cover of episode Mysterious "Drones" Spread, Media Malpractice, and How Medical Journals Became Captured, with Hugh Hewitt and Dr. Aseem Malhotra | Ep. 964

Mysterious "Drones" Spread, Media Malpractice, and How Medical Journals Became Captured, with Hugh Hewitt and Dr. Aseem Malhotra | Ep. 964

2024/12/13
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Hugh Hewitt:美国政府对近期在多个州(新泽西州、纽约州、马里兰州)出现的大量不明飞行物(无人机)事件反应迟钝,缺乏透明度,令人担忧。他认为政府有能力追踪这些飞行物的来源,但至今未给出令人满意的解释。他质疑政府的说法,认为这些飞行物可能构成对国家安全和公共安全的威胁,并呼吁政府立即采取行动,向公众提供答案。他排除了业余爱好者和外星人的可能性,认为幕后操纵者可能是敌对国家,并利用政府机构之间的漏洞进行活动。 Megyn Kelly:她对政府的回应表示怀疑,认为政府的声明缺乏可信度。她指出,政府官员最初否认事件的存在,但在越来越多的目击报告和公众压力下,才承认这些飞行物的存在。她与Hewitt一样,对事件的真相表示担忧,并认为政府有必要向公众提供透明的解释。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why are there mysterious drone sightings in multiple states, and why is the federal government dismissing them?

The mysterious drones, spotted in New Jersey, New York, and Maryland, have sparked concern due to their large numbers and coordinated movements. The federal government, including the White House and military, claims there is no threat and that the sightings are unconfirmed, leading to frustration among officials and the public. Some speculate the drones could be a Chinese intelligence operation, while others suggest they might be a test of U.S. airspace security.

Why did ProPublica attempt to smear Pete Hegseth over his West Point admission?

ProPublica, a left-leaning investigative group, tried to discredit Pete Hegseth by claiming he lied about being admitted to West Point. When Hegseth provided his acceptance letter, ProPublica defended their actions as standard journalistic practice, but critics argue it was a politically motivated hit job aimed at weakening his credibility as a Trump nominee.

What is the link between statins and heart disease according to Dr. Aseem Malhotra?

Dr. Aseem Malhotra argues that statins, while effective for some high-risk patients, are overprescribed for those without prior heart disease. He claims that the focus on lowering LDL cholesterol is misguided, as high cholesterol in older adults is not a significant risk factor for heart disease. Instead, insulin resistance, caused by diets high in sugar and processed foods, is the primary driver of heart disease.

How can people reverse the effects of insulin resistance and heart disease?

Dr. Malhotra recommends a low-refined carbohydrate Mediterranean diet, rich in olive oil, fish, nuts, and vegetables, to combat insulin resistance and reduce inflammation. He also emphasizes the importance of reducing chronic stress through meditation, which can help reverse arterial blockages and improve heart health.

Why are medical journals criticized in Dr. Malhotra's documentary 'First Do No Pharm'?

Medical journals are criticized for being heavily influenced by pharmaceutical companies, which fund drug trials and pay for favorable publications. This creates a conflict of interest, as journals often exaggerate the benefits and downplay the harms of drugs. The documentary highlights how this corruption has led to overmedication and harmful medical practices.

What are the risks associated with the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, according to Dr. Malhotra?

Dr. Malhotra cites evidence showing that the mRNA vaccines, particularly Pfizer and Moderna, have a serious adverse event rate of at least 1 in 800, leading to hospitalizations, disabilities, and life-changing conditions. He also warns that the vaccines may accelerate heart disease and increase the risk of cancer due to long-term immunosuppression.

What should people do if they have already received the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine?

Dr. Malhotra advises optimizing metabolic health through lifestyle changes, including a healthy diet, stress reduction, and immune-boosting supplements like high-dose vitamin C. He emphasizes the need for further research and acknowledgment of the vaccine's risks by the medical establishment.

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Welcome to the Megan Kelly show and happy Friday. With just over five weeks to go before President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in, the media is working through their five stages of grief. There's anger from Don Lemon, denial from media stationed outside of Mar-a-Lago about the fact that they're no longer relevant, and some bargaining and acceptance from the owner of the Washington Post, Jeff Bezos. We'll get to some of that in a minute, but we're going to kick it off with some breaking news on these

with the question mark that we reported on yesterday in depth. If you missed that report, it's on our YouTube channel now. Joining me now, longtime radio host Hugh Hewitt, host of the Hugh Hewitt Show, friend, and one of our must-listen to commentators in America. His show is going to be moving to afternoon drive time on the East Coast in January. Hugh, great to see you.

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afternoon, I highly recommend. I don't know if I recommend being in New Jersey between dusk and 11 p.m. And by the way, now it's not just New Jersey. Reports today that these things, we'll call them drones because we don't know, but for lack of a better word, have now been seen in New York,

and over LaGuardia or near LaGuardia and down in Maryland. Listen to this from the governor of Maryland who just dropped this tweet. Governor Larry Hogan last night, beginning around nine 45 PM. I personally would personally witnessed and videoed what appeared to be dozens of large drones in the sky above my residence in Davidsonville, Maryland, 25 miles from our nation's Capitol. I observed the activity for approximately 45 minutes. Like

Like many who have observed these drones, I do not know if this increasing activity over our skies is a threat to public safety or national security. But the public's growing increasingly concerned and frustrated with a complete lack of transparency and the dismissive attitude of the feds. The government has the ability to track these from their point of origin, but has mounted a negligent response. People are rightfully clamoring for answers, but aren't getting any.

We are being told that neither the White House, the military, the FBI, or Homeland Security have any idea what they are, where they're coming from, or who has launched or is controlling them, and that they pose no threat. That response is entirely unacceptable. I join with a growing bipartisan chorus of leaders demanding that the feds immediately address this issue. The American people deserve answers and action now.

This is crazy. We were told yesterday by John Kirby at the White House, nothing to see here. We can't even confirm that there really have been drones. And this is leading now to senior government officials to step out and say, sorry, sir, we are seeing them.

This morning, I had Shyam Sankar on the program. He is the chief technology officer for Palantir, and he's being tipped for the deputy secretary of defense under Pete Hegseth. He's Mr. Artificial Intelligence. And I said, what do you think of these drones?

And Shyam said, they're terrifying. And I thought to myself, holy smoke, this guy is one of the smartest tech people in the country. And he says it's terrifying. And he explained, we don't have control of the domain.

And if you don't have control of the domain, you have essentially ceded your national security and your personal security to whoever's in your space. And we have seen drones used rather effectively by the IDF, by Ukraine, by Russia, not so effectively by Iran. But people have got to wonder what in the world is going on here, right? It can't be obvious, right? Can we eliminate hobbyists? There are too many of them, and it's too elegant a configuration.

I don't believe in space aliens. I do believe in adversaries who exploit what Sankar called the orcs, the seams between our various agencies like DHS and the Pentagon, and they have to get much more serious and in a hurry, Megan.

Yes, I don't get this. There's nothing to see their response by the feds. It makes me think it is the feds. But if it is the feds, why wouldn't they pause now that it's become such a controversy? They're still doing it. So I don't know what's going on, but it's very strange how certain the feds seem to be saying they are that it's nothing.

Whereas honesty sounds more like what Larry Hogan said, you know, what these New Jersey law makes are saying, like, we don't know what this is and we need to know. Here's the headline from NBC yesterday.

Now key House and Senate lawmakers are demanding that top federal law enforcement officials immediately brief them on these mysterious drone sightings. And here is Kirby, right, at the White House yesterday. He said that Homeland Security, the FBI, and state and local law enforcement have not been able to corroborate any of the reported visual sightings of the drones. He said upon reviewing images of the sightings, law enforcement officials have concluded, quote,

These are actually manned aircraft that are being operated lawfully and said there have been no confirmed drone sightings in restricted airspace. White House National Security Council telling NBC News we have no evidence at this time that these reported sightings pose a national security or public safety threat.

or have a foreign nexus. But now you've got New Jersey senators, Cory Booker and Andy Kim, New York senators, Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, sending a letter to the Homeland Security Secretary, who's also a Democrat, as you know, and the FBI director and the FAA head all saying to all these guys, we demand a briefing. And some say we could get it as late as or as early as this afternoon. Hugh, this is bizarre. I don't remember seeing anything like this.

No, we have Area 51 to do our experimental stuff. We don't do it in New Jersey. But that's not, I don't think it's

Our team. We don't do it. But I will say, why would anyone at the White House expect us to believe them when they told us for two years that President Biden was spry and doing jumping jacks and backflips in the Oval Office with cringing PR maids? Why would we believe anything they say? I don't. And therefore, when the Intel Committee gets a briefing and Tom Cotton comes out or Mike Walz comes out of the House and the Senate Intel Committee and says that

X, Y, Z, I'll believe them and I'll believe Dean Trump when they get there. I'm not believing these two. Same. I feel exactly the same. And on this one, we actually do need, we need some answers. I mean, I don't know what it is. Here is what I hope it isn't. Watch. It's a massive spaceship for the listening audience from Independence Day. It's a big spaceship too.

That's we're rooting against that. I think I think that's worse than Iran or the Russians. Am I wrong? Or China? I remember Independence Day. They were everywhere at once. So that but again, they picked New Jersey. So this doesn't make any sense to me unless they're just. No, I don't get it. Like, let's just spend one second speculating on what it could be. Because the the.

