35 Comments
User's avatar
Brien's avatar

Just spent a week with 15 highly educated liberals from across the country. Not one of them has even heard of these 6 books. They didn’t watch the RFKJr Senate testimony or any of the other congressional hearings concerning Covid or the vaccines. All they know is what they have heard on CNN or NPR or read in the NYTs. If it didn’t come from one of those sources it is either false or doesn’t exist. Several of them came down with Covid during the week and they were all comparing notes on their vaccine booster status, eager to get boosted as soon as they returned home. I’d say this group is typical of urban and suburban America in all big cities. This divide is seemingly impenetrable.

Expand full comment
Tim Webb's avatar

The three monkeys come to mind.

"See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil."

Once you open yourself up to truth, your whole world comes crashing down, and such people have a vested interest in the status quo, and in the rewards it brings them.

"Conspiracy theorist" is their go-to explanation for anything that doesn't fit their world view.

Expand full comment
Ellen's avatar

Ugh. Was it the ones who had Covid who are planning to get boosted ASAP? That's insane.

Sadly, yes, lots of blue-bubbler's don't see that there's an entire universe of information outside of the narrative. Or they think, as I used to, that CNN and NYT are corporate media, but The Guardian and Democracy Now are independent. Same corrupt, polluted headwaters of the narrative, same bullshit, slightly different tone. Cringing to remember the sources I once trusted.

At least the several people I've talked to so far in my quest for roommates (in a blue city, on a progressive list), have said they were "fully vaccinated", but then said their last shot was in 2022 or early 2023. Even though I know spike can potentially be produced for years, I'll settle for someone who hasn't taken shots in the last two years. There seems to be some awareness that vaccinating forever isn't necessary, while nowhere near understanding that it's not an overhyped vaccine, it's a crime against humanity.

Expand full comment
Truthseeker's avatar

Book smart… is not the same as having common sense. There’s a shortage of common sense today…

And, It’s a fact some people who are negatively impacted by vaccines have ‘emotional blunting’ … it’s a key feature of autism… so…

Expand full comment
Norm Patriot's avatar

This is a self-correcting problem. Wait a few years and see.

Expand full comment
Fred Reeve's avatar

, they’re willing to step into Gates’ cesspool of depopulation.

Expand full comment
earl's avatar

Same here; I just spent a week with 2 liberals with 6 degrees between them. People so smart, they don't need to know anything (hat tip Andrew Wilkow). One said she had Covid 3 times and was glad she got the shots, or it would have been much worse. His preferred new source: YahooNews!

Expand full comment
savvysenior's avatar

Don't confuse me with the FACTS, my mind's made up!

Expand full comment
John Alton's avatar

This likely par for the course. Steve Kirsch mentioned in his last podcast that the so-called intellectuals that are judging his debate don't seem to grasp that the injections were dangerous even after he has presented six months of analysis showing them the problem. He was shaking his head.

Expand full comment
Dory O’Toole's avatar

Disappointed you have not mentioned Dissolving Illusions as an RN since 1979 that’s my go to recommendation when people challenge me on my position as an anti stupid as opposed to anti vaxxer( compliments of Dr. Zelenko ) That stunning piece of scientific data as to the history of vaccines and the lies associated with safe and effective rocked my beliefs in trusting the CDC WHO NIH Public Heath and our Government Susanne Humphreys MD has been a warrior for Do No Harm and she deserves a standing ovation!

Expand full comment
Trying hard's avatar

Thanks! I was gonna write the same thing about Dissolving Illusions. Also add "Turtles All the Way Down" ( vaccines- several books by that name) Almost a handbook for anyone considering the far too many vaccines for their children With good questions to ask the pediatrician Who will of course be offended and not able to answer any of the questions. But of course none of my children will even touch the Turtles book which I gave to each 1 for Christmas several years ago. Loving Leake and Mcculloughs book-- they all combine to paint a horrifying picture of historic and present day medical corruption and near religious fanaticism for vaccines.

Expand full comment
Dr. Karen R Rickers's avatar

You took the words right out of my mouth!

Expand full comment
MB's avatar
14hEdited

For readers who cannot pursue paid subscriptions to medical freedom authors on SS, buying these books is an ideal alternative means to provide financial support if feasible. I have a shelf full of these titles that I do not have time to read, but I feel it’s important to recognize the authors’ dedication and sacrifice. I also want their books to become best sellers so more people are awakened. Added bonus is you can lend the books to friends.

Expand full comment
peter tomkinson's avatar

Add the Daniel Roytas book 'Can You Catch A Cold' to your reading list. He exhaustively examines the history of research on respiratory illness and transmission.

Expand full comment
Sheila's avatar

And Have Yourself a Wholly Vibrant Life: Reversing Asthma and Other Chronic Illness Naturally (by Sheila Murrey). My true life story and more healing asthma!

Expand full comment
NMM's avatar
9hEdited

The book, that probably is out-of date, that woke me up, I read in the 1980's titled : A Shot in the Dark. I didn't read it until my youngest son had a severe reaction to his grade one vaccination for school. We were all in the dark - assumed we were doing the right thing. How uninformed, trusting and naive we were!

Expand full comment
DaughteroftheKing's avatar

THANK YOU, Mr. Leake, for highlighting all of these EXCELLENT TRUTH sources!

Expand full comment
Patrick Frank's avatar

John - you have Peter McCullough's ear.

Zinc and copper have long been known to prevent the ulcerogenic effects of aspirin and other NSAIDs.

The first report known to me came out in 1976. They've sporadically continued into the present. Zinc aspirinate has even been recommended as an ulcer preventative.

