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As Iāve said, if thereās not enough rage toxins or adrenaline in my bloodstream I head on over to CBCās website... Rarely do they fail to infuriate. They certainly didnāt fail with this wee stinking chestnut that I listened to at work last evening: Not only beyond parody, itās beyond belief. As is customary with the CBC, nowhere to leave a comment, and on the odd occasions when they do? Theyāll delete it if it doesnāt fit their ācommunityā ie, āfellatialā standardsā¦
Lying Shittypedia says of Dr. Goldman: āHoward Brian Goldman (born 1956) is a Canadian emergency physician, author, public speaker, and radio personality... He completed his undergraduate medical education at the University of Toronto in 1980. In July 1980, he began postgraduate medical education in family medicine. On 15 January 1982, Goldman obtained his Independent Practice Certificate from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. He received his certification in family medicine from the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC) in July 1984, followed by a certificate of advanced competency in emergency medicine from the CFPC in November 1985.ā
And yet he recommends the bivalent āvaccineā when it comes out shortly ā how could he recommend this, given that the Sars-Cov-2 virus does not exist, never has existed (proof is anywhere you care to look, starting with Patrick Kingās subpeona to Deena Hinshaw) ā for a variant that, if it hasnāt arrived yet, how could they know itās coming? And how could they thus have a clue what to do about it? ā but which obviously couldnāt exist either anyway, thus heās lying twice about it; along with mask wearing (grimly proven time and time again not merely utterly useless but to be physically and psychologically detrimental) and the Lethal Injections for little children. Children are purportedly not in any way at risk for this phantom contagion, even the Criminal CDC has admitted that. He specifically states āIf youāre immunocompromised or live in long term care where youāre highly likely to be exposed to the virus, you should also consider getting a booster now and not wait.ā š±
Obviously hasnāt heard of āVAIDSā (yet) eitherā¦ š¤
And of Allison Joan McGeer: āis a Canadian infectious disease specialist in the Sinai Health System, and a professor in the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology at the University of Toronto. She [was] also appointed at the Dalla Lana [Capt. Roy: āDalai Lamaā, surely?!] School of Public Health and a Senior Clinician Scientist at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, and is a partner of the National Collaborating Centre for Infectious Diseases. McGeer has led investigations into the severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak [Capt. Roy: ie, āSARSā: The nakedly obvious attempted fraudulent pandemic of 2003 that went nowhere, unlike the subsequent nearly identical Covid Scamdemic based on it that did] in Toronto ... During the COVID-19 pandemic, McGeer has studied how SARS-CoV-2 survives in the air [Capt. Roy: ā?!ā] and has served on several provincial committees advising aspects of the Government of Ontarioās pandemic response.ā š¤Ŗ
... No doubt she also telepathically debates Medieval theologians on how many angels can dance on the head of a pin ... š®āšØ
I consider these two clowns, credentials doubtless up the ying-yang, probably reams of academic publications, likely heaps of awards; one a broadcaster on CBC Radio, the other a professor; their opinions respected and valued, their recommendations and diagnoses acted upon ... š³š²š£
And also obviously connoisseurs and purveyors of the finest kool-aid imaginable. š Evidently not the faintest clue what theyāre advocating is not merely wrong: Itās an abomination.
Meanwhile Yours Truly? After I was kicked out of the military / my career was destroyed on a cocktail of bogus accusations, a lifetime of dead-end shit jobs, marginal, under- and unemployment, I now earn my living as a security guard. During my one professional gig, I applied to music graduate school; they requested letters of reference, so I wrote to three of my professors at my undergrad ā bear in mind I was one of the few graduates of my university to ever get a professional musical job of any kind ā youād think those professors would have been delighted to recommend me. But No! They sent letters NOT recommending me! And that was that ā¦ š¤
For the love of all thatās Good and Holy, and for crying out loud !! How does the accreditation racket f***ing work ?!