When I first heard about it, I thought, okay, it's probably like some smart MIT college thing.

guys who are super effective with drone technology and are having some fun. Maybe they're from New Jersey. And so they targeted New Jersey just to see what might happen. But this has been going on since November 18th, right? So we're like going on a month now and it's spreading. And even though the feds are saying to all of us, nothing's there, there's nothing confirmed.

I mean, I know some of the people in New Jersey who say they've seen them. A friend sent me a video who I've known for two decades of what she and her husband saw not long ago. But anyway, like the feds would know, the feds would have investigated this no matter what they're telling us. So why would they be lying to us? What could the explanation be that would cause the government to lie?

The easiest explanation is it's the CHICOMs. They let the balloon float across the country, which I believe was the third or the fourth balloon, but the first one that the public saw. And this administration does not want to have a confrontation with China as it goes out the door. The only people that I think have the technology capability to do this are the CHICOMs, unless it's the MIT kids. The MIT kids used to blow up

the 50-yard line between Harvard and Yale games. They would do funny things like that. So they have lots of tricks. But MIT's nowhere near New Jersey. I don't think it's the Rutgers people. Much as we all love Rutgers, they're in the Big Ten. I don't think it's the Rutgers people. So I immediately think Chinese Communist Party. Could be Princeton people. That's in New Jersey.

No, they don't really actually do science in Princeton. They do eating. I guess it wasn't Einstein. He was there. I think that's a good that's a good theory. We're going to find out. I don't think this mystery will remain a mystery. And I don't think John Kirby is going to get away for another day or two of saying, don't believe your lying eyes. There were no drones. That's a bunch of B.S.,

Yeah. And they're going to be airplane pilots. They're going to be fighter pilots. They're going to be people who know which they speak, who go up there and observe now. And the media is paying attention. Once the media begins to pay attention, answers begin to manifest themselves. Same thing happened with the balloon. If people remember the balloon sequence, there's no balloon. It can't hurt us. It doesn't belong to the CHICOMs. We'll shoot it down later. Now we can't find it. A series of denials that has to do with the inability of the administration to protect the country. Same sequence underway.

Mm-hmm. Okay. So speaking of don't believe your lying eyes, Pete Hexheff did get into West Point.

That's the lead of our next story. And this is relevant, even though he went to Princeton. Speaking of Princeton, he he did get into West Point, decided in the end after touring both and considering what his life would look like to go to Princeton. But ProPublica, this far left group, activist group that's tried to take down Justice Alito, Justice Thomas with smears, is now trying to take down Pete Hegseth.

by getting ready to report that he was lying, that he did not get into West Point. So they called West Point to say, did Pete Hegseth get into West Point? And West Point allegedly told them not once but twice, no, he didn't get in here. He didn't apply here. We have no record of Pete Hegseth ever applying to West Point.

So then they go to Pete Hegseth's lawyer, Tim Parlatori, and they say, we're going to print that he lied. You have one hour to respond, which is ridiculous. As if this is like national security and they had to rush to print with it, Hugh, right? They had 60 minutes and he had to get back to him. Baloney.

So instead, what happened was Pete Hexeth went on Twitter, on X, and posted his acceptance letter. He didn't deal with ProPublica. He dealt with us and said, take a look at this. Here's my acceptance letter from West Point. And now ProPublica is trying to defend itself by

by saying, hello, this is how journalism works. When you posted that, we stood down from the story. So calm down, Pete Hegseth. And to this series of events, you say what?

I'd say number one, I wish I had a recording of the editorial meeting when they decided to do the story because they're stupid. If you get into Princeton, you will have certainly gotten into West Point, especially if you're a fit young man like Pete Exit. So it's presumably true. But you know what else corroborates that is that after he's done with Princeton, he goes into the military and goes into combat and is deployed three times twice per combat area.

So there's no reason to doubt that he was interested in the military and there's no reason to doubt that he was qualified to get into West Point. So what kind of editorial predicate did they have

other than he's the most wounded nominee. Let's try and bring him down. He's the weakest member of the herd right now. He's no longer. They've made him stronger. We're a left-wing hit group. The best thing to come out of this, actually, it's two-part. One, the mask is off for a publica. They've done some good work in the past that I've actually used on my show, usually having to do with international stories, but they've done horrible stuff in the last six months on the Supreme Court. And

then no sooner do they catch flack that josh gerstein over politico another lefty come to their aid so they're circling the wagons around an exposed left-wing um

And I just love that it's happening. The Common Eye posted on X had 300,000 views. People are getting to know ProPublica out of this. And I think it may have secured Pete Hicks that confirmation. Although on yesterday's program, you're talking to Josh Holmes and the gang from Ruthless, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse from Ruthless. They were not certain about Pete Hicks.

Pete getting through because hearings are hearings. And I remember the Clarence Thomas hearings, the Brett Kavanaugh hearings. They've come up with anyone, people we haven't heard of yet, right? Just random XYZ people. And you're not going to have the chance to do what you did with your colleague from the Daily Mail or your sit down with Pete Hegseth. It's going to happen in 72 hours.

And he's just got to go in Ali North style. I don't think he'd wear the uniform anymore. I don't think he's in the reserves, but he's just got to go in and hammer every allegation. Right. Be merciless on it. And then and then let's see those Republicans look at Trump and all of his supporters and say, we reject him, that we're going to we're going to stop him based on whatever comes out of that hearing. I mean, we'll see whether it's

new evidence, when they actually produced somebody on the record to accuse Pete of the things that have been alleged only anonymously thus far. I look forward to seeing some former Fox News employee get up there and say, oh, he was drunk. Okay, sure. You know what? I'll testify at the hearings. I spent 10 years working with Pete. He was never drunk, and I saw him in the prime time when you would be. Anyway, so...

So that's that's Pete. I will say I think their hesitancy is based on Joni Ernst, because I think we all think we're going to lose Murkowski, Collins and maybe McConnell. Maybe not. I don't know. Maybe. But he doesn't like Trump at all. It's vice versa. So she's the one. And I know she's saying things that are closer to.

a maybe, but you know as well as I do, Stu, why do I keep calling you Stu? He was a very talented lawyer who went to Harvard and University of Michigan at law school and worked in the Reagan administration.

She's being careful with her words. She says, while I support Pete through this process, what I what I think he deserves is a hearing. That is that's just a buying time phrase. That's not a promise of support. Now, what I am hearing here is that she doesn't like him. Well, you know, you're never in the room. I actually don't think we're going to lose Senator Collins. I think Senator Collins is very serious on defense.

He's chairwoman of incoming appropriations. I think if he tells her, I will pay attention to your line items and we will fully fund it, not necessarily going to lose Murkowski either. They need those Air Force bases up there. They just moved a bunch of C-130s up to Alaska. I don't know about Leader McConnell. I doubt that too. Because again, DOD is so big. If you shoot to kill the SEC death, you better win. And everyone's got a lot to lose. And by the way, you don't know who's coming after that.

And so Pete is well known and I find it interesting that both you

and another former Fox colleague, Geraldo Rivera, who have no obligation to come to the defense of Pete Hacksett, have both stepped up to do so. That's very revealing. I don't know Pete Hacksett by interviews like this, and I've read his books, and I've talked to him a few times in the hallway or on a set, but I don't know him. You and Geraldo know him. You have no obligation to defend him. You both have defended him. That tells me a lot. Yeah. I mean, I said to the audience,

don't marry Pete, but I would take him as my sec def. So it's basically my words. I have a question for you. I think spouses know each other pretty well, but other than spouses, people who work in a network and who do shows together know each other very well. You know, whether you're on time, whether you're late, whether you dress well, whether you don't dress well, you know everything about

Boyfriends, girlfriends, husbands, wives, children. You just spend a lot of time with your colleagues, which is why when you and Geraldo say Major Pete is great, I listen.

Yeah. I mean, I spent a lot of time with Pete Hegseth and all I ever saw was a professional, smart, earnest, great guy who cared deeply about the military. It's all he wanted to talk about ever. I mean, even when you're making casual conversation, that's what he wanted to talk about the military and what he could do to address their concerns and how their needs weren't being met truly even in casual conversation. And I've said this to my audience before. We did have conversations many times at the times at Fox news about

whose drinking was getting out of control or who was potentially taking drugs. And some we knew were, and those people were definitely on the radar. We all knew he was never one of the names. Pete was on the radar for loving the military and veterans. And yes, for being a little Randy, I guess we can say when it came to the women, whatever that's between him and his wife. Did you use the word Tom? Rich Lowry, isn't he cute?

Yeah, somebody is Tomcatting. I like that. Let me ask you about the one, the people who could really ride out Pete, makeup artists. I don't know how Fox does it, but PBS, when I did a decade with you. No, they loved him.

My former makeup artist at Fox, who is there all the time, has been texting me about him nonstop. She's in his camp. She knows. You're exactly right. They know where all the bodies are buried. And their opinions count a lot. They know people well.

And one posted on Instagram in support of him as well. So, I mean, he's good there. I wanted to pick up on what you said about the political reporter, Josh Gerstein. So he gives you a hard time. You responded to the ProPublica attempted attack on Pete by saying this story is and remains that a bureaucrat at West Point misled you and you did not print that.

That's not journalism. Then Politico inserts itself into your spat with ProPublica. Josh Gerstein, the reporter, saying, Hugh, are you really saying we should do a story every time what a government spokesperson tells us turns out not to be right? I mean, it would take up perhaps half of my time. And then you responded. But do you want to walk us through why it responds to that? They're saying, look, they checked it out. It didn't check out. They moved on.

