‘This Man’s Morally Corrupt’: Rep. Ronny Jackson Blasts Dr. Kevin O’Connor
'He's not a particularly great physician'
The White House press corps is not happy with Karine Jean-Pierre — as she just can’t seem to stop repeating lies from the White House regarding the president’s health.
“I never answered the question incorrectly,” Jean-Pierre responded to a frustrated member of the press. “That is not true. I was asked about a medical exam, I was asked about a physical, that was in the line of questions that I answered.”
“And I said ‘No, he did not have a medical exam,’ and I still stand by that. Matter of fact, the president still stands by that. He had a verbal check-in, that is something that the president has a couple times a week,” Jean-Pierre continued.
When another reporter asked the name of the doctor with whom President Biden has weekly check-ins, Jean-Pierre got angrier.
“I am telling you right now that I am not sharing, confirming names from here. It is a security reason. I am not going to do that Ed, it doesn’t matter how hard you push me, it doesn’t matter how angry you get with me. I’m not going to confirm a name,” she said.
Pat Gray is confused as to why it’s a “security reason.”
“If she mentions the guy's name, if it’s Dr. Cannard, does that mean people are going to try to kill him? Is that what the security issue is? Are you endangering his life by saying, ‘Yeah, he treated the president?’ This is BS. Come on,” Gray says.
Jean-Pierre then went on to claim that it was for the doctor’s “privacy.”
“It is inappropriate, it is not acceptable,” she added.
“He’s the president’s doctor,” Gray laughs. “That just ruins your career.”
In another press briefing, Jean-Pierre appeared to be on the brink of tears.
“We literally do everything that we can, my team does, that we can, to make sure that we get the answers to you,” she said. “And sometimes we disagree, sometimes we are not in agreement. But you know what, that’s democracy.”
“And so to say that I’m holding information, or allude to anything else, is unfair, is really, really unfair,” she continued. “And I will admit, I will be the first one to admit, sometimes I get it wrong. At least I admit that.”
Then it got worse, as Jean-Pierre told reporters sometimes she doesn’t “have the information,” but again, at least she admits it.
When she was asked whether or not Biden would submit to a cognitive test, Jean-Pierre said more of absolutely nothing.
“Everything that he does day in and day out, as it relates to delivering for the American people, is a cognitive test.”
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On this special episode of “Sara Gonzales Unfiltered,” your favorite spicy Latina invites former G.I. surgeon and medical researcher Dr. Andrew Wakefield — who Wikipedia labels as a “fraudster, discredited academic, [and] anti-vaccine activist” — to challenge the mainstream narrative surrounding Big Pharma.
Also joining the show is Matthew Marsden, BlazeTV contributor and star of Wakefield’s new film, "Protocol-7,” which is a bombshell “whistleblower story” that chronicles the true events of the lawsuit against Merck for the firm’s allegedly harmful MMR vaccine.
Together, the three discuss what Sara calls “epic levels of Big Pharma corruption.”
So, how did Dr. Wakefield become “Big Pharma's number one enemy?”
Simple. He spoke the truth even when the truth was inconvenient.
Turns out when you “confront government policy and you threaten pharmaceutical industry profiteering,” you “take a relatively promising medical career and flush it down the toilet,” says Dr. Wakefield, adding that he’s been embroiled in this battle for “30 years now.”
The longstanding narrative surrounding Dr. Wakefield is that he claimed “vaccines cause autism.”
However, that’s not even close to the full story.
“In 1995, I started getting calls from parents saying my child was perfectly well ... and then they had an MMR vaccine, then they had a seizure, and they were never the same again; the lights went out, and they were ultimately diagnosed with autism,” he tells Sara.
While Dr. Wakefield was not trained in matters related to autism, parents continued to call him because their children were simultaneously experiencing painful “intractable bowel problems,” which was within his scope of practice.
However, “The doctors and nurses I talked to dismissed this. They said, ‘This is just autism, get used to it, put them in a home, forget about them, move on, [and] have another child.”’
Thankfully, instead of silently complying, Dr. Wakefield “put together a big team of eminent doctors and the world's leading pediatric gastroenterologists at the time.”
“We investigated these children, and the parents were absolutely right,” he says. “The children had an inflammatory bowel disease, and when we treated that bowel disease as we might treat Crohn's disease or colitis with anti-inflammatories, then not only did the bowel symptoms get better, but they started speaking again.”
“We did it 183 times before I left the Royal Free [Hospital], and it happened virtually every single time.”