Meanwhile my own direct experience thus far of the fulminating āvaccinationā cataclysm? My step-daughter ā I tried to warn her, she wouldnāt listen ā took The Lethal Injection in 2021; she now has eczema so severe she canāt shower, she canāt use her hands without wearing gloves. Itās even on her eyelids ā And after just reading this, I wonder if it will devolve into myositis: Myositis: More Evidence of Immune System Damage from COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines. Her periods which I gathered were always heavy are now more like a haemorrhage. She canāt work, sheās on income assistance. My friend Grant took the injection, laconically saying at the time āNah ā it was nothingāā¦ 2 years later now bitterly informs me he has myocarditis; a condition until recently so rare that cardiologist Peter McCullough had seen only 2 cases of it in a 30 year careerā¦ But now apparently popping up like toadstools on the forest floor. Grantās musical career is pretty much toast, you wouldnāt dare practice or play a wind instrument with that diagnosis. My co-worker George ā again, I tried to warn him, he wouldnāt listen ā took the injection late 2021. Since then? Heās had three stents put into his heart to fix a 75% aortic blockage; is on blood thinners. And in all those cases and also with our former landlady ā say it again Sam: āI tried to warn her, she wouldnāt listenā š ā I have noticed sudden unpleasant personality changes; the sudden development of bizarre paranoid ideations.
But these grossly irresponsible intellectual gigolos instead are still doing all they can to encourage uptake!? When does this end? When does the lid blow off this pressure cooker? How messy will that be when it happens?
Best,
Capt. Roy Harkness
PS: I was going to go through the presumably computer-generated transcript to make corrections, but thereās precious little point; itās not much better than gibberish and so deceptive, dishonest and utterly clueless it doesnāt bear comment ā although you may enjoy my insertions...š¤ I think of various substacks I read, Dr. William Makis, Prof. Mark Crispin Miller, Dr. Paul Alexander, āVigilant Foxā, āLionness of Judahā, āDr. Pearlā for example.. the developing fulminating holocaust they illustrate... but these two? Dr. Brian Goldman? Dr. Allison McGeer? How can they be so utterly oblivious? Do they not even begin to understand the nature of, the depths of, The Crimes Against Humanity they are complicit in? It staggers belief.
But evidently, they donāt. Classic examples of Orwellian Doublethink, both of them. Hereās the link, if you can stomach listening to it:
š© Linkedy-Link š©
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BRIAN GOLDMAN: Hi, Iām Dr. Brian Goldman. Welcome to The Dose. There are signs that COVID is making a comeback with some new sub variants. And if youāre due for a booster, whether to roll up your sleeves now or wait for one that protects against those new strains is a question that you probably want to answer. [Capt. Roy: No Brian.. that question never, ever, crossed my mind...] So this week we are asking, āshould I get a COVID booster now or wait for one that is more up to date?ā [Capt. Roy: š¤Æ] Hi, Allison. Welcome back to The Dose.
ALLISON MCGEER: Hi Brian, pleasure to be here.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: When did you get your last COVID booster?
ALLISON MCGEER: I had to look it up. You know, itās getting harder and harder to remember it. April, March 2023, Second Bivalent booster. Because Iām old, right? [Capt Roy: Could it be the spike proteins chewing your higher cognitive functions to ribbons, Allison?]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Oh, so my. Youāre a vintage. Weāre not going to call you old. So. Okay, so you got a decision. Youāve got a personal decision. And in addition to dispensing advice and we certainly want to hear all about that. But before we begin, can you give us a āhi, my name is tell us what you do and where you do itā so that everybody knows all of your amazing qualifications. [Capt Roy: āyour amazing qualificationsā? Wowā¦ justā¦ wow.. š]
ALLISON MCGEER: Well, hi, my name is Allison McGeer, and Iām an adult infectious disease physician and infectious disease epidemiologist at Sinai Health System in Toronto.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Great. Here we go. So how active is COVID right now? Itās still warm outside. And people kids are just going back to school now. So how active is COVID right now?
ALLISON MCGEER: So more active than the beginning of July, but less active than last April and May. So itās starting to creep back up again. But thereās still not a lot of activity in Canada. [Capt Roy: Umā¦ Dr. Allison? There isnāt any activity. āCovidā doesnāt exist. Youāre looking at good old Influenza A and Influenza B, bad colds, and Iād hazard, in 95% of cases at least, the initial symptoms from The Lethal Injections youāre pushing.]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: And, you know, what are we waiting for? Are we waiting for the weather to get colder, too, for kids to be entrenched in school? What are we waiting for? [Capt Roy: Could it be, weāre waiting in addition for a sudden surge of noxious dishonest propaganda?]