Josh's argument is a straw man and it stands out in a city full of battalions of straw man. Josh's argument stands out as a straw man because it is not responsive to number one. Why did they begin the inquiry when he was a Princeton guy and he did go in the military?

Number two, why didn't they tell us that West Point had misled them, which is itself rather significant since he's going to be the Secretary of Defense? And if the answer is because they have bad bookkeeping, then you just put it in. It's a one paragraph thing. We got a tip or we were concerned that he didn't get into West Point. We investigated it. It turns out that West Point was wrong.

So we ought to now worry about West Point record keeping. Tom Cotton has sent a letter over to West Point. He wants answers. My guess is it's innocent error by an incompetent bureaucrat. But unless until we know that it's a story, what we know is that ProPublica did not do it. Now, part two, Josh Gerstein, how is he connected to ProPublica?

Josh Gerstein broke the Dobbs leak, remember? And he's been a critic of Thomas and Alito and their ethics the whole time. So he and ProPublica are washing each other's hands.

They share a point of view about the court. So they're circling the wagons. Left-wing journos are circling the wagons around left-wing journals. And he got hammered in the comments because everyone said, yeah, that's actually not journalism. You should say that you were misled by West Point and that that was unfortunate and that you were hot,

washing the story. And that's what I hate that when you have an hour to respond. That's hot washing the story. And thank goodness he had good vibes.

You don't do that. You don't do that where you only have an hour to respond unless there's a reason for it. You know, like we've got to get this story. It's breaking. It's big. And national security, whatever. There are reasons why you might have to if it came to you late. You didn't have time to go to the source, whatever. But this is not one of them. Some evergreen piece on whether Pete did or did not get into West Point. They were just trying to sandbag the guy. You know, one of the possibilities, and you mentioned it,

on why they wouldn't even do just a one-paragrapher on it is somebody at West Point was the initial source. Somebody, I mean, you think of West Point as being, you know, pro, they're military, whatever. That doesn't mean they're pro-Pete or pro-Trump.

And if somebody at West Point, you know, if the call was incoming to ProPublica and, you know, in an attempted smear that they were about to print and didn't because Pete had the records that West Point claimed it didn't have, that'd be a reason why you wouldn't say it. You know, it's interesting. I hadn't considered that their tip

had come from within the academy. As you probably know, the academy is under an intense amount of focus for having become WOC. And not one of them, but all three of them are under an intense amount of focus about what are you teaching our future warriors? Are they doing more social justice warrior-ing than they are actually levality warrior-ing? And I have no opinion on that because I'm a civilian. But I know we should look into it and the people who are veterans in the Congress

Cotton, Dan Sullivan, Michael Waltz, they're drilled down on this and they're not going to let it go. The best result for West Point is that ProPublica called us up. They called a file clerk. The file clerk got it wrong. She looked or he looked in the wrong place and we came up with the right answer and we immediately called them back. That's the only best case scenario for West Point. If they initiated the story, if someone decided, you know, I don't like Pete Hegg said, and I'm going to blow the whistle.

on a claim that I heard him make once on West Point because I don't see it in my data file. That's a bigger story. Either way, ProPublica did not do its readers justice. And Josh Gerstein and the gang that are defending them are just tipping their hands at the fact that they're activists. They're actually journalists, but they're advocate journalists, activist journalists. And that's what I am, but I'm transparent about it.

Yeah, right. Exactly right. All right. So now there are, we took covered activists, journalists, but we did not yet cover the sad, sad journalists.

down near, but not in Mar-a-Lago. There's a piece today, yesterday in New York magazine. The headline is the press is down and shut out in Palm Beach. Steve Chung is not sympathetic. Steve Chung, of course, Trump's long-term spokesperson, who's now his director of comms incoming at the White House. Okay.

So they start by saying the quoting. Good morning from West Palm Beach. I'm your transition pooler today. This is The New York Times is Michael Scherer, who wrote this on December 9th to a group of fellow reporters who have teamed up to take turns covering the post-election news out of Mar-a-Lago.

But he doesn't have much to report. The reason is, he writes, I've reached out to the transition about today's schedule and have not heard back. Scheer was part of an unofficial press pool set up by the White House Correspondents Association to cover, you know, Trump's team down there. But the press is being kept at a safe distance.

They point out this is very unlike 2016 when Trump let the press stand at the base of Trump Tower and interview all these candidates who are coming in to kiss the ring on their way in and way out. But this time, no, he's not really interested in it. And Steve Chung has said, hey, I didn't authorize your weird little transition coverage. You didn't ask us. We would have worked with you. You didn't. So pound sand. But they lament in this piece.

the incoming press secretary, Caroline Leavitt and Steve Chung, sometimes don't get back to the shutout frustrated reporters at all, Hugh. And they go on to say that these folks, okay, notwithstanding the fact that

They don't know what's happening. They're not sure what's going on with the White House press room seating chart. And they can't get straight answers on whether they're going to be where they want to be and were that they are, quote, soldiering on and that they're doing this. That was standing the fact that hotel rooms on the island of Palm Beach are hard to come by and they are expensive. So most journalists are exiled about a half an hour's drive in.

When has a reporter ever paid for their hotel room? When has that ever paid for their hotel room? So the idea is expensive. But Hugh, the horror West Palm. I can't be sympathetic because the president-elect has talked to Time magazine, to NBC, and to Jim Cramer at the Stock Exchange.

All three of those were fairly in-depth. The Kristen Welker was 30 minutes. I make my arrangements to talk to the president through Margo and his personal staff, and they are very professional. The Chung organization is very professional, but they are not giving away the candy the way that they did for eight years ago. Because eight years ago, they came in thinking that they were going to get a fair deal.

And it turns out they don't get a fair deal from these people. So why bother? Why be nice to them at all? I like my own shirt, by the way. It comes on my show. I think it's by the corner. But no one is owed anything by the president-elect. And, Megan, if he gave a lot of interviews, do you think we would start getting the one president at a time low back, which they're waiting to unleash on him?

Yeah, right. So here's the end of the piece. It was my favorite part. Not only have they been banished to West... Oh, God. It's like being...

Bumped from the double wide to the single in the trailers. They say with the West Palm Hilton now officially sold out, some reporters have been forced to retreat to the courtyard by Marriott out by the airport. The humiliation of these poor reporters. I actually prefer courtyard by Marriott because they don't give you espresso machines. They give you the old fashioned Mr. Coffee.

so that in the morning you don't have to make that espresso machine work. I just got to say, for anyone who's ever gone to a convention, you're lucky if you're within 15 miles of the convention center. I mean, you just got to travel, travel, travel. So,

That is a silly story. And I'm... You're reporters. You're the lowest of the low. And that's how you're supposed to live. And it's one of the very healthy ways we make you generally hate authority. It's just in this country, you're supposed to hate authority, whether they're red or blue. And you people don't. Don't you think it's interesting, by the way, the pro-publica did not

report that West Point misled them. Would you report if someone misled you from the government? I would. That would be a big story. I would call back. I would call back and I would say, now I've seen a record proving that you misled me. So what is your explanation for misleading me?

And I'd love to, I'd love to hear what they say. And depending on what they said, I'd go from there. But I would definitely be very interested in the fact that I'd been misled by West Point, which absolutely knows whether Pete Hexeth applied and not only applied, but got in. You're going to tell me that record keeping is that bad. Pete's what? 44. He was in college 25 years ago. I'm trying to do the math there. It's not that long. And what?

West Point of all places would have pretty meticulous records. That's your boss. If you're going to West Point, your boss is the Secretary of Defense. You would at least use extreme care before responding. And in fact, you might want to call the transition team to inform them that you've had an inquiry about the nominees around the Department of Defense. How would you advise us to respond? That's what a professional would be. But someone tried to do a head job on people.

Yeah. Well, here's like, I wonder because the other piece of it is when it comes to West Point, there could be national security implications. I would imagine the records there, they would keep them better than your average university would because who's trying to get in and why? Whose kid is trying to get in and why? I would imagine those records are considered rather important by like

the Pentagon. And so I do wonder whether they are as capable of hapless error. Probably they are probably, uh, as a Princeton or where I went Syracuse, but, uh,

But maybe not. Anyway, maybe somebody will get to the bottom of it. Okay. While we're on the subject of journalism, something interesting happened over at CNN and it's turned into a controversy and I'd love to get your thoughts on it. Clarissa Ward is considered a star reporter over at CNN. She's been there many years. She was at Fox for a short time and she's

She is doing reporting on Syria and what's happened in the wake of Bashar al-Assad being chased out of the country to Russia and this new Islamist group taking over, you know, like the kinder, gentler al Qaeda. And she was patrolling through the streets as in her reportorial role and

And says that she came upon a Bashar al-Assad prison facility with one of these new, you know, quote unquote, reformed al Qaeda types with her and that they went into this prison cell and there's a prisoner who is being held by Bashar al-Assad. And here's my interview with him. We got him out. We gave him some water and he had a bite of food and we stuck a mic in his face. And this is extraordinary footage.

And now in the wake of this interview, which got all sorts of plaudits all over the internet, people, oh my God, she's amazing. What she did, blah, blah, blah. Now some people are raising questions about whether she was misled. I think that's the most charitable thing I've seen on there. Some have suggested she may have been part of the misleading. I doubt that, but I don't know. I don't know what's happening here. And I'm not even sure there is a story, but I'm going to bring it to you because it's getting some steam. I hope you've seen the clips.

