares, hair loss. Some people Kyle, when they they they get their shot, they go home. They're like, I feel great, right? Some of them. Other people were saying I had to be rushed to the emergency room for anaphylaxis. My heart rate was at 160 for the hour after the vaccine.
I'm going to the emergency room tomorrow because I can't feel, you know, my pinky finger and the ring finger on my left hand. There's this very weird metallic taste I have in my mouth that won't go away. This was the weirdest one. I saw several people, at least a couple dozen, saying they got the shot and then their tattoos lost their color.
Very, very weird. And this isn't like how many you saw some of these there was a lot of weird stuff that was running around that seemed like garbage data to me. I saw guys and I don't want to name names because I can't remember who it was and I don't know the difference between these people but somebody with names that are either Stu or
Pete or something. But but but honestly, like, I don't know which one it is because there's a couple of people that have those names and some combination thereof and I don't remember who it was but they were like, oh it's it's it's Luciferian. It's Snake Viper, Venom and like some other bullshit that made no sense. And their source was Doctor. And you're like, oh, well, it's a Doctor Who's also a chiropractor. That's what kind of doctor is. And I'm not mad at chiropractor.
I'm just saying like, you're not a medical doctor, you're not a scientist. And neither are doctors, by the way. They're generally not scientists. They're people who are educated to do a certain type of thing, which is not necessarily clinical study unless they do it. So we had all this weird stuff, people having stuff stick to them. I don't know if that was real or not, but that looked really weird, like metallic like.
The the the magnetism things and and then you know you walk in the room and all of a sudden you're Bluetooth and right the misinformation is is. Like, that stuff makes me go. Those are the same people that tell me that they have an implant. I used to get people in the ER that would do this. You would have, I don't know if you could have handled the ER. It's like, so fun and so funny and that you and your sense of humor are very similar to mine.
And then people would come in and they'd be like, I'm here because I have radiation burns on my feet. And you're like, oh, whoa, like, we got to get you. We got to get you into our room. And then we're like, we need to do ISO protocols. Like, what do we got to do? And then you start asking questions because I'm a paramedic and I'm the assessment triage guy. And I'm like, why do you have these burns? And they're like, well, I have an implant and it's leaking.
And there are radioactive implants. And they do leak occasionally for certain types of things. But you're like, OK, now I have an index of suspicion. This person is nuts, right? You're like, when did you get the implant plant? And they're like, well, I don't really know. You're like, all right, now we're going down this rabbit hole. Well, when did you first notice it? And they're like, well, I think when I was kidnapped by the CIA and you're like did. That really happen in the Did
that really happen? Oh yeah, more than once cause. And on the street, it's way more frequent. But like when they walk into the ER and they let you know that they have an implant that they didn't agree to and it's operating in some way that it wasn't designed to and that they were kidnapped. And then they tell you who they're, you know, it's the Rothschilds or it's Chris Ray or, I don't know, it's Pompeo, who's in charge of the CIA. Whoever it is at the time, that's the villain in their
mind. And you know, basically the Internet was the worst thing for mental illness that ever happened. These people are real. And so those people also got into the COVID game because everybody was were like, we don't believe in this institution because it's lying to us and we know that it's got a death counter. That's nonsense. And now we're open to like all kinds of weird stuff and a lot of patronistic, crazy people who were just looking to be accepted. I'm not mad at them, but they're
confusing. They got stuff kicking. To a lot of the doctors that went through this, too, Kyle. Actually some of the some of the doctors that were very, you know, reputable, distinguished professionals who really believed in the medical industry and Pharmaceutical industry, who then were like kind of like jolted awake by all this, this crap. They even went through their own version of not believing literally anything anymore. That's just what happens. Because they're like my my
entire world has been. How many people got anchors to all the things that were anchoring them to the reality and then they were open to, like either scams or bad ideas or anything floated by you? You remember, there's this, what is this movie? Moana. Remember the Moana movie? OK, well anyways, I got younger kids. The Moana, There's this crab that's like this, I don't know, like a demon crab in the
underworld or whatever. And whenever you see something shiny, it just grabs it and puts it on its shell. So there's this, like, shell full of crazy, and it's all shiny and glittery. Like, that's what people's ideology started going because they cut all the normal ties. And they're like, oh, that's something that I now believe in. Like, I also believe in this crazy shit. And they just carried around the shell full of like, mismatched ideas. Didn't even matter if they made
sense to each other. And we're debunking that still. Because yes, so many people got confused and they just like, they're like, I don't believe anything now. I believe whatever I want. And the worst part of that is that that kind of stuff is used to discredit the real work that's going on. Like the biggest.