ALLISON MCGEER: Well, donāt we wish we know now that theres; itās disappointing after so long and certainly disappointing for someone like me, you know, my whole career trying to answer some of these questions. But we donāt know precisely what all the pieces are. [Capt Roy: I suspect some of us actually do...š¤š] We just know that, you know, as we go back inside in the winter. So going inside the summer doesnāt seem to be a problem. Going inside in the winter may be a problem as kids get back to school and have more contact as we get further and further from our last vaccine dose, as this virus changes more and more to move away. So itās the combination of things together and probably still honestly, as we all still kind of get back to normal. Itās been this long, slow process of returning to all of our activities as we know them. And I think those of us who are older and more vulnerable have been slower than other people to do that. So all of those things layered together is whatās going to get us the fall activity. Itās just really hard to predict at the moment how bad itās going to be. [Capt Roy: Ya think?!? Personally Iām waiting for the āHaemorrhagic Variantā that Kill Gates smirkingly insinuated could be comingā¦]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: But the trend lines are up [Capt Roy: Of course they are] and theyāre going to go up a lot faster in the weeks, in the weeks and months to come. Have I got that right?
ALLISON MCGEER: You got that right. For sure weāre going to have a COVID activity this winter that is greater than it is now. Itās a question of whether itās going to be not as bad as the flu. As bad as the flu you worse than the flu. [Capt Roy: Earth to Allison? It IS the flu!! ā¦ unless as I said already, itās initial reactions to The Poison Death Shots.]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Iāve been paying a lot of attention lately to a new sub variant called BA286, also known in some circles as Pirola. Now, that's an interesting name. What do we know so far about this new sub variant? [Capt Roy: How about that itās a fraud, it doesnāt exist?]
ALLISON MCGEER: Well, itās academically interesting for a variety of reasons. [Capt Roy: Iāll bet it is. š¤] So first of all, if youāve been tracking it as painfully as I have, youāll know that itās popped up in many places around the world. [Capt Roy: The same variant? In many places? Umā¦ how could it do that?] So itās not just in one country or one general area, but in all those places so far itās really uncommon. You know, one in Canada, two in Denmark, one in South Africa. So, you know, three or four in (indistint). [Capt Roy: Allison? Do you actually believe the horseshit youāre spewing?š āCause I donāt.] So remarkable for being widespread but not increasing dramatically over the last month or so that people have now been tracking it and not taking off in any one place before itās seen everywhere. So itās different than what weāve seen before, and that makes it a little harder to parse whatās going on with it. The good news is about it is that so far and thereās weāre just beginning to get the data on how far away it is from an immune system perspective, from other variants. [Capt Roy: āBafflegabā? Gobbledeygookā?] And the very first data came out last week and suggested that maybe it was farther than you would like. But three other labs have weighed in since and said, āno, I donāt think soā. So thatās the good News about it ā is that initially people looked at the sequences and they said, āOh, this is going to be (indistinct) a long way away. Not sure the boosters are going to cover itā. [Capt Roy: The āboostersā donāt cover anything. They never provided immunity, nor prevented transmission.] But thatās looking like thatās not correct. [Capt Roy: Indeed.] It really is looking like the boosters will cover it well. [Capt Roy: š¤£š¤£ā¦ ā ļøā°ļøšŖ¦] And even without the boosters, even without these most recent boosters, people are probably still pretty well protected against it. [Capt Roy: š¤Æš©]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: And I gather that youāre referring to the most recent studies, the most recent data thatās come out. There were a couple of groups of scientists in the United States who reported that the antibodies that are produced by a recent Bivalent vaccine or by an infection with Omicron, reacted against this new sub variant, suggesting that that if you have those antibodies, youāre likely to be reasonably protected against against the new one. [Capt Roy: Oneās head begins to revolve, at first, ever so slowlyā¦ šµāš«šµ]
ALLISON MCGEER: Thatās right. And, you know, everybody has their own way of doing these tests and each of the assays is a little bit different. And of course, weāre not far enough into this to have standardization of assays to know exactly how to translate them. So itās really important that you weigh all of them together and thereās a bit of a range in in peopleās findings. [Capt Roy: As in āall over the mapā? If not āmade up out of whole clothā?š¤Ø] But overall the answer is that it looks like peopleās antibody levels were more protective against the strain than we thought they were going to be by just looking at the sequence, which is what people originally saw. [Capt Roy: Did you two ever hear of āAntibody Dependent Enhancementā? Happens consistently with coronavirus vaccines and apparently these experimental mRNA concoctions too. Look it up sometime.š®āšØ]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: So thatās good news. Thereās another sub variant that Iāve been watching, e.g. five, also known as Eris. The WHO calls it a variant of interest. [Capt Roy: Those grifters? Iāll bet they did.] What do we know about that?