I'll show you the media. It was one of the places that did a rather lengthy piece. They, they watch our, uh, uh, business and reporters and raise questions about reports like this. There's a guy named Charlie Nash who raised some questions about the piece and I'm going to show it to you. And then there's a filmmaker named Hassan Akkad who, um, has been detained for

twice in Syria, and he has got some doubts about this video. All right, let me show you the first clip. This is part one when they find this guy under a blanket. It's high drama. You can see Clarissa's a little dramatic herself, and I will say seems to insert herself into the story. Watch this. It's one of many secret prisons across the city.

I can't tell though, it might just be a blanket. But it's the only cell that's locked. The guard makes us turn the camera off while he shoots the lock off the cell door. We go in to get a closer look. It's still not clear if there is something under the blanket. Is there someone there? Is someone there? Or is it just a blanket? I think it's someone. Hello? Yeah. Oh. Muffin muffins.

He tells the fighter he's from the city of Homs and has been in the cell for three months. Okay, you're okay. You're okay. You're okay. He clutches my arm tightly with both hands. Does anyone have any water? Okay, so here's what people are pointing out. He's pretty clean.

for a guy who is, who's been in a prison cell for how many months, three or three plus months, three months without food or water for four days. What we see on that video is no waste at all in the prison cell and, um, no, no, no facilities, no bucket, no bucket.

Right. And we see a man who's still under the blanket, even though he's just heard somebody shot shoot off the alleged lock on his cell. Still under there. OK, maybe he's hiding. We see Clarissa Ward, who speaks, according to her, Arabic, only speaking in English in Syria. OK, don't know why that happened. And this guy, Hassan Akkad, who's

says the following. I was detained twice in Syria. I think this is staged. CNN should investigate. Happy to be proven wrong. Individuals are never locked in communal cells. Cells look too clean. No discarded clothes, bags of bread, bottles of water, other blankets. And he has too much energy for someone who had no water for five days. This is what the cells in Syrian prisons typically look like, Hugh. We pulled this from one that was farther north.

I mean, you can barely see the ground. There's so much debris and trash. I don't know. But here's what I believe. I doubt Clarissa Ward, who's a respected reporter, would stage this whole thing. But I do think there's a possibility she and the other media celebrating this moment are not being skeptical enough about it being staged for her.

Yeah. Do you remember the fellow from Hamas who ended up being a star in video after video where they staged the death of young people? And he became kind of an internet sensation because he was really good at pretending to be a victim again and again and again. And it's turned out to be a tried and true tactic of the Islamist resistance, wherever it pops up, to stage manage

victimization videos. I don't know if this is true. I don't know, Clarissa. I doubt any reporter would set this up because the danger of your career, it would be an existential destruction of your career if you staged that. Are you insufficiently suspicious of it against the backdrop of what you've seen in other Syrian prisons?

Perhaps, because if I were the CNN editor, I might have raised these questions interspersed with the actual reporting. Don't you think that would have been safer to raise doubts about the possibility you had been punked? Because reporters are punked all the time. In talk radio, we have a six-second delay because people call up all the time and punk us, and then you dump them when they go off in their own...

little, they want to, Howard Stern's people used to do this to every other radio show in America. Yes, Baba Booey. Yeah, and so you always had a delay because people are in the business of punking people. And I just think they've got to be very careful when they corroborate everything.

Here's the second clip where they're now outside of the prison and she's interviewing him, which, you know, I think like some people like I don't get it. Why? Why aren't you getting him to a hospital? But journalists are often heartless like that. That's she's not alone in that approach. Most of us would you know, we want the story and then he can go to prison. But here are the hospital. Here it is.

After three months in a windowless cell, he can finally see the sky. "My God, the light," he says. "Oh God, there is light." The fighter hands him something to eat. He can barely lift it to his mouth. But his body can't handle it. His captors fled during the fall of Damascus.

She's holding him, rubbing his back. No food or water. That was at least four days ago. The rebel tells him there's no more army, no more prisons, no more checkpoints. Are you serious, he says? Syria is free, he tells him. It's the first time he has heard those words. As a paramedic arrives, the shock sets in.

Jake, I have to say, I have been doing this job for nearly 20 years now, and that really was one of the most extraordinary moments that I have ever witnessed. And folks pointing out online how clean the man looks, the jacket, the pants, the fingernails, like...

It's just, and does he have the right energy level for somebody who hasn't had food or water in almost five days? I don't know, but I think that there should be an investigation by CNN just to make sure they have not been used by an organization trying to look like heroes, notwithstanding their own controversial behaviors. It's either a great scoop or a great dupe.

It's one or the other. She either gets a Pulitzer for being on the ground and being willing to go in a risky place, or there's going to be a Hall of Shame trophy here because it'll be a great do. What I am most suspicious of, three months in an Assad prison, you would expect manifestations of cruelty.

not merely being hungry and thirsty. Five days without water is pretty bad. You could probably barely move. I did note there was a story the other day that an 11-year-old girl survived three days

at sea between a shoe and she up during from Sierra Leone to Italy and her boat capsized off of Tunisia before the first Italian off and 44 people died and she lived so miracles happen She had hypothermia when she came out of the water, but you can tell when people have been under stress I don't see did you see any wounds any scratches? No bleeding

No. And there's one other weird thing, potentially, it depends on your opinion, where in her exchange with Jake Tapper, who was asking her about this, she offers one additional detail. Take a listen to SOT 8.

We don't know where Abdul Khurban is now. He got into that ambulance. We offered to give him our phones to call his family, but as you can see in that moment, he was in a state of profound shock. He wasn't able to collect himself to the point where he was able to get in touch with his family.

possible possible possible but again you wouldn't want to call your family first thing out of captivity after three four months and you you're so shocked you can't make okay it's possible right but these all these are just like that's what led to the media piece in our favor in our favor who stands to benefit from this

Because I really don't think Clarissa Ward would stage it. So who stands to benefit from staging it? The guy who worked for Hamas was trying to generate international pressure against Israel. Well, who are they trying to generate international pressure against? Assad's gone. So who wins with it?

But it works for them to look like they are the kinder, gentler that they, oh my God, Bashar al-Assad is even worse than you knew. This poor man, he's been under there. And we're talking about it, that it went everywhere. It went everywhere. So much coverage about how, you know, what an evil man this Bashar al-Assad is and how the new captors, well, not captors, but the new- Team Jolani is really good. Team Jolani calls in.

It gives water and cell phones to prisons. Okay. That's a potential motive.

I mean, you'd have to kick those tires as a journalist. You know, again, being used. That's the biggest thing you have to worry about in this kind of situation is being used, being turned into journalistic propaganda. And perhaps Clarissa Ward saw that coming from a mile away and made sure that that wasn't happening. But I would like to hear more. I don't I'm not sure right now based on what I've seen. OK, the controversy over the

the CEO murder, the United CEO, Brian Thompson, with people, sorry, Brian Thompson, where people are continuing to try to justify this. We have been meaning to get to some of these stories, but we didn't quite get there. AOC weighs in. She does the, this is not to justify violence, but bit, but bit. Here's what she said. I think that this collective American experience, which is so

twisted to have in the wealthiest nation in the world, all of that pain that people have experienced is being concentrated on this event. And it's really important that we take a step back. This is not to comment and this is not to say that an act of violence is justified. But I think for anyone who is confused or shocked or appalled, they need to understand that people

interpret and feel and experience denied claims as an act of violence against them. Oh my God. Hugh. There's no evidence of a denied claim. Correct.

It's just the craziest thing in the world. There is no evidence of anything except a screenshot of a back x-ray. My own theory is a psychotic break and a schizophrenic acting out of anger against anyone who randomly he picked out of a phone book. And I do believe his shouting at the police indicated some kind of psychosis. But Elizabeth Warren and AOC, repulsive and disqualifying.

They have no facts upon which to base their speculation, even if their speculation had a denied claim on the part of the killer, that's not justification. All they do is license additional political violence. I had Steve Spolese on my radio show yesterday, and I asked the majority leader,

In June of 2017, a man tried to kill you. He didn't like Republicans. And Scalise teed off on this because he cannot believe people stand with anyone using violence in any situation and trying to make an excuse on the basis of mythology. There are no facts and evidence that had anything to do with UnitedHealthcare or a denied claim. Nothing. Zero.

And moreover, in the guy's alleged manifesto, he says, oh, they're probably people better qualified than I am to explain exactly what they're doing that's so bad. He doesn't sound like somebody who had lived this firsthand and had a personal great. Not that that would justify any of this. But to your point, we don't know what this is about and what the evidence seems to be suggesting is you had a

once perfectly normal young adult, one minute. And within the past three to six months, a switch flipped, which is totally consistent with some sort of psychotic break, whether induced by a schizophrenic problem or by drugs that he was taking. We don't know, but show me the evidence. And by the way, even if it is a claims issue, too soon, too soon to engage with this guy's gripes and ideas.

Yeah. And how many claims did he have given? And Brian Thompson has two sons who are without a father. And there is an incredible lack of empathy on the part of AOC's Ms. Empathy and Elizabeth Warren. I have a question for you, Megan. What are the manifesto rules?

When the Unabomber Manifesto was released, it was a big controversy. The Manifesto of the Nashville Killer, the trans activist, was never released. It had to be leaked. I'm not sure where this guy's manifesto came from or why we know parts of it, but I haven't seen the whole thing. What are the manifesto rules? Do we always release them or sometimes release them?