Yeah, alright. Like so if there wasn't, if there was a willing participant willing to listen to you at some point, if if they're established media showed them the crazy, they wouldn't listen to you anymore because they saw that you. See what I mean? Let's do this more of this data. I want to have you keep going
into the V safe stuff. OK, so basically, you know, it's it's it's really 390,000 entries from people who experienced something after getting the shot, many women who were breastfeeding their babies at the time. Now, Kyle, you know I'll never forget I saw a video of a woman who was who had just gotten the COVID shot and really didn't
feel well. And she was like, I would love to take a Tylenol, and she was pregnant and she was like, I want to take a Tylenol right now, but I know how dangerous Tylenol is for my baby. And I'm sitting there. She feels crappy because she just got the COVID vaccine, but she won't take a Tylenol because it's dangerous. It's just such a disc, like the the the cognitive dissonance, which I talk about on my program on a regular basis. Those two ideas that run into each other at full speed.
The end result is a migraine for most people. But it's not often the time where they go like, hey, my ideas don't line up like I'm doing weird things that don't make sense. I'm taking a novel, I'm taking a novel shot that there is no long term. And the I I have to imagine this is what, like, I saw the thalidomide sort of analogy right away for pregnant women. Because I think that we're really bad. Like we've been trying to avoid that in medicine for so long.
As a paramedic, they teach you about thalidomide and you're like, it was a miracle drug. The answer? Is. Slow down, yeah. It was a miracle drug that just like had babies with flippers and no long born formation because they didn't know that it was interrupting important pathways during embryonic formation. That seems like something worth waiting on. I I I think my wife would rather have morning sickness than like a a Penguin for a child.
Yeah, yes, yes. Yeah. So what I'm saying when I say that is breastfeeding. Women are getting the shot and no one's telling them anything. And then one woman said, I'm breastfeeding. I think that might be something that someone might want to know. It was almost like I've used this example, this analogy a couple times. I read this all of this data over the period of about 8 hours at night, and I felt like Bruce. It was at night. That's the only time that I
could do without. I felt like Bruce Almighty getting the prayers coming in all at once. It felt like I cried, which is very rare for me. But these people, the the the way that many of them tried to excuse away what they were experiencing as something else just because they they didn't want to believe that it was what they had just received was really, really something.
And some of the, you know, like the mom would have rushed her baby to the hospital that was breastfeeding that I've been referencing for three minutes and never got around to saying why she was breastfeeding her baby. And her baby had a reaction because this vaccine was expressed in breast milk. The spike protein was expressed in breast milk. It didn't stay where they told us it would stay. It basically instructed the body to create spike protein. It infected every organ of the
body. Spike protein embedding itself everywhere. And autopsy, we see it in heart muscle, we see it in the ovaries, we see it in in many different organs that it should never have ended up. That crosses the blood brain barrier. Now this the the other thing too, Kyle, is that you're seeing this, I'm sure, and you've talked about it. Actually they're using long COVID, which does exist for some people as a cover for all of the vaccine injuries.
So in that 99 million study, there was a a bunch of docs that came out against it. It's a long COVID. It's not that we're not seeing spike protein survive in your heart muscle after you heal from COVID once your body clears The Once you clear the body of the spike protein, you're not finding people who are infected with COVID having a heart attack the same way that you're finding someone whose body has been turned into a spike protein factory having heart attacks.