ALLISON MCGEER: Well, you know, same thing. Thereās every time youād think, you know whatās going on, somebody says, āOh no, you need to worry about and you know, outcomes, the letters, numbers again, of new variants sort of thing. But as expected, you know, as coronaviruses do, this virus is evolving and there are new variants arising. And every time we notice one that seems to be taking over, meaning itās more transmissible. Every time we notice one that has a lot of mutations, meaning it might be further away from the immune system, people, you know, perk their ears up and start focusing on what we know about. But so far, EG 5.1 and FL.1 might be 15 now Iāve forgotten. [Capt Roy: Spike proteins acting up Allison? šµ] So far all of the new ones that are out are, you know, really donāt look like anything. So theyāre just COVID doing what COVID does. And none of them are going to have a big impact on the effectiveness of the booster dose this fall or like the whatās happening before we get that booster dose.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: So and, you know, these are questions that you probably donāt want to answer because who has all the information right now anyway? [Capt Roy: How about Kill Gates and Tony Fraudci? Let me hasten to add Albert Bourla and Rochelle Walensky?] But these are questions that doctors and nurse practitioners are being asked all the time. To what extent do the current bivalent vaccines protect against these new sub variants? [Capt Roy: Brian? Allison? They donāt protect against anything. Theyāre genetic bioweapons. Theyāre slow-acting deadly poisons.]
ALLISON MCGEER: Itās going to depend on how long it is since youāve had them. So if youāre just talking about any protection and what we know is that once you get to about six months after booster dose, youāre not very well protected. Notice me couching that? Iām not saying nothing. Iām just saying not very well protected against getting an upper respiratory tract illness from SARS-CoV-2, which can be miserable but is not dangerous. [Capt Roy: If itās not dangerous, please explain the orchestrated hysteria campaign for the past 3 years and the incredibly dangerous experimental injections foisted on us all? š¤š©] If youāve had an infection in addition to that booster, youāre probably better protected at that even past six months. But still, the protection is not great from any infection. The protection from severe infection, however, is really different. I canāt put a number on the protection from severe infection until we see it. None of us can. But everything we know suggests that people who have been well vaccinated and or have been vaccinated and have had at least one infection [Capt Roy: How can they have had āat least one infectionā after theyāve been vaccinated? Theyāre supposed to be immune, right?] are going to be substantially protected from the severe disease. That does not mean that those of us who are older and people were immunocompromised and people who have multiple underlying co-morbidities arenāt going to be at some risk of severe disease. But just at the moment, with not really very much activity, peopleās boosters are probably holding fairly well. [Capt Roy: š±š„³š¤Ŗš¤Æā¦ ā ļøā°ļøšŖ¦]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Okay. Letās letās try to drill down a little bit. Letās start with people of average risk who maybe have been waiting eight, nine, ten months or a year since their last booster. So they need one. So youāve said that that immunity drops off and the magic number seems to be six months. Of course, Iām sure thereās a range, but but would you be telling people, advising people if itās been that long since youāve had a booster to get one now, regardless, and not wait for the new one? Whatās your thinking on that? [Capt Roy: Brian? Is this rubbish really your idea of āthinkingā?š¤Ø]
ALLISON MCGEER: So what Nancy [Capt Roy: Who the Hell is āNancyā?] and public health are telling us is that we should be waiting. And thatās premised on the fact that thereās still not very much activity. And itās almost certainly true that the booster, in the same way that the Bivalent boosters protected people better last year than the old vaccine. Almost certainly true that the new booster is going to protect us better against the SARS-CoV-2 viruses, viral strains that are around this fall. So waiting is good. The question to me is one of the things that would make you not wait and one of the challenges that you might get into if you decide not to, and the things that would make me not wait are circumstances where you know that your exposure to COVID is likely to be significant and you have an underlying condition that means that youāre at greater risk of severe disease. For instance, the extreme example to my view is in long term care homes. We know that residents are highly vulnerable if an outbreak starts in a long term care home. In my view, every resident of that long term care home should be getting a booster now