Well, let's look at what happened with the manifesto with the trans killer in, um, is it Virginia? We're trying to think of the city. Um, yeah, where they kept it from us. Yeah. Yeah. There we go. Nashville. Thank you. Where they try to keep it from us and it had to be leaked. I mean, I, part of it has been leaked online. I don't know if we've seen the whole thing, but it's like, of course there's, there are different rules depending on the person's, you know, status and the, the, the Kimmel having his producers, lusty texts, uh,

after this guy, him reading those on the air. It's just the latest scourge on ABC News. And how can they share a calling card with this guy? It's just absolutely vile. Hugh, that's the state of our media today. I'm thrilled that you'll be coming on in the afternoon now to talk about it more. And I love the show and listening to your opinion. Thanks for being here. Thank you, Megan. Thanks for having me. Continued success of The Megyn Kelly Show.

Thank you so much, my friend. I want to tell you while we have just one minute that we are going to be dropping a special episode. I think it comes out tomorrow morning and we're going to be talking about like some special fun Christmas things and Christmas gifts. And I think you guys are going to really enjoy that. So look for that in your feeds. And in the meantime, if you want to email me about your

best Christmas gift, what you're recommending for your fellow listeners and viewers, or what you received over the course of your lifetime that you love the most, it's Megan at MeganKelley.com. The Megan Kelly Show is supported by Grand Canyon University. Founded in 1949, GCU is a private Christian university that's dedicated to delivering an affordable and transformative higher education. They

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So joining me now is a prominent and outspoken cardiologist and creator of the documentary First Do No Pharm, Dr. Asim Malhotra. Dr. Malhotra's documentary sheds light on the pervasive influence of big pharma on healthcare, the truth about cholesterol and statins, and much, much more. Dr. Asim, welcome to the show. Hi, Megan. Lovely to be here.

I thought the documentary was fascinating and disturbing. I remember, and I think this is one of the things you guys, that led you to make this documentary, a few years ago, the line on statins had become, the question in today's day and age is not so much why are you on a statin, but why aren't you on a statin? That they were being recommended for perfectly healthy statins

people over age 50 who might get heart disease or clogged arteries at some point as almost like a preventative measure. And while the whole film is definitely not just about statins, that's where it starts. And it's very interesting. So let me kick it off by playing this soundbite of a guy who was your patient, right? Tony Royal.

who did take a statin. He was in a position of having had a heart attack, so his case was more severe. But the question of why not take one was experienced by him. The answer, I should say, firsthand. Here's Tony, slot 30. Massive aches in my legs. I have no energy, no libido. I just lost the will to live almost. I felt dreadful. It was that point where I started to question

what was going on. Either I was very sick with some other illness or my heart was going downhill again, or it could be possibly the medication I'd been put on. One of the medications that Tony was on that he believed caused him quite significant side effects, such as muscle fatigue, erectile dysfunction, brain fog, really limited his quality of life for many, many months was a statin drug. So Dr. Asim, let's start there with statins and this problem overall.

Yeah, Megan. So really interesting you started with that because, you know, my journey as a practicing cardiologist, as a qualified doctor for well over 20 years, actually started towards the end of sort of 2009, 2010, when I really started to investigate why heart disease hadn't really come down in the way it was predicted to come down.

You know, by the end of the 20th century, it was predicted that heart disease would essentially be eradicated because of statins that come on the scene. And a lot of what happened around changes in guidelines on diet was based upon this, what we now know is a very flawed hypothesis about lowering cholesterol. So that's where I begun my journey because I was seeing my patients come in

you know, more stress on the system and the National Health Service, more people are suffering from chronic disease, but patients also reporting a lot of side effects from statins, which where there was a discrepancy between what I was observing in terms of the frequency of these side effects and diagnosing it and what was in the published literature. So when I went on that journey, Megan, basically I came to the conclusion that the, you know,

you know, this fear around cholesterol is grossly exaggerated to the extent where one could argue, and there's published evidence for this, that high cholesterol, so-called LDL, bad cholesterol, isn't really a significant risk factor for heart disease. But of course, that's where statins came in because the thinking was if we lower LDL cholesterol, so-called bad cholesterol, with these statin drugs, which are, by the way, prescribed, estimated to be prescribed, Megan, to 1 billion people globally, certainly at least 200 million. And we think at least 30 million Americans

and taking statins, it doesn't really have that much of an effect. So when you start looking at the actual data on statins, and there's a huge caveat here, by the way, because almost all of the data on statins comes from industry-sponsored drug trials that have never really been independently evaluated. And that's something, of course, that comes out in the film where myself and John Abramson from Harvard are trying to get access to the raw data so it gets investigated. Even if you look at that data from the drug companies and break it down,

The actual benefit of a statin for an individual over a five-year period, but low risk of heart disease, or certainly if someone who hasn't had a heart attack, is about 1%, 1 in 100 chance of it preventing a non-fatal heart attack, a non-disabling stroke.

without prolonging one's life. Now, Tony's case is really interesting. And he was quite unusual patient because, as you already alluded to, you know, he was somebody that had a heart attack. He was a Virgin Atlantic Airline pilot. He was fit and active. He was following the dietary guidelines, low fat guidelines, thought he was doing everything, you know, healthy in a healthy way.

And his early fifties basically suffered a heart attack, couldn't fly anymore, went back to his previous job, which was a maths and physics teacher. So he's very good with numbers. And then he started to get debilitating side effects, you know, about a year after, you know, taking all these medications as described, or he suddenly felt unwell anyway, initially started looking at the drugs and the details and the benefits, et cetera, thought there were side effects from the drugs, stopped his statin, felt a lot better. And at the same time changed his lifestyle. And, you know,

you know, Tony now is in a situation, this is quite unusual for a heart patient who's had a heart stent and a heart attack. He's now training for world Ironman, you know, and he's 60 plus now and he's off all his pills, Megan. So I'm not saying this is for everybody, but it's a great example of what can be achieved in healthcare. If we actually give patients the right information, if we empower them, uh,

on the benefits and harms of drugs in a way that is not through coercion, not through manipulation of drug industry who are there to basically make money. And the reality is this, most people in the world, Megan, taking statins are going to get no benefit whatsoever and they don't even know it. If high cholesterol, high LDLs doesn't cause a heart attack and you

potentially can see that number rise without freaking out, then what does cause a heart attack? Yeah, great question. Before I answer that specifically, I said something interesting that I found myself and a number of international scientists in 2016 and BMJ, we actually looked at whether LDL cholesterol had a risk for heart disease in over 60s.

partly because the original studies where cholesterol was exposed as a potential risk factor or as a major risk factor for heart disease. What wasn't publicized, Megan, in those original studies from Framingham, Massachusetts that started in 1948 and went up for decades is that once people hit 50, as their cholesterol dropped, their death rates increased. And we thought, this is a bit unusual. Why is no one really talking about this? So we went back and looked at up-to-date data

And what we found, one, was there was no association with LDL cholesterol in heart disease in over 60s. But the most interesting finding was the higher one's LDL in older population, the lower the risk of death statistically.

So the question is, how is that possible? Well, one of the things that's been forgotten because of all this focus on heart disease and this forward hypothesis is that cholesterol has a really important role in the immune system. Older people are more vulnerable to dying from infections. And there's also an association, I must express that we don't know if it's causal, but there is an association with low cholesterol and cancer, which again is likely a link to the immune system. So just to muddy the waters a bit further, that just lowering cholesterol for the sake of it may actually be harmful. It's not that it has no effect

detrimental effect. Now, what is the risk factor, major risk factor for heart disease? It's a process in the body called insulin resistance.

So it's essentially over time, your body becoming resistant to the hormone insulin. And that is driven essentially by food diets that are high in starch and sugar, ultra processed foods, being sedentary, and also to some degree chronic stress. And insulin itself, when it's raised chronically for a long period of time, or if you're eating a lot of junk food,

it directly is toxic to the inner lining of the heart artery. So that's what causes heart disease. And that's accepted in the literature. Why is it not well known or publicized? Because not never been really an effective drug to tackle insulin resistance has then been proven in a trials to prevent heart attacks. And of course, you know, there is no market for healthy lifestyle, really, for just eating real food, you know, not being sedentary. No one gets rich off that.

Absolutely. So that's really the missing link. And when I institute this plan with my patients, Megan, you know, the lifestyle plan based upon the best evidence. And I don't say don't to my patients, don't take statins. I say, listen, this is the absolute benefit, you know, without talking about harms. I mean, harms come in as well in terms of quality of life limiting side effects in particular, like muscle fatigue, like what's only role experience.

Most patients, when given that 1% figure, Megan, don't want to take the pill. And I actually write my letter back to their general practitioner and say, listen, the patient has decided they don't want to take the statin. I've given them the information and their decision should be supported in keeping with the principles of ethical evidence-based medical practice. So actually what the statin issue highlights is that if we were practicing true ethical evidence-based medicine in healthcare, Megan, we'd sort out the health crisis very, very quickly.

How would you see? So I think the way a lot of people see heart disease is you go to your cardiologist and maybe they give you an echocardiogram stress test combo where they can see your heart and how it handles stress. And they'll see whether you have a thickening of the walls of your arteries. That's the gold standard test, I think, other than getting that, I guess, calcium score read with injectable dye, which is more invasive. But-

So if you see fatty buildup on the walls of your arteries, then you have a mystery to solve, right? And today, I think the doctor would say, if you had it, don't eat so much red meat. Don't eat fried food. Exercise more, right? What would you say if you saw that? Yeah, so on the red meat issue, first of all, just for full disclosure here, Megan, in 2013, I caused global controversy

When I wrote in the BMJ, but formerly the British Medical Journal, that the saturated fat does not cause heart disease. And that's and that's the evidence for that is now pretty much conclusive. So that means that eating foods like red meat does not contribute to heart disease at all. In fact, I tell my patients, I'm not worried about how much red meat you consume as long as you're following the principles of what I call a low refined carbohydrate Mediterranean diet.

