Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yes. Once upon a time there was a debate, you know, probably now 25 years ago, there was a thought that maybeβ Well, we don't actually have to be in somebody's presence. We could see them on Zoom or the social media would be just as good as actual social connections. For quite a while, the evidence has been that Facebook is not as good as bowling leagues.
was made originally by Eli Lilly, which developed this thimerosal, the mercury preservative for vaccines in 1932. There was no science that supported them. It literally had no science. But they were all repeating this again and again, like a mantra. And in 2003, a CDC scientist called Pichiero, did a study that seemed to confirm that claim.
was made originally by Eli Lilly, which developed this thimerosal, the mercury preservative for vaccines in 1932. There was no science that supported them. It literally had no science. But they were all repeating this again and again, like a mantra. And in 2003, a CDC scientist called Pichiero, did a study that seemed to confirm that claim.
was made originally by Eli Lilly, which developed this thimerosal, the mercury preservative for vaccines in 1932. There was no science that supported them. It literally had no science. But they were all repeating this again and again, like a mantra. And in 2003, a CDC scientist called Pichiero, did a study that seemed to confirm that claim.
That is, you don't get the same benefit from connecting with people online. Via social media, as you do from actually connecting with them face to face. That's what the evidence has shown. I can tell you when public opinion on that changed, and it was just about November 25th of 2020, at the height of the pandemic.
That is, you don't get the same benefit from connecting with people online. Via social media, as you do from actually connecting with them face to face. That's what the evidence has shown. I can tell you when public opinion on that changed, and it was just about November 25th of 2020, at the height of the pandemic.
That is, you don't get the same benefit from connecting with people online. Via social media, as you do from actually connecting with them face to face. That's what the evidence has shown. I can tell you when public opinion on that changed, and it was just about November 25th of 2020, at the height of the pandemic.
And what he did was he measured mercury levels in the blood of children who had been given a thimerosal vaccine. And within a week, the mercury, the ethylmercury in the vaccines all disappeared. Then he gave the same children a tuna fish sandwich. And the ethylmercury from the tuna fish was in their blood 54 days later. That was the half-life.
And what he did was he measured mercury levels in the blood of children who had been given a thimerosal vaccine. And within a week, the mercury, the ethylmercury in the vaccines all disappeared. Then he gave the same children a tuna fish sandwich. And the ethylmercury from the tuna fish was in their blood 54 days later. That was the half-life.
And what he did was he measured mercury levels in the blood of children who had been given a thimerosal vaccine. And within a week, the mercury, the ethylmercury in the vaccines all disappeared. Then he gave the same children a tuna fish sandwich. And the ethylmercury from the tuna fish was in their blood 54 days later. That was the half-life.
And everybody in America realized that hugging grandma was not the same thing as actually seeing grandma over Zoom. And it isn't.
And everybody in America realized that hugging grandma was not the same thing as actually seeing grandma over Zoom. And it isn't.
And everybody in America realized that hugging grandma was not the same thing as actually seeing grandma over Zoom. And it isn't.
So his conclusion is, wow, you know, we've been saying this for all these years, and it turns out to be true. And he published that in Pediatrics, and a bunch of scientists, like world authorities on mercury toxicity, like Dr. Boyd Haley from the University of Kentucky, wrote a letter to the journal and said, oh, what happened to the ethyl mercury?
So his conclusion is, wow, you know, we've been saying this for all these years, and it turns out to be true. And he published that in Pediatrics, and a bunch of scientists, like world authorities on mercury toxicity, like Dr. Boyd Haley from the University of Kentucky, wrote a letter to the journal and said, oh, what happened to the ethyl mercury?
So his conclusion is, wow, you know, we've been saying this for all these years, and it turns out to be true. And he published that in Pediatrics, and a bunch of scientists, like world authorities on mercury toxicity, like Dr. Boyd Haley from the University of Kentucky, wrote a letter to the journal and said, oh, what happened to the ethyl mercury?
In the beginning of the 20th century, around about 1900, America was very polarized politically. Our politics were tribal. We were very unequal. It was economically. Big gap between the rich who were living on the Upper East Side of New York and the huddled masses, poor immigrants, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Big gaps between rich and poor. We were very socially disconnected.
In the beginning of the 20th century, around about 1900, America was very polarized politically. Our politics were tribal. We were very unequal. It was economically. Big gap between the rich who were living on the Upper East Side of New York and the huddled masses, poor immigrants, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Big gaps between rich and poor. We were very socially disconnected.
In the beginning of the 20th century, around about 1900, America was very polarized politically. Our politics were tribal. We were very unequal. It was economically. Big gap between the rich who were living on the Upper East Side of New York and the huddled masses, poor immigrants, on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Big gaps between rich and poor. We were very socially disconnected.
Because Pigeiro could not find it in the sweat of the children, the feces, the blood, the hair, or the fingernails or the urine. What happened to it? Did it really leave the body? So NIH commissioned a monkey study by one of the famous, iconic scientist, Dr. Thomas Pichiero at University of Seattle in Washington, or University of Washington in Seattle. He took macaques. He did the same thing.