and weāll deal with what comes later. Later. If you have an immunocompromising illness and are going to be traveling a lot by air in the next six weeks, thatās another good reason for thinking about getting a booster now. But for most of us, waiting and watching is a reasonable thing to do for the moment. Remember that itās a little bit irritating because you kind of like to make a decision to not worry about it. But I can make the decision today that Iām not going to get a break any booster and change my mind tomorrow. So the fact that Iām deciding today not to get the old booster because Iām waiting for a new one doesnāt mean I canāt change my mind a week or two weeks or three weeks from now if things change in terms of activity. And so that thatās what Iām thinking about. And so thatās what Iām saying to other people in general. Makes sense to wait. But itās a good idea to just have half a mind on whatās going on because you can change your mind.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: So one exception would be people who have severe underlying diseases or exist, you know, are living in conditions that put them at greater risk of outbreaks, for example, long term care. Are you saying that somebody of average risk whoās traveling to a COVID, a place where there's high rates of COVID, that they should get a booster in advance, regardless of of whether itās a new booster or not?
ALLISON MCGEER: The challenge here for them is whatās the downside of getting boosters? [Capt Roy: How about, āvaccine injuriesā or, āa slow, agonizing deathā?] So from a from a straight out, you know, protection against disease, you know, individual level balance. To me, those people getting these boosters is enormously sensitive. [Capt Roy: No kidding!] Right? The last thing you want to be is in your hotel with COVID in a country where you donāt speak the language well. So it would make sense. The downside, however, is that our current guidance for when you can get a booster is six months, and we still donāt know the extent to which people are going to enforce that. You know, obviously, if if thereās a huge amount of activity, itās likely that people are going to walk that back a little bit. But you are expecting some risk at the moment. If you live in Canada and you choose to get a dose now that you may not be able to get a dose until December or January of of the new Bivalent booster.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Okay. Letās go to a completely different category. How about kids going back to school? [Capt Roy: As Pink Floyd advised: āLeave them kids alone!ā]
ALLISON MCGEER: So what again, what Nassy is saying is that those kids should be waiting for their booster, that itās still likely to take six or eight weeks of time for COVID to start to build again as it starts. And so Nassy is recommending that all children of the six months get to get a booster, but that they wait for the bivalent booster to come because kids in particular arenāt, healthy children are not at that high risk of COVID. And most of them have had a dose or two of vaccine and the infection so far. And so waiting for kids makes a lot of sense.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Assuming most of us should wait for an updated booster, how well will that updated booster protect us against these new sub variants, do you think?
ALLISON MCGEER: Thatās that's a thatās a just a lot of thin ice to go out on. Yeah. So, you know, I think that itās important to remember here that now weāre talking about, you know, benefits over previous years. So everything is getting a little more marginal. I think itāll boost us probably 50 or 60% against severe disease for a period of 4 to 6 months. [Capt Roy: A vaccination thatās good for 4 - 6 months? Seems to me when I was a little kid, vaccation was for a lifetime and a booster, only in exceptional circumstances and maybe, 10 years down the road at the very most.] This is straight out opinion, right? [Capt Roy: Youāre the putative expertā¦ š¤šš©] The you know, where we'll not know for sure until we see it. But there is there is good cross-protection against all of the variants that we have seen so far, which means that for the people that the people that weāre particularly worried about are older adults who have not yet had an infection. Even if theyāve had all their booster doses. Those are the people where protection is waning and where protection against severe disease from what theyāve had so far may be down around, you know, 70, maybe even a little bit below. And those people will get boosted back up to somewhere above 90%, I think, And most of the rest of us will get at least a 50% reduction in risk of severe disease whatever our baseline is. [Capt Roy: š©š©š©š©š©š©š©]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: This may be an easier question, but again, you know, it it requires knowing something about the behavior of Health Canada and vaccine manufacturers. When is the updated booster expected?