So that is definitely not something that I recommend patients to not do. Eating red meat is not an issue when it comes to heart disease. And even on the issues of, say, colon cancer, the evidence is only really there for processed meat, not really for red meat, for real food. And the dietary guidelines, unfortunately, in the US and in the UK have really put at the base...

to tell people to eat, you know, six to 11 servings, I think in the US guidelines of starchy foods, which is the complete opposite of the foods that you want to,

Oh, it is absolutely insane because these are the foods that are going to drive all these conditions. It's not just about heart disease, it's high blood pressure, which is the single biggest risk factor for death globally. It's type 2 diabetes. They all contribute to also, you know, it's not about longevity. It's about quality of life as well. If you've got type 2 diabetes, you're massively increased risk of depression, chronic pain, for example. And then, of course, then you've got the pills to take, which aren't that effective, by the way, that give you side effects. So a whole management really of people's health in health care is upside down.

What I do tell patients to do, though, is to adhere to a healthy lifestyle. I use calcium scores sometimes in patients because they're a very good way. It's an imaging for people that don't this. It's a it's a form of imaging which looks at coronary calcium, nothing to diet, which is a mark of inflammation and buildup of plaque or fatty deposits, if you like, within the arteries. And it correlates. Also, it gives a very accurate representation, Megan, of your risk of a heart attack or stroke in the next decade.

But what's interesting is, and certainly with my patients and what the literature tells us, if you look at it properly, is that this is potentially reversible. And of course, in the film, First Uno Farm, you know, without giving too much away, you know, we end up going to India to meet a cardiologist who for well over 20 years, and it's published on this, has been actually reversing the blockages

within the arteries, which most doctors, and I can tell you almost every cardiologist will not even think it's possible. So he's done that through a combination of lifestyle. But the most important factor from his research that actually caused the reduction in the blockages, which I think is fascinating, is actually through meditation.

And this can be explained. And this is really interesting. So chronic stress is established as a risk factor for heart disease, the same as being a smoker or having high blood pressure or type 2 diabetes. But most of us are not really dealing with it properly. And the process involved is that

If you look from an evolutionary perspective, acute stress obviously can be life-saving. But from an evolutionary perspective, if we were in a jungle and we're running away from a tiger, for example, when you're under a state of acute stress, the body releases clotting factors and inflammatory factors. So that if we were attacked by that tiger, we are not going to bleed to death or it's going to reduce our risk of bleeding to death. Let's put it that way.

Now, this is chronically going on in the body at a low grade when people are stressed, you know, chronically stressed, and that's how it damages the heart arteries. And heart disease itself, again, for many years was thought to be a fixed issue. You develop a blockage and like a clog pipe, it gradually gets worse over time. And at some point, you're going to have a heart attack.

But this is not true. We know now that it's a dynamic process. So it can be reversed, Megan. And I think that's really one of the most interesting, fascinating aspects of the new paradigm in actually reversing, not just preventing people having heart attacks, but actually reversing the blockages. And that's where we need to do more research and invest more of our resources. I

I want to get to the causes of why we've been so misled, for sure. That's basically what first do no farm is about. And it's shocking. RFKJ is in there. Our audience will recognize a lot of the faces. Cali means is in there. Dr. J about a char is in there. Great, great film. In fact, before we go any further, how can they see it? Because I was sent to me as a screener. But how can our audience see it?

Yeah. So it's on a website. Um, the, the website's no farm film.com. So that's no N O P H A R M film.com. So they can download it for about $10. I mean, it was independently funded, very low budget. Um, you know, and, uh, yeah. Okay, good. So let's, let's remember that, uh, to, to see it. But before we get to that, you mentioned in passing just their Mediterranean diet, what all you added a couple of phrases on there. Can you talk about eating? Yeah. So, um, so, so the, I think the, uh,

If we understand heart disease to be a chronically inflammatory process, which is exacerbated by insulin resistance, then the solution to prevention and managing heart disease is to deal with the chronic inflammation and the insulin resistance. So there are certain components of the Mediterranean diet that have been shown in studies. You know, there's not a lot of, unfortunately, nutrition science is quite flawed. But, you know, the studies have shown that they are

There are certain components of the Mediterranean diet that are anti-inflammatory. So these anti-inflammatory components come from extra virgin olive oil, oily fish, nuts and seeds, whole fruit and vegetables. So as long as the base of the diet is really composed of those foods and you eliminate the sugars and too much of the refined carbs, that means not too much bread, pasta, rice, potatoes, for example, then you are basically following the best possible diet when it comes to heart disease.

Okay. So I call it a low carb, a low carb Mediterranean diet is a way to describe it. One question I have for you is let's say I have listeners out there and viewers who are, you know, 60 years old and they're like, I'm constantly inflamed. I've lived 60 years of inflamed, you know, I've, I've eaten all the processed foods, but I'm inspired. Now I'm going to, I'm going to start tomorrow with a Mediterranean diet. That's low carb.

Can they undo 60 years of damage? Or is it like kind of a fait accompli at this point? I think a lot of people are like, forget it. I'm screwed.

No, Megan, actually, that's a great part of the, there's a lot of hope here. The, you know, there's evidence that, good evidence that shows, and I've seen this with my patients, that you can actually start to reverse the risk factors for heart disease and many other, insulin resistance, by the way, isn't just about heart disease, Megan, it's probably after smoking the most important risk for cancer as well. And certainly linked to Alzheimer's as a, you know, as a prominent risk factor. So if you sort the insulin resistance out, you're probably going to

solve a lot of the chronic disease problems in the whole of America. And this is the good news. Within three weeks, there's 21 days, 28 days, you can actually start to reverse those risk factors. I've had patients that sent their type two diabetes that they've had for 15 years into remission just by putting out the carbs. Wow. And is your body then...

at zero or are you closer to death than somebody who's been living well for their 60 years? Listen, it takes more to reverse disease than it does to prevent it. So it depends from patient to patient. But unless you try it, you won't see. But there'll definitely be an improvement. Now, to what degree, we don't know until you try doing this. But certainly with my patients, I say, listen, do this for three to six weeks.

Certainly, I think the maximum improvement you will see in terms of blood markers, you know, linked to high blood pressure or type 2 diabetes, for example, will happen, you know, about three months, but it can go on for longer than that. Is there a cookbook that you like that you recommend?

Well, I've actually written three books myself. And the first book I wrote has a lot of recipes and it's called the POP diet, P-I-O-P-P-I, which is based upon the original village, which was behind the Mediterranean diet. But my more recent book, which probably is more up to date and more concise and relevant to our conversation today, is called A Statin-Free Life. And in that book, there are recipes and a diet plan and everything else. And it explains the whole cholesterol issue and heart disease reversing as well.

That's great. Just to give people a place to get started as we go into the holidays, it's a good place to kick it off. All right, so let's talk about causation because when you first came out, you mentioned you caused quite a stir, but the industry wanted to cancel you at almost every turn and you published a paper in the BMI, what was it called? The BMJ? BMJ. Yep. And

They tried to get your paper pulled. Your film has an interview with a woman who was running it at the time who didn't know whether she was on your side or not, who was open-minded to pulling it if you had misstated facts and misled people. And she's pretty forthright about how once, you know, they wanted to see data and so on, but they ended up not pulling it and saying to the people who were criticizing you,

Why don't you write a rebuttal if you feel differently? And they didn't really want to do that. So this all kind of gets to

There's an absence of honest data from the people who are telling us things like statins are perfectly safe with a very, very good side effect profile. It's not just the statin drug makers. It's drug makers for the most part who just they they hide information even from the people who are charged with reviewing their drugs and telling the rest of us whether their drugs are safe.

Yeah, absolutely, Megan. So, you know, medical knowledge is under commercial control, but most doctors don't know that. And just to give you, you know, how bad the situation is, 20 to 50% of all healthcare activity in the United States, and you spend almost more than $4 trillion in health care, actually brings no benefit to the patient, is wasteful or harmful.

And the reason for this is that most doctors and policymakers are unaware of the poor quality research that drives overuse in terms of overmedicated people, underuse of simpler, safer lifestyle options, avoidable adverse events, waste and missed opportunities to give the right patient the right treatment at the right time. So that's really the major issue here. And the way to overcome this or to solve this problem is to make sure that, you know, drug trials are independently evaluated.

Or, you know, take things further. I mean, if you look at the history of the drug industry over the last few decades, most drugs they produce are copies of old ones. You know, they take an old generic drug, they change the molecules here and there, they patent it, make lots of money, which is, of course, a huge waste. You know, the American taxpayer, American public are paying lots of money for something that could be a lot cheaper with an old generic drug.