Extended use of aspirin is generally contraindicated because of fear of GI bleeding and ulceration. However, co-administration of zinc or copper prevents that outcome.

I've written to some of the lights in the field, But they don't respond, and nothing is ever done.

It would be child's play to compound a 325 mg aspirin tablet with 15-30 mg of zinc. A totally safe dose. GI problems would be totally banished. Extended use of zinc-aspirin, e.g., to prevent stroke, would be completely safe.

An aspirin tablet with 15 mg of zinc and 1 mg of copper might be even more effective.

So, the proposal is that the Wellness Company be the first ever to offer an ulcer-preventing aspirin tablet. All the anti-inflammatory activity remains. But no GI disturbance. No bleeding, No pain. No danger of ulcers.

I also have very long-time personal knowledge of the efficacy of Zn/Cu and aspirin.

Please ask Dr. McCullough to look into this possibility. It is otherwise ignored.

A Zn-aspirin tablet would save lots of people lots of pain. It would virtually guarantee the safety of extended use. GI bleeds or ulceration, no longer a danger, would no longer restrict extended use.

Ulcer-free aspirin is right up the Wellness Company alley of safe medicine. Not only saving people from serious injury but another victory for medical ethics. One can only wonder, a bit darkly, why it has never been offered.

Most of the literature can be found at the links below, through 2011. There may be more recent work.

Dr. McCullough can convince himself of the facts of the case. Wellness Company safe aspirin would be a great talking point in an interview. It would be a blessing for very many.

Pat

https://doi.org/10.1002/jps.2600650129

https://doi.org/10.1002/jps.2600721222

https://doi.org/10.1002/jps.2600731266

https://doi.org/10.1016/0014-2999(85)90415-7

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2661183/

https://doi.org/10.1016/0014-2999(90)94112-b

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-7158.1992.tb03650.x

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0010-8545(02)00086-3

https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.941025

https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.59.972

Expand full comment
Alio McDavis's avatar

"If you could stop the shouting, the rocks and stones themselves will start to sing"

Truth has a way of sticking around.

Expand full comment
Tim Webb's avatar

Dr Mark Bailey from NZ also has an extensive tome called - I think - "The end of virology."

He and his wife - also a medical doctor - have quite a crusade against this failed enterprise.

The idea seems to be catching on like wildfire, and not before time.

Huge damage has been done to billions.

Expand full comment
Nasty1's avatar

Thanks for the insight John. I’m a life long reader and follower of Emanuel Swedenborg’s writings. Being so I can attest to why the Catholic church would prefer to have them locked in a vault where they could not expose the orthodoxy for what it is…

Expand full comment
carolyn kostopoulos's avatar

your book is next up on my reading list. then Siri, then DeBecker

Expand full comment
Paul Kirshman's avatar

The time that a CLIA laboratory must retain paraffin embedded blocks from all surgical procedures must be increased from ten years to 30 years because of the unanswered testing for retrotranspositioning, transpositioning, and integrase risks that have been criminally neglected in the corrupt and conflicted ‘rolling out’ / DUMPING of these biological bioterrorism Vaticcan approved ‘counter measures’.

Expand full comment
Tim Webb's avatar

This term "countermeasures" was first brought to my attention by Sasha Latypova, when discussing the highest-level conspiracy to inflict death, disease, and depopulation on the world.

There are many with their shoulders to the boulders.

Expand full comment
Jennifer Jones's avatar

Thanks for this.

Expand full comment
Tim Webb's avatar

I'm by no means a fan of the RCC, but their suppression of the works of Galileo has some substance to it, despite the popular opinion that he was exposing the lies of religion, and so had to be declared anathema.

What it boils down to is that he said that the earth revolves around the sun, which went against the geocentric stance of the religious authorities.

He thought this because he had seen the moons of Jupiter revolving around that planet, and so from his observations, he deduced that the earth must also revolve around the sun; because it too is a small object revolving around a large one.

The crucial question though, is - is it smaller?

Received wisdom asserts that it is.

But simple common sense suggests that it isn't.

The evidence for the contrarian viewpoint comes from science, and specifically, from the Inverse Square Law for the radiation of light and heat.

Simply put, no object that is 93 million miles away from earth, whose surface temperature is a mere 5K celsius, could possibly light and heat earth to the extent that we are familiar with - the only credible explanation is therefore that the sun must be much smaller than commonly believed, and also much closer.

Expand full comment
earl's avatar

So happy to support you folks in what I hope is another Great Awakening.

Expand full comment
Peter Daniel Miller's avatar

This is an impressive compendium of knowledge, history, and analysis of vaccine damage to human health. These, together with the growing numbers of scientific papers showing the ill effects of the covid mRNA injections in particular, constitute overwhelming evidence of widespread harm. And yet doctors and public health agencies persist in their demonstrably false belief that sticking needles in people is always good for them. Does this amount to religious faith? Perhaps so, but we should be wary of attributing these falsehoods only to religion, lest we unjustly malign all religion and spirituality. It is actually the absence of religion that produces ersatz ideologies of salvation, such as the crude reductionism of those who preach 'following the science'. Of course money is driving the medical providers; it is hard, though, to account for the credulousness and passivity of even the most educated members of the public. Fear is probably foremost, yet the far higher risks of death and illness caused by vaccines ought to banish that fear. Whether one regards religion in general as irrational or not, there is something far more irrational at large in the persistence of vaccine ideology. A mass death-wish, perhaps, merges with the eugenics ideology of a few whose tech-utopia is littered with the wished-for corpses of billions of 'unnecessary' people. Rather than maligning all religion, a more accurate portrayal of our current situation would focus on the warped tech-oligarch vision of our future.

Expand full comment