And we theoretically, we would be able to care about this and suss it out because there is technology to do so. But we don't seem to have that drive. In fact, we see the opposite. It's obfuscation. It's confusion, it's smokescreen. It's you don't know what you're talking about. It's you're not a doctor. I like that one too. It's like but I can read a study. I can read English. Yeah.
And and you know you've got a bunch of these vaccine injured people that were pro vaccine that did it for the for society whatever their reason was that are injured now and are being mocked and ridiculed and they won't study them. Like they don't ask you what's your vaccine status because they don't want to know. So you just don't ask the question. You'll never have the answer. Why are we having all of this uptick in cancer? Why are all these people getting sick?
I wonder if they had the vaccine recently. They don't ask. And the sad thing I think too from people that sit on the conservative side of the House, there's a a a strong movement of anger against people that did some awful things. This is the the the Stanford Prison experiment. We were the inmates and the guards were abusive and we hate the guards in kind of some ways. But like, I also don't hate the guards. Like, I'm not mad. I I'm mad at what happened.
But I I don't want that to be a reason that we don't look after these people like they're human beings. They're Americans. Like they live right next to me. I don't know who they are. How would I know? By looking at them and we're we're probably going to get along. So yeah. It's so hard for people to get over that one thing. Like when someone dies, like, I don't want to celebrate someone's death at 50 years old because like, they died suddenly
and good, I got you. It's like, holy shit, we have a bunch of people that are dying that we can't and we're not. We're refusing as a society to to address it. 100% And even those that like people like you just mentioned that know what's going on. For example, I have something I sent you this morning that would play in really well right here. You want to play the video? Yeah, yeah, No, we'll make fun of you at. The end I believe it's this one
here, so let me see. I think I got this one queued up correctly. I have been wrong and I have seen lots of you out there and I have personal friends out there who've been telling me I was wrong and I would much rather avoid this conversation and not do this at all. But you were right. What part in this did I play? And how do you first of how do you say sorry to all of you that I've been putting comments in my videos for like, take a look at
this, take a look at this. And I said, OK, they're just turning in. There were some some results that were strongly biased in order for it to work out. And never have I seen plans play out like this at this degree. All right, So this was the other part that bothered me. It bothered me from the beginning, but it really makes me nervous once you see what this I heard whisperings about this. I didn't believe it. I did not believe it. All right.
So don't play the whole video. If you guys want, you can find it in Tracy's timeline. This is what the tweet looks like. We'll go back and we'll just talk because I don't want to hear somebody in high speed Hyper Chipmunk talk, but. She she's basically, she was, she was a proponent of the vaccine. She told her entire Now she's like, shoot.
And I want everybody to understand, Kyle, from a psychological standpoint, there are millions and millions of people out there who are faced with this now, and they could be like her, a Doctor Who went out and told all their friends and family, you'd better get this, you'd better do this. And they have to come to terms with that. Inside of themselves. How do they handle it? They just double, triple down. We're seeing that happen quite a
bit. Do they actually take responsibility for that which they, you know, which they took part in? And then how do you live with the fear of being injected with this and not knowing if you're going to make it I? Know I hear, yeah, I hear stuff like that from from Dan Bongino who who has been one of the most, I think, honest people about that sort of scenario, like believed in one thing. What we don't see is that these people have a vested interest now.
It's their own. It's their own personal self worth and their own decision making process was hijacked and so now they've got to deal with that in their own head. That's a big burden. I'm not a big fan of this like COVID amnesty, like everyone who treated people shitty, like look, there's some really awful people that do awful things and some of them probably should hang for what they did. I think that's a not AI. Don't think that's a hyperbolic statement, like the evil they perpetrated.
There's also a lot of people that made bad decisions on bad information that are otherwise decent human beings. And you know that because they were decent before and I don't want to lose. Like we lost a lot of friendships over it. I know family members that wouldn't come to our house. You know, I'm not calling anybody's name out, but they know who they are and they said they wouldn't come over because we weren't going to do it. And like that's a fear based thing.