And then, of course, there's the harm issue, because what they do is that the results of their trials that they design, they control, they analyze, they publish in medical journals, who, by the way, take a lot of money from industry as well, which comes out in the film, will grossly exaggerate the safety and benefits of those drugs. So no informed consent is truly happening. And of course, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out if a doctor is making clinical decisions on corrupted and biased information making.

at best it's going to lead to suboptimal outcomes for patients and at worst it's going to do harm you know and even pre-pandemic the third most common cause of death and this is still when i when i talk about this at lectures people gasp even doctors the third most common cause of death globally after heart disease and cancer is prescribed medications according to one you know analysis so it's really a massive problem it's a major public health issue and and what the the main focus and of course

you know, part of this Maha movement and what Robert Kennedy Jr. likes and Jay Bhattacharya and Marty McCurry want to do is one of the most important things is to get the American population, you know, reducing the medications they're taking and then trying to, you know, empower them and create environments so they can flourish from a health perspective through lifestyle. They're, they, like anybody who's associated with medicine,

forget the magazine world, they're on a different page, wants you to lose weight. Any real doctor is against obesity, which is probably the number one or a huge risk factor for so many diseases, including diabetes, which just doesn't lead anyplace good. And what they have said on this show and elsewhere is,

eat better, move more, right? Like that's really what we're looking to do and throw out that food pyramid and stop, you know, eating six to 10 grains a day. And so what we've done over in America and now increasingly in other parts of the world is take Ozempic. And I, I get the pushback to Ozempic as that's not the answer, you know, eat better and exercise more.

But this film, like some other pieces and books and films, has suggested it's worse than that. Like Ozempic actually is in the category of violating the do no harm rule. Like it actually may be more dangerous than it is beneficial. And I want to ask you about that because the whole thing is reducing inflammation, right?

And this drug helps one eat less and therefore potentially reduce inflammation. It was recently cited in a medical article saying it may reduce your risk for Alzheimer's because of its reduction in risk for inflammation for the people who take it. What I would say first and foremost is that when it comes to medical journal articles, you know, remember there's industry sponsored trials. So if it comes from the drug industry, just don't believe any of it. And that is my view. That's the view of Catherine DeAngelis, one of the earliest editors of JAMA.

With Ozenpic, one of the issues with Ozenpic is it basically stops you. It controls, you know, it reduces appetite massively. But the issue with Ozenpic, which is a great concern, is that, you know, when you lose weight, you want to lose body fat. You don't lose muscle. And, you know, you basically end up losing 50% muscle, 50% body fat. There are all these other side effects that, again, are underreported in the trials that we're now seeing in the real world, including, you know, stomach paralysis, nausea, vomiting, etc.

I think it probably has a role, Megan, in a very, very small minority of people who have tried everything and are morbidly obese and are really struggling. But I think 99% of people who are taking Ozempic shouldn't be on it. I think it's going to do more harm than good. I think it has to be through a lifestyle change. Here's Dr. Robert Lustig in the piece talking about how it works, SAW35. Yes, there is a 16% weight loss. What is that weight?

Turns out it's equal amounts of fat and muscle. Using as much muscle as fat is not a good thing. These two drugs, semaglutide and also the third one, terzepatide, lead to nausea, vomiting, pancreatitis. And now there's a warning label on Ozempic for gastroparesis, which means stomach not moving, stomach paralyzed. Stomach turns to stone.

And guess what? It lasts way beyond the discontinuation of the drug. In fact, that's why the drugs work is because you can't eat because it delays gastric emptying. It delays your stomach from being able to move the food along. You think that's a great way to lose weight? In fact, if you can't eat, that's starvation. Well, the fat in the muscle shows that's how it works.

Stomach to stone. I have not heard about that side effect from these drugs. What's that? Well, it's just basically this means that the stomach stops working. The peristalsis, usually what passes food through our body basically just becomes, you know, just stops essentially and then probably hardens up. Yeah.

Why aren't people dropping dead? I mean, that seems like it would kill you. Yeah, I mean, yeah, I think, well, those people get admitted to the hospital and probably get put on drips and everything else, and they wait until things start to improve. So it won't necessarily kill you, but it's not very good. It's not ideal. It's not pleasant. Yeah. Okay, so back to the problem of the nondisclosure of information and of big pharma controlling the messaging around their drugs.

I did not realize that sort of the birth of these so-called scientific magazines involved big pharma. And that was kind of all part of the plan. The way I understand it from do no farm, um, your film is of all people, Ghislaine Maxwell's father, uh,

was in on the ground floor of forging this unholy alliance. And we have a little clip from the movie, Do No Farm, about this. I'd love to watch it, then have you explain what happened here. Sot 31.

A sleek, profitable commercial model underpinning the modern medical publishing industry was established by the controversial British business titan, Robert Maxwell. Maxwell recognised and exploited the appeal of scientific notoriety amongst researchers and scientists to win their approval for hundreds of new journal titles and their participation as unpaid peer reviewers.

With research content willingly provided by drug companies, the Maxwell model marry a free-of-charge content and peer review process with a lucrative subscription model to generate unheard of profit margins for a publishing business. Maxwell sold his empire for more than half a billion dollars in 1991, but his fingerprints remain on one of the world's most profitable publishing opportunities.

the the father of jeffrey epstein's longtime partner galene maxwell it says the headline of the article underlying the quote was the the man who bought and sold science go ahead yeah it's extraordinary i think you know what this highlights again megan and

When we had a screening in London, the Alessa Square Odeon, there were a lot of doctors that came and they were absolutely shocked with what they heard because Fiona Godley, the former editor of the BMJ, has been a giant medical publishing. She basically says that medical journals are essentially businesses. Now, as a doctor that has been conventionally trained, we were taught that if it's published in the medical journal, the Lancet or JAMA, the New England Journal of Medicine,

Megan, that it was like gospel truth, gospel scientific truth. And nothing could be further from the truth, partly because there's a lack of acknowledgement and realization that one medicine isn't an exact science and it's an applied science, which means it's constantly evolving, but it also means it can be manipulated.

And the other side of it is, of course, the medical journals. And again, most doctors don't know this, are reliant on funding from big pharma and often can get millions of dollars for publishing one article on a particular drug. And the way that works is the drug companies will, you know, do a drug trial, publish it in a medical journal.

And then it's not just about advertising. They pay the medical journal for reprints of the article that then gets used as marketing material where they can take it to doctors or give it to them at conferences. And one of the most, I think, horrific examples of how

this happens or how this works in terms of that whole system was what happened with Vioxx. You know, John Abrams talks about this in the film from Harvard and he, this was a blockbuster drug in the late nineties that was initially marketed under being better than ibuprofen as an anti-inflammatory drug because it gave less stomach side effects. Um, the drug company was Merck.

The original trials were published in New England Medicine. And ultimately, it was found that Merck had withheld data showing, even from the beginning, that it increased the risk of cardiovascular events, heart attacks, stroke, death, by at least two to fourfold.

and ultimately probably killed at least 60,000 Americans. Merck refined almost a billion dollars in 2011. But when John Abramson was involved in the litigation process, what he found was that not only did Merck obviously know about this through internal emails, their chief scientist basically saying, it's unfortunate that these cardiovascular effects are there, but the drug will do well and we will do well. But when the FDA wrote to Merck to say, and they realized there was a problem,

these heart attacks, for example, and said, you need to put a black box warning

on the packaging of Vioxx, what did Merck do? They doubled down on their marketing and they gave, you know, they paid the New England Journal of Medicine, you know, hundreds of thousands of dollars more to get more of those reprints so they could market it to doctors. It's just absolutely shocking. It's horrifying. What's the diagnosis here, though? You see, I'm a root cause analysis person. I don't want to say this to be inflammatory, Megan. It's actually accurate, you know.

In the book, The Corporation, and the documentary from well over 20 years ago, there's a new one called The New Corporation, made by law professor Joel Buchan. The preeminent expert in forensic psychology behind psychopathy, Robert Hare, actually diagnoses the corporation as an entity, not individuals, but the entity. The corporation is being psychopathic in its pursuit for profit. So callous and concerned for the safety of others, incapacity to experience guilt, repeat applying, conning others for profit.

And that hasn't changed. And that hasn't been challenged or rebutted. So this is the big problem we have is that we've created, we almost as a society in a way, we've allowed the creation of these big corporations to almost through legal means be psychopathic in the way they make money. And the rest of society suffers. So until we sort that out at the root, this problem is only going to continue. And what they also do in the way that they exist. Yeah.

I was going to say, we know that big pharma has infiltrated organizations like the FDA, which has a revolving door to big pharma. And therefore, the people who approve the drugs that we take and we give our children and get from our doctors are not... They're compromised. They're trying to please the Pfizer's of the world and the...

I'm trying to think of the company that produced OxyContin with the Sackler family. Purdue Pharma. Purdue Pharma. Yeah, Purdue Pharma. Thank you. They're trying to please Purdue Pharma because that's how they get paid when they leave government service. But this is something in addition. It's also these...

you know, respected medical journals that are the ones that put out. I mean, I've received articles like that from my own doctor when I say, hey, what about this? Hey, is this something I should worry about? And he'll send me an article from one of these places and

you're giving us a whole new way of looking at these with a big asterisk on these articles. You do feature, as I mentioned, RFKJ in the film. Again, it's at nofarm, spelled P-H-A-R-M, film.com, nofarmfilm.com, where he is talking, I believe this is when he was running for president as opposed to now tapped for HHS secretary, on what he thinks should happen to these medical journals. Here it is, 32.

They are presenting themselves to medical professionals as an arbiter of truth and as a neutral referee and a reliable referee of the truth. And they know that those medical professionals are relying on journal articles to treat patients and that if they tell a lie, if they're committing fraud,

that they can injure and kill people. So, you know, I believe they can be prosecuted. And not only can they be prosecuted for those injuries, but they can be prosecuted on the racketeering statutes or promoting fraud. So I will, I'm going to do that as soon as I get in there. Just as a process question here, Doc, I think one of the reasons I'm excited about RFKJ is

possibly coming in as our HHS chief is I think he's all over these issues. I think he's been living a life as a litigator in this sphere where he's been onto a lot of this stuff long before the rest of the medical and even legal community. Do you think I'm right?