ALLISON MCGEER: Now, the only safe answer to that question is that I know with absolute confidence that everybody is scrambling to get as fast as they can. Thatās, I think still likely to mean that it will be the middle of October before we get there. And when we get the first doses again, weāre not likely to get them all at once because vaccine manufacturing plants just have the capacity limits. They canāt do 24 million doses a day. I will. The first people we will needs to offer protection to will be those who are most vulnerable. So as with our first set of vaccines will go for residents of long term care, older adults, health care workers first, in all likelihood. And so it may be November some time before the rest of us to get that vaccine.
BRIAN GOLDMAN: And knowing what we know. And youāve already said there are a lot thereās a lot that we donāt know about the behavior of COVID. [Capt Roy: Brian? itās the re-branded flu?š©] Are, how hopeful are you that thereāll be plenty of vaccine on hand as rates start to rise to the point at which we wish we had the vaccine available as quick as possible?
ALLISON MCGEER: I think all of us should worry that activity is going to move faster and vaccine availability. I donāt I just donāt know enough about what the circumstances are. And, you know, with Health Canada or vaccine supply to be able to talk intelligently. Itās one of those things that Iām trying not to lose sleep over because I know people involved are doing the very best they can. [Capt Roy: š¤Æā¦ No they damned arenāt!ā¦š¤£š¤£š¤£ ] So itās not something I can alter. I think it just means that whenever any of us as health care workers get an opportunity to you know, move a little faster, do things a little better, that weāll need to do that this fall. I am worried that activity is going to climb faster than we would like it to, but weāre not talking the beginning of the pandemic okay. Weāre not talking the beginning of Omicron. Weāre not talking about catastrophe. [Capt Roy: Actually Allison, yes we are. We are talking about āDepopulationā, of āGenocideā if not āDemonideā and the collapse of civilization. Purportedly 6 billion people on Earth have taken in good faith these hi-tech rat poisons; odds are good, all these people will be dead in the next 2 - 5 years. Care to think what the reality of this, actually is?] We are talking about something that we'd all like to avoid. [Capt Roy: Too late Allisonā¦š³ far, far, too late...š³]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: You know, Iām mindful of the fact that the two of us are having this conversation. The two of us are pro vaccine. [Capt Roy: Hey Brian: āThe History and Pathology of Vaccinationā by Edgar M. Crookshank, MD? First published if memory serves in 1886? 137 years ago? Thatās how long the truth about vaccination has been around. But the Covid āvaccinesā arenāt even vaccines: Theyāre experimental genetic chemotherapy agents. Itās your job to know this, and to warn people, no matter the personal cost. Didnāt do that thoā did you? š¤š] And there's a lot of people who are going to listen to this, who are not or who are ambivalent and and, you know, and maybe have only had three doses of the vaccine. [Capt Roy: š¤Æš©] So what do you say to them at this point in the pandemic, in this point, in the in the story of COVID?
ALLISON MCGEER: Well, you know, generally thatās a long conversation because itās both about thinking about how you, how people would feel about vaccines, why people are hesitant about vaccines. [Capt Roy: Allison you daft twit! I am NOT āvaccine hesitant!ā] And thereās this many reasons to be hesitant about vaccines as there are people in the world. [Capt Roy: The central one being āVaccinationā is pretty much a fraud to start with ā and potentially a very dangerous one?] And so, you know, itās about trying to, you know, center those people and help them make decisions. [Capt Roy: āNo chance, English Bedwetting Type!āš] You know, truth is that all of us make different decisions about our individual level of risk, and none of us make the smartest decisions in the world about every level of risk there is. [Capt Roy: In this particular case Iām pretty sure I haveā¦š] It's okay that people are hesitant. I of course, I worry about them as a health care worker because I know what the risk of COVID is, [Capt Roy: A āprovenā mortality rate of 0.003% Alison? And thatās IF you believe this monumental fraud?] and I donāt want people to be at risk of COVID. But itās you know, itās a conversation that has to be had about why people are weighing that risk public differently than I am. [Capt. Roy: āAnyone with a brain had enough time to examine the Scamdemic and see that it was false...If in a year you didn't practice that and you went and ran off to get the jab so that you could go travelling or not get offended or do something like that...? Youāre an idiot. And youāre a coward. And you don't live according to the truth.ā ā Br. Alexis Bugnolo]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: Well, Dr. Allison McGeer, I always love talking to you about COVID and you have not disappointed. Once again, thank you so much for bringing some clarity to a subject that that is certainly continues to be important to us and will continue to be important this fall.