When it had become clear “that the medical profession was wrong on virtually every count” related to the effects of its vaccines, Dr. Wakefield suggested “dissociating these vaccines into their component parts ... given perhaps by separation of one year.”
In other words, he never suggested not taking vaccines but rather just taking them separately in order to better study the effects of each individual vaccine.
So while he drew “no conclusions,” made “[no] definitive statements,” and per protocol, suggested a “more detailed study” based on the case series he’d drawn up, his words were twisted and manipulated, eventually leading to his expulsion from the medical field altogether.
To hear more of Dr. Wakefield’s story, as well as the details of his film “Protocol 7,” watch the clip below.
Or head over to get.blazetv.com/sara for the full, 100% uncensored, and FREE episode.
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A Utah doctor has been accused of doling out nearly 2,000 fake COVID vaccination cards and dumping actual mRNA shots, thereby defrauding the U.S. government.
KTVX reported that Dr. Michael Kirk Moore Jr. of Salt Lake City, his neighbor Kristin Jackson Andersen, and two others have been charged with conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government; conspiracy to convert, sell, convey, and dispose of government property; and conversion sale, conveyance, and disposal of government property as well as aiding and abetting.
Court documents indicate that the accused were both members of a group seeking to "'liberate' the medical profession from government and industry conflicts of interest."
Moore was indicted on Jan. 11 by a federal grand jury in Salt Lake City.
Moore, 58, is a plastic surgeon at the Plastic Surgery Institute of Utah Inc. in Midvale, where he worked with office manager Kari Dee Burgoyne and receptionist Sandra Flores, both similarly charged.
According to the federal criminal complaint, Moore and his compatriots destroyed hundreds of doses of government-provided COVID-19 vaccines.
Moore allegedly signed a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention COVID-19 Vaccination Program Provider Agreement in order to secure COVID-19 vaccines and vaccination record cards and ordered hundreds of doses of vaccines from the CDC.
Instead of peddling the government vaccines, Moore allegedly began giving out fraudulent vaccination record cards in exchange for direct cash payments or direct donations of $50. The approximate value of these cards was $96,850.
Between May 2021 and September 2022, the defendants allegedly also administered harmless "saline shots to minor children to trick them into thinking they had received a vaccine" at the request of their parents.
The charging documents indicate that Moore had managed to "falsely reflect that the Fraudulent Vax Card Seekers had received at least 1937 doses of bona fide COVID-19 vaccines, when, in fact, they had received none."
As for the real vaccines (i.e., Janssen, Moderna, Pfizer, and Pfizer Pediatric), the defendants allegedly destroyed $28,028 worth by drawing them from the bottles sent by the government and "squirting them down the drain" via a syringe.
The scheme reportedly worked on a referral basis.
Those seeking the cards were prompted to provide Andersen with the name of a previous customer. After this preliminary screening process, the so-called "Fraudulent Vax Card Seeker" allegedly was directed to a website to make the $50 donation.
The scheme appeared to be going well until an undercover agent managed to get a referral in March 2022. Then, in June, Moore's clinic gave a second undercover agent a fake vaccine record card.
The second undercover agent had Flores confirm that the defendants gave fake vaccinations to kids.
"By allegedly falsifying vaccine cards and administering saline shots to children instead of COVID-19 vaccines, not only did this provider endanger the health and well-being of a vulnerable population but also undermined public trust and the integrity of federal health care programs," said Curt L. Muller, special agent in charge with the Department of Health and Human Services, office of the inspector general.
Moore and the other defendants may be on the hook to the government for at least $124,878.
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The first transgender officer in the U.S. Army and wife have both been indicted for allegedly attempting to communicate with Russian officials in the hopes of giving them kompromat on some members of the military and their spouses.
Over the summer, Major Jamie Lee Henry, 39, and wife Dr. Anna Gabrielian, 36, had reportedly made contact with someone whom they thought worked at the Russian embassy but who was actually an undercover FBI agent. Henry, an internist, is a medical doctor with security clearance at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, one of the largest military installations in the entire world. Gabrielian, an anesthesiology and critical care instructor at Johns Hopkins, allegedly expressed hope to the FBI agent that they could use her husband's security clearance to obtain the private medical records of some strategic members of the military and/or their spouses and relatives that Russian officials could then "exploit."
According to the indictment, which was unsealed on Thursday, Gabrielian said she was motivated to help Russia because of her Russian patriotism, and her profile at Johns Hopkins does indicate that Gabrielian speaks fluent Russian. However, it is unclear whether she is a Russian national or somehow otherwise affiliated with the country.