That's a fear based bad information. Like can I hold it over their head forever? I don't. I can't do that. We need those people to make sure this never happens again and we need them to feel emboldened to speak out about what they've gone through and and we need to support the people that have been harmed by this. I can't walk by someone on the ground and just be like, well, you were mean to me last year so screw you like I can't do I. No, they need our support. It's they need our help.
It's not a Christian position, which is what I think probably a big, vast majority of us formed our values on. Whether you're a practicing Christian or not is irrelevant. Like, you know what's right and wrong and what's right is not celebrating bad fortune of someone that you disagreed with or was mean to you. We almost always do that, by the way. Like, nobody asks, Like what kind of person is that inside the burning house?
If there's a a mom and a baby up in a window, like, well, she she shitty she shitty asshole. Is she a white white wine Karen mom? No. You're going to run in the building and get the old lady out. If you're a good person, that's your job, because who cares? A fellow human being, that's why. Yeah, because if you have the ability and the willingness and the and the wherewithal to go up and save somebody, then you go save them. So anyway, I think I think there is a there, but there's a fight
over that. A lot of us are fighting that sort of if I don't know you, it's way easier for me to hate you. But if you actually know those people, and we all know somebody like that, if we're being. Honest. It's being politicized too. Because, you know, let's just face it, you know, Donald Trump is the the nominee for the Republican Party. And anybody that says anything about this vaccine, there's automatically a jump to, I don't know how to explain this the
right way. Like people feel like now if they talk about the fact that it's bad, it's somehow reflecting poorly on him. So people will kind of jump around it not wanting to acknowledge the things that are going on. This is the big problem if you put your faith in a person like I'll take it in outcomes all day long. And Donald Trump had some good ones. No doubt he had some crappy ones too. He I just talked about it the the other day. Bump stocks like bad out, stupid
choice. Reagan did it too. Like none of these politicians are perfect. And for some reason if we can't take the shots where they're due so we can try to get better outcomes from them, then we're falling down as as citizens looking for representation. Like we're not electing a hero or a king or a God. We are going to elect a representative and we have a say in that. And so if they suck at something, it's like, hey man, I don't agree. Could you do better so than that?
It's it's that there won't be accountability if you can't acknowledge a mistake. That's the biggest thing you know. How are we going to get accountability for what happened if the person that takes the chief executive role will not acknowledge there's even a problem with the thing in the first place?
And Donald Trump is actually really susceptible to that kind of pressure, which is even the other most important thing, like you Boo a Lindsey Graham. How many times you're going to see a Lindsey Graham on stage with him? Again, probably not very often. Are you serious every time he brings them? Up. Does he really? He's still doing that, even after that big Boo fest. OK, well, maybe I'm maybe I'm. Lost. We're all screwed. It's Tracy. We're screwed.
What are we doing? Are we stalking ammo now? I. Don't know. I'm just going to live my life happy. That's what I'm going to do. I'm going to smile and I'm going to mock myself on the Internet for everybody to see like I did the other day. All right, you. Want to You want to do a little bit of that and then we'll talk about your carnivorous. Yeah. Expedition here. I think video number one, I've got you being silly so you can talk through. You can what? What are we seeing here?
So my husband took my car in for a recall and then they were keeping it too long and I had to go get him at the dealership. So I went out and I got in and I waited and waited and waited for him to drive. Yeah, I didn't see him get in, and I guess you didn't either. He was at the dealership with my car. It's. Really hard to make the car move from the passenger seat unless you've done some proper down drills.