Yeah, 100%, Megan. I mean, I've known Robert Kennedy Jr. for a few years. You know, we've spoken at events together. We've spoken a lot with each other. I'm very, very impressed with him in terms of his deep knowledge of the issues, his integrity, his ability to communicate. He is very unique and he's absolutely the right person, in my view, to be leading HHS to sort these problems out.

So where, what should somebody trust if they're going to Google a drug that their doctor has recommended to them? I mean, can we trust the NIH website? Cause you get a lot of papers over there, but you know, Jay Bhattacharya is not running NIH yet. Like what, I know Dr. Google is very dangerous, you know, just typing in G what is this? What, what, what can they trust?

Yes, it's a really good question, Megan. Hard one to answer. That's why we need to transform the system. But

I think at least what they should do is keep an open mind. And I think what's been really powerful in the last few years has been the growth of the alternative media so we can have these conversations. People are realizing that there's a discrepancy between, you know, what they're being told, like safe and effective, you know, on the COVID vaccines. For example, CNN, the BBC, Marty McAree said publicly that one of the biggest barriers

the purveyors of misinformation during the pandemic was the US government. But really, in my view, they are just puppets of these big corporations. So I think people just have to just think outside of the box a little bit, look at alternative media, make up their own mind. But ideally, in the long term, Megan, we need to restore trust in these institutions because society can't function cohesively unless you have a strong government that's ethical and medical institutions that are ethical.

And, you know, there will be a little bit of disruption going on before we get to that stage. But, you know, we're in this mess with health care because we've allowed these corporate psychopathic entities to have so much power that they become tyrannical. And, you know, and that level of tyranny is so strong is that the way they exert their powers, even, you know, people like RFK Jr. or myself or others who have been speaking out.

you know, they will dedicate resources and even use the media to smear us because that's how they, you know, uh, keep their, um, keep spreading their misinformation to people. So it's going to take time. I mean, one of the, I tell you just, you know, if there's one website people could go to, which is an independently, you know, um, an independent of, of commercial influence website done by very rigorous scientists who want to, you know,

you know, people to be fully informed about drugs. It's called the NNT.com. So the NNT, yes, numbers needed to treat NNT.com. And actually there's a really good website and a lot of their, whatever's published on the website actually is published in one of the American family physician journals.

And what they do is they break down the data, for example, statins, they will say, if you've had a heart attack, your benefits say one in 40 over five years and preventing another heart attack, etc. And they give a traffic light system about whether overall the drug is beneficial or the drug is harmful. It talks about things like heart stents, which, again, are massively overused in the United States and other parts of the world. That's what I trained in doing.

So that's quite a useful resource for people, for sure. They're not sure about the drug they're taking. And it goes through many, many medications as well. And looking at all the evidence combined.

We've got the one and we've got no farm film.com. We're not done discussing what's in this gem, which you really should watch. Uh, but we're going to take a quick break and more with Dr. Asim right after this. Did you know that American homeowners nationwide have over $32 trillion in equity and cyber criminals are targeting it? They're not dumb with a growing scam. The FBI calls house stealing.

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So can we talk about the COVID vaccine? Because I know that you believe your father may have died prematurely as a result of one of the boosters. You've been very outspoken about the vaccines. I know you got blowback when you suggested that these vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna were a likely contributory factor in all unexpected cardiac arrests, heart attacks, strokes, cardiac arrhythmias, and heart failures since 2021. Yeah.

which a lot of us believe, but every time we try to say,

There's a lot of, seems to be a lot of increased in cardiac deaths. We're told we're idiots and that it's just all the same numbers and it definitely had absolutely nothing to do with the Vax. Yeah, Megan. So, um, you know, I've thought about this in a lot of depth because, you know, I'm somebody that's been a very outspoken advocate of evidence-based medicine. I mean, I've published extensively. I've worked in advisory government roles over the years. Um,

And everything I usually advocate for comes through medical journal articles that I've published that have been peer reviewed. Usually nothing to do with the drug industry in terms of those articles. They're usually analysis, independent analyses. And just to give people, people can get confused here, but essentially when you look at the evidence right now in terms of the COVID vaccine, specifically I emphasize and look to mRNA vaccines, so Pfizer, Moderna.

um people know that the serious harm is there the question is how frequent is it and the data comes from what we call randomized control trial reanalysis of pfizer modernist trials pharmacovigilance data that what people are reporting in the yellow card system autopsy data we know now certainly more than 70 percent of people that died within a couple weeks of having the vaccine almost certainly caused by the vaccine that's been proven you've got um observational data and of course my own clinical experience

So the serious adverse event rate on the best evidence we have, and this has not been rebutted, to be honest, in any serious platform, Megan, comes from reanalysis of Pfizer-BioNTech trials by independent scientists. Joseph Freeman is a lead scientist who works very closely with Jay Bhattacharya, by the way.

You've got Peter Doshi, associate editor of the BMJ. And what they found was that the serious adverse event rate was at least one in 800 at two months. And that means disability, life changing rate, hospitalization. And from the original trials that got approved around the world, Megan, you're more likely to suffer serious harm from the vaccine than you were to be hospitalized with COVID, which suggests from the beginning it was going to do more harm than good.

But actually, where we are now, and this is, I think the UK government's probably the only government in the world that's published this, been transparent in publishing this information. And I think they're publishing it, although it's not been well publicised, but I'm going to publicise it for you now, because there are a lot of good scientists and good people out there whose conscience would not be clear unless they got that information out in some way, shape or form. If you're in the highest risk group in 2024 of COVID, which is basically people over 90, Megan,

You have to vaccinate 7,000 people over 90 to prevent one of them being hospitalized with severe COVID versus a serious adverse event rate, harm rate of at least 1 in 800, because it's only at two months that they found that figure. And we know there are long-term effects. So that suggests that right now, it's at least eight times more harmful to have the COVID vaccine in the highest risk group than to have benefit. I mean, this is absolutely extraordinary. So the question is, why is that not getting fully acknowledged?

I honestly genuinely believe most people are well-intentioned. Of course, we talk about all these commercial determinants of health that have been going for a long time that have captured institutions. But the main barrier to the truth, Megan, and I see a lot of very bright scientists out there, people who have a track record of doing things for the genuine good who completely have a blind spot on this issue, it's psychological.

And the two psychological barriers I've written about are ones of fear and willful blindness. So fear, essentially, which happened from early on in the pandemic, we had this exaggerated risk of COVID, but also there's probably fear of maybe stepping outside the echo chamber that they're in as well. Fear inhibits your ability to engage in critical thinking.

But I think the more important psychological barrier that a lot of people can relate to is something called willful blindness. And that's when human beings and we can do we're all vulnerable to this all the time in some ways, right? It's when human beings turn a blind eye to the truth in order to feel safe, avoid conflict, reduce anxiety, or to protect pristine and fragile egos. Now in in personal lives, this can happen, for example, when a spouse turns a blind eye to the affair of their partner,

But institutional examples of willful blindness historically, Megan, that you will know about are situations like, for example, Hollywood and Harvey Weinstein or the Catholic Church and child molestation. These are examples of institutional willful blindness. I think we're seeing exactly the same thing here because it's faced between the choice of accepting an uncomfortable truth

Most people will choose to bury their heads in the sand, but the reality is we have to face it head on because it's not going away. And it's not that everyone's been vaccinated now and it's done. Unfortunately, there is good evidence emerging suggesting that, and I've seen this as well, that it can certainly accelerate heart disease, which means many people who had the vaccine even two or three years ago are suddenly going to prematurely have heart attacks or sudden cardiac death. And we're still seeing that.

We've got one of the world's top oncologists in this area who's also been involved in vaccine development called

Professor Angus Dalglish in London, and we've got Robert Clancy, one of the world's eminent immunologists, 83 years old now, Emirates Professor of Immunology, top immunologist of Australia, used to work, by the way, many years ago with Anthony Fauci. They're both massively concerned with this COVID mRNA vaccine increasing cancer through several mechanisms of immunosuppression.

So it's unfortunately not something that's going away. We're up against a time constraint here, but that does lead me to ask, is there anything those of us who have been vaccinated by the Pfizer or Moderna thing can do?

Listen, I'm in the same boat. Again, I've had two doses. I've had some issues as well. The first and foremost, the best thing people could do here during this is absolutely optimize their metabolic health. So really optimize your lifestyle as much as you can, because this is a chronic inflammatory problem with the vaccine. And if you can, you can probably mitigate it to a large degree through that process.

And really everything you can do to make sure your immune system's enhanced, whether that's taking high doses of vitamin C, concentrating on your stress levels, eating real food, all these things are really important. But again, we need an acknowledgement by the establishment. And to be honest, I'm hopeful, Megan, because I think the new administration that comes in are going to want to tackle this head on. So we're not that far off that.

Okay. All right. Well, I mean, yeah, millions of us are in it together. Good to know. Again, do nofarmfilm.com, nofarmfilm.com. Very interesting stuff, Dr. Racim. I understand. I have it on good authority that you are under serious consideration to also join the Trump administration in some important role, and I'm rooting for you. I hope it happens. Please come back if and when that happens, would you?

I'd be delighted, Megan. Hopefully next time actually in studio as well so I can actually meet you properly. That would be delightful. Thank you to you for all of your good work. Really appreciate it. Wow. And thanks to all of you for joining us today. We're back tomorrow with a bonus episode on the bombshell news about the Duke lacrosse case and favorite Christmas movies. There's a combo for you. See you then. Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.

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