Though Henry was not said to be motivated by Russian patriotism, the indictment does suggest the Army officer expressed some sympathy for Russian interests.
"My point of view is until the United States actually declares war against Russia," Henry allegedly told the agent, "I'm able to help as much as I want."
Henry also told the agent that Henry had attempted to enlist in the Russian army to fight against Ukraine but had been rejected for a lack of combat experience.
"The way I am viewing what is going on in Ukraine now, is that the United States is using Ukrainians as a proxy for their own hatred toward Russia," Henry allegedly said.
Gabrielian also allegedly called Henry a "coward" when the Army officer expressed misgivings about violating HIPPA regulations in service to Russia.
During a meeting with the agent at a hotel last month, Gabrielian reportedly gave the agent private medical information belonging to the spouse of a service member in the Office of Naval Intelligence, as well as the information of a relative from an Air Force veteran. Henry likewise handed the agent the medical records of five Fort Bragg patients, according to the filing. It is unclear whether Henry had treated those patients personally.
During that meeting, the couple also supposedly attempted to establish a contingency plan, in the event they were ever arrested.
Gabrielian allegedly requested that the Russian embassy help find her children "a nice flight to Turkey to go on vacation" so that they couldn't be used as "hostages" against her if she were ever incarcerated.
Both Henry and Gabrielian have been charged with conspiracy and wrongful disclosure of individually identifiable health information. They face up to 15 years in prison each, if convicted.
The couple were married in 2015, the same year Henry came out as transgender. At the time, Henry gave an interview with Brightest Young Things. "My passion is service member health," Henry said in the interview. "...The biggest part in supporting the health of service members is listening to them. Trauma has to be handled on an individual’s timeline and in a way that is unique to that individual."
Brightest Young Things has since changed its name to Exactly. It claims to be an "award-winning Design, Strategy, and Events agency for brands who want to stay relevant with today's beautifully diverse audience."
An experienced auto mechanic and small business owner in Cleveland, Ohio, has finally fulfilled a lifelong dream. At age 51, he is now a doctor.
Earlier this year, Dr. Carl Allamby completed a long, circuitous path into medicine that began when he was still a child. Allamby was one of six children. His father was a minister, and his mother was a homemaker. Despite his parents' best efforts though, the family struggled to afford even the most basic necessities. They were on welfare and often couldn't afford gas, electricity, or water.
"And if not for government handouts," Allamby said, "we would have been without food on many occasions."
Though Allamby felt the desire to become a doctor even back then, his difficult circumstances didn't allow him to give the idea much thought. Instead, he took a part-time job at an auto parts store and performed repair jobs on the side. He took to the work quickly and managed to open his first shop at 19.
"In a sense, I started Allamby’s Auto Service mostly out of desperation and necessity," Allamby admitted.
Then, at age 34, he decided to try to grow his business by pursuing a business degree at Ursuline College in Pepper Pike, Ohio. That decision changed his life.
In his final year there, he was forced to take an introductory biology course to complete the business program. That course once again reignited his interest in medicine.
"Learning about some of the incredible basic functions of the body reminded me of my childhood ambitions to become a doctor," he recalled.
So, he enrolled in pre-med courses at Cuyahoga Community College and began volunteering at a local hospital.
"Initially, I worked in a pediatric ward for immune-compromised children, providing activities for them during their often long-term stay."
By 2015, Allamby was accepted into medical school at Northeast Ohio Medical University. Now, seven years later, Allamby has completed his residency and works as a full-time attending emergency medicine physician at Cleveland Clinic's Hillcrest Hospital in Mayfield Heights, Ohio.
Despite all the hard work and sacrifice, Allamby has no regrets about leaving the repair shop for the emergency room.
"I cannot be more happy than where I am now," he claimed. "When you look up and the day is over and it’s time to go home, you cannot believe nine hours has passed. I leave so energized."
He also acknowledges that he wouldn't be a doctor, if it weren't for his family.
"My saving grace [growing up] was our strong family structure," he said. "My siblings and I always stuck together and weathered our hardships as a team."
Now a husband and father of four, Allamby said that his family, especially his wife Kim, continues to support him. He also hopes that his story will inspire others to pursue their dreams.
"I feel we all have the opportunity to make our lives better. If you want it, go after it," he said. "Don’t give up.
"Plan your work and work your plan," he continued. "Your sacrifices today will produce advantages for tomorrow."