Laughing at myself because he's not there to drive the car, Kyle, because I apparently am a passenger Princess. Well, that's the car that you are the passenger in. And so it just goes to show that we are all sort of likely to be victims of our own habits and our regular decision making. And if it if that's your door, you get it on that car, that's where you're going. Kyle, your piece, the Catholic Church piece on my Twitter account got like, I don't know,
500 retweets or something. That video has almost 9 million views. That also says something. What does that say about our people, Our people being the American people, the people that speak English? What does it say about us? Be blunt. We're stupid. Are we? We Yes, Now, I loved reading. Let's be Let's be fair about
this. On that video, Kyle, there are gay people, straight people, lefties, righties, people with Ukraine, flags in their handle, all different political persuasions, people from overseas commenting their experiences, laughing, making fun of themselves, making fun of me, having fun. It was probably the most uplifting and positive tweet that I have made in oh gosh, don't even know how long. Nobody cared what my politics were. Nobody cared what I did for a
living. They saw a funny video of a woman being a passenger Princess expecting her husband to drive her around. And they laughed at it because either so many stories, people leaving their keys like people trying to start the wrong car in the parking lot. Getting into somebody else's car because it looks like hers, That's my favorite. You're like. Yeah, so many stories. Hundreds and hundreds of them. Completely apolitical joy on that.
On that thread, however, I could publish something like we were talking about today, or the origins of COVID or vaccine damage or or injury or, you know, information about something that's really, really, really important and get like a fraction, not even of the engagement that I got on that video. We are.
We are not a serious people, but also tells me that social media is not life, 'cause if you go talk to me about COVID, everybody's got an opinion, everybody's got an opinion on it, and everybody's a virologist too. They all know a lot of things. Let me ask this, 'cause I think this is the truth, but I'm curious, 'cause you're in a different part of the country and we've actually never even
been in the same room together. So we can kind of just say we have some pretty non overlapping groups of people that we've interacted with in our lives. I think 80% of this country is still in the middle of they're not paying attention to things that don't matter. They're looking at the things that are in their life. They know their kids, teachers maybe. Maybe they're worried about their job, but they're like let people are less political than
we would believe if we just. Watch social media like Real. People in the real world, right? And most Americans do actually still believe in the same values. We might find some things that we get really riled up about. But 75% of the things, if you were to put the 100 things that we have to do every single day, we'd all agree on You got to
take out the trash. You got to make sure the garbage is picked up. You got to make sure that we can afford to put gas in our car like simple, stupid things that we all live with, like whatever our country is built on. Is that true? So how do we get people to understand that? Like, we're all actually in the middle and we're quibbling about the details. We're not quibbling about, like fundamental threats to democracy
or whatever the hell whatever. The thing we don't Ukraine is not like our Ukraine policy is not going to change whether or not your kid is doing a good job in second grade. Someone sent me this. This is what we should do. We should all walk around with a jar full of black and red ants. Ants. Ants. They get along great until you shake the jar. When you shake the jar, they start to fight each other. And then you say who's shaking your jar? Because we will get a lot, you know?
There's so much love amongst us if we're not being shaken by some external force trying to tell us who we're supposed to hate today. Yeah, and the fear is the other piece of it. It seems like to me. And COVID was a great fear apparatus, and Donald Trump was a great fear apparatus. And Russia is going to kill us all is another fear apparatus. I had this. The Chinese are going to kill it. Like the Chinese are just going to try to steal all of our money. That's what they've been doing.
Like they will kill us, but just not today and not immediately. It's going to be long. Well, our reality is what we observe, right? So we're on socials every day. We're having these conversations. You obviously have a reality that has been, you know, insane. But if you lived in the middle of the country, somewhere on a mountain with no Internet and no television, your reality is
pretty damn peaceful right now. I had conversations with those people in New Hampshire. When I went up to talk with Vivek, I went up and talked to randos, sitting at a bar in a little town in New Hampshire that was near where? The Porcupine Festival. Was pork pork fest. I can't believe you went to pork. Fest. I did go to Pork Fest. There's weirdoses there. And I sat down, and I'm talking to these guys, and they're like, So what are you about?
Like, what are you here for? And I'm like, I'm here for Pork Fest. And they're like, OK, like, were you just visiting? And I'm like, no, I was speaking. And I was in a panel. And they're like, cool. Like, what about? And I was like, well, about weaponization of the FBI. And they're like, oh, what's that? And I was like, well, they've been doing all these things. And they're like, really? When did that come out? And I was like, last year or two.