ALLISON MCGEER: Youāre most welcome Brian. I don't think you meant it when you said that you always enjoyed talking to me about COVID because I think weāre all tired of talking about COVID, but doesnāt mean we donāt have to get our boosters. Take care. [Capt Roy: Yes it does, Allison: Youād have to be certifiably insane to take one of those injections, knowing the risks.]
BRIAN GOLDMAN: You too. Dr. Allison Mcgeer is an infectious disease physician at Sinai Health System and professor in the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology at the University of Toronto. Hereās your dose of smart advice. After a lull, COVID cases and hospitalizations are slowly climbing, though nowhere near what we saw during previous peak times. Thereās a new sub variant called B.A. 286, also known as Pirola. Public health doctors have been fearful about this variant because it is genetically quite different from the one that until recently was the dominant one. But those fears may have been premature. Very recent studies suggest that people who have either been infected with or vaccinated against Omicron produce antibodies that are likely to protect against the new sub variant. COVID watchers are tracking another new sub variant called EG five or Eris. So far, thereās no evidence that Eris causes severe COVID infections. A new Bivalent vaccine that protects against these sub variants should be available this fall, hopefully at the same time as the annual flu shot. If you need a booster, the National Advisory Committee on Immunization or NACI, says you should wait until the new one arrives. Get a booster now. [Capt Roy: Fuck that. š”] If you're immunocompromised or live in long term care where youāre highly likely to be exposed to the virus, you should also consider getting a booster now and not wait. [Capt Roy: š±š²š£š³ Wish I could find a āRussian Rouletteā emoticon.. š¤] If you plan on traveling to a part of the world with a high rate of COVID when COVID was on the decline. Many of us got out of the habit of wearing masks. [Capt Roy: Whatās your point, Brian? Half of us also have a below-average IQ. Guess the ones who āgot out of the habitā were the other half.š¤] Cooler weather and kids going back to school. I mean, we can expect to see many more cases of COVID this fall. Consider wearing a mask when gathering indoors with lots of other people. [Capt Roy: Um..? ānoāā¦ ] If you have topics youād like discussed or questions answered, our email address is the dose at cbc.ca. If you like this episode, please give us a rating and review wherever you listen. This edition of The Dose was produced by Isabelle Gallant, our senior producers, Colleen Ross. The dose wants you to be better informed about your health. [Capt Roy: It does? Boy! Sure had me fooled! š³š©] If youāre looking for medical advice, see your health care provider. [Capt Roy: After the last 3+ years of orchestrated bullshit insanity Brian? The corruption enough to gag an army of maggots? Iāll never darken a doctorās doors again, if I can by any means avoid it.] I'm Dr. Brian Goldman. Until your next dose.
Remember Bill and āBillindaā Gates snickering about the second pandemic being worse than the first? They knew exactly what was coming and why and that it would be the collapse of peopleās natural immune systems.
These are again the times of Noah.
People are calling for, including me, to "take back our country".
Well, we can't "take back our country" until we GIVE OUR LIVES BACK to God. We are the ones who gave our countries to Satan in the first place.
I've been trying to tell people something like this:
Give your lives back to the true God, the heavenly Father of Jesus and our true heavenly Father as well. Repent of your sins, your dealings with Satan. Turn away from Satan and accept the ransom and death of Jesus given for your release from bondage and possession by Satan. Time is running short, go down on your knees now and ask God for forgiveness. He has been waiting for you.
"For God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten son so that whoever believes (trusts, follows and obeys Jesus) will not die (lose their spirits and souls to Satan) but have Everlasting Life."
Thank you for doing the extremely tedious and dirty work of reading and dissecting the transcript. Of course, the saving grace is your own inserted reactions. Another new word for me to use - bafflegab, love it.