So I was like, you hear about these FBI whistleblowers that were in front of Congress? They're my buddies. And they're like, yeah, I don't know. I don't really watch Congress. They don't know. They don't know. They're probably they're they're happy though, aren't they? Well, they're happier. They're happier than you and I are most days. So it's aspirational. It doesn't work very well for our line of work. No. We've picked a miserable existence.
We're carrying your cross, folks, and anybody who's watching this, you're miserable with us and we love you for it. Tell people where the best place is to find your work and your the podcast and the days and the hours so everyone can can tune into Dark Delight like I often try to do, especially when I'm doing show prep. Well, thank you Kyle. I hope everyone wasn't bored for the hour that you can go, you can go to you can go to uncoverdc.com and find me there.
You can find me on all the social media platforms. Getter Truth, Telegram. What else is there? All of them at at Tracy Beans with AZ and then at the high wire.com where I write weekly Tuesdays and Thursdays with Michelle Edwards. And yeah, that that's pretty much. That's pretty much it. That is Rumble. On Rumble, where's your favorite streaming platform? What's the most largest piece of your audience where your chat goes? Rumble. Yeah, rumble.com/is it?
Is it uncovered DC? Yeah, I think so as well. I have it bookmarked so I don't have to actually type it in ever. I don't actually know the type in uncover DC on rumble folks. And thanks for following us. Thanks for joining me, Tracy. It's been a long time and come in. Like I said, hopefully the house looked OK now that we've got it set up and it looks good. I'm, I'm, I'm jealous, actually, I I'm moving my office into another room so I can stage it because of you.
That's. What I want to do, I want to push my friends to be better. It's true. It's really true. I'm not even kidding, you bastard. Thanks for joining me. We'll leave on a high note. All right, buddy. We'll talk again real soon. Bye. See ya. Oh, and that is it for today's show, folks. I hope you enjoyed that. Beans is one of the best. Really just loyal, good person, truer word. I I seriously have a strong appreciation. That's why we have such good
chemistry. I told my wife like she reminds me kind of of you, but like maybe more extroverted. My wife has a lot of the similar characteristics. We have kind of that same banter. Anyway, want to thank her for joining us.
I thank you guys for joining us. We've got more and more five star reviews tumbling in. So if you have not got yours in yet, make sure you do. Let's first say if you want to support the O'boyle family sweatshop, you guys can do so at the Dash suspendables.com Get yourself Look, I'm actually wearing the shirt on the video. You can see it. This is my favorite shirt. When I get the Kyle Serif and show shirts maybe those will step into the next spot.
But until then, the Dash suspendables.com promo code. Kyle. Very easy, Kyle. Check it out. Check out what you might be interested in. Garrett is going to try to add some new designs. Don't know if there's going to be a lady shirt. We have mostly men, listeners, ladies, if you're a lady and listening to this, you know, put it in the comments. Send us a send us a five star review letting us know how many shirts you need and why Garrett should be inclined to do it. I don't know.
I don't know if he even reads those or listens to the end of the show. But sure enough, we appreciate you all supporting them. They've had so many orders come in since Glenn Beck read it and all the new listeners here. We really appreciate you guys doing that, too. OK, how about this five star review coming from Powhatan fan? Mary says Five stars. Great show, as usual. I especially like the segment on the cops who Shouldn't be cops. This is a little bit older going back a little ways.
Yeah, there's some cops who shouldn't be cops, obviously. Whoa, look at that. There are definitely some cops that don't need to be cops. There's definitely some people out there that don't have the right constitution for law enforcement. We appreciate the ones that do because they are keeping us all safer and the ones that don't, you know, we got to call it out. We'll call balls and strikes here. We'll be fair. We continue to be anyway, until we see you again tomorrow.
God bless all of you, Be safe and we will see you again in the morning. Thanks for listening to The Kyle Seraphin Show, streamed live weekdays on rumble.com/kyle Seraphin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth, Social and Instagram at Kyle Seraphin.
