Aaron Russo Unplugged Part 3 (Landmark Cinema and Borders books in Chicago on 7-30-2006)
Here's a rare video produced by Gary Franchi in 2006 of filmmaker Aaron Russo in a Q&A session following a showing of America: Freedom to Fascism. Filmed at the Barnes & Noble in Chicago, IL. A must see for any Russo fan.
Jeremy, married father of three (and one of them vaccine injured, in need of full time care) got the injection to keep his job, he ended up getting sick from it, his job terminated him anyway.
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Doing the #Haka for freedom down in Wellington, New Zealand.
They’ve had enough of the Vaccine Apartheid, the Pharma corruption - they want Jacinda out. ( TELEGRAM CHANNEL :" 21st Century Wire ( Official ) " , https://t.me/My21wire )
Elsie Crane, a 43-year-old software developer, was referred by her doctor to a psychiatrist, Dr. Mellon Dome.
So, Ms. Crane, reading your chart, I see your doctor suggested you see me because you stopped believing in SARS-CoV-2.
Yes. He said I was having unusual symptoms. A sense of relief, euphoria, and possibly an inflated sense of my own importance.
Well, euphoria can be dangerous. Have you stepped out in front of traffic lately?
No.
Do you have a desire to jump off a rooftop and fly?
No. Although I recently skipped along our driveway to my car. I don’t usually skip.
When did you stop believing in the virus?
It’s hard to pinpoint the moment. I was watching a cooking show a few weeks ago. The host was making a shrimp dish. I fell asleep and had a dream. Dock workers were throwing cases of vaccine vials into the ocean. When I woke up, I felt lighter. My daughter called from college. She said she was taking a leave from her studies and coming home. Her thesis advisor had just been fired for writing an article defending the 1st Amendment. I miss my daughter. I was glad she was coming back.
And then you stopped believing?
I think it was around that time.
Did something traumatic happen to you?
No. I lost my cat for a few hours, but I found her in the living room closet.
Any marital problems?
No. But I haven’t told my husband I stopped believing.
Why not?
He wears a mask when he goes out in the backyard to work in the garden.
I see. So I would call what you’re experiencing a spontaneous suspension of belief.
Is it serious?
It could lead to irrational actions. We don’t have a mental disorder label for it yet, but I have seen it in a few patients. It’s a regression into childhood, basically. A person abandons responsibility.
I don’t feel like a child.
You wouldn’t. That’s part of the syndrome.
Can it be reversed?
We can treat it with medication. But the drugs don’t restore your belief in the virus.
And that would be the goal? I believe in the virus again?
Are you vaccinated?
No. I was ready to do it, because my husband insisted, but then…if I don’t believe in the virus, why would I take the shot?
Yes. I understand. Let me ask you something. Have you taken any trips lately?
Why, yes. I went to visit my sister in Arkansas a couple of months ago. She lives out in the middle of nowhere with her dog. We went for long walks in the woods, did some fishing. It does me good to get away once in a while, and she needs the company.
And I assume you didn’t watch much television while you were there.
None. Sally doesn’t have a TV.
All right. Now we’re getting somewhere.
Where is that?
You see, you fell off the radar, so to speak. I’m going to prescribe a course of operant conditioning for you. It’ll help you get back on track. OP is training for the mind. It reminds you of important concepts and ideas. How many TV sets do you have in your home?
Four.
Good. I want you to have them all on all day, tuned to the news shows. Not the news talk—just the straight news. Sit and watch for at least three hours a day. Do you read news?
We get a local paper. I sometimes go to the BBC website.
Good. Every day, search out and read articles about the pandemic. At some point, you’re going to feel a slight bump.
A what?
As if you’re sitting on a train in the station, and then it starts to move. That bump will tell you you’re back in sync. You’re accepting the information you’re getting.
Okay.
Aside from your husband—he’s something of an oppositional figure for you—do you have a friend who really believes wholeheartedly in the vaccine and the danger of the virus?
Betty. She and I went to college together. She lives near me.
Good. Spend time with Betty. Talk with her. She’ll be an important ally.
I keep hearing stories about people who took the vaccine and had severe reactions. Some of them wound up in the hospital.
We all hear those stories. You have to ignore them. When you encounter one, say to yourself, “This is not real.” Repeat it several times. Gradually, your reaction to the stories will flatten out. You won’t be affected. I’m going to give you a link to an audio presentation. Every night, before you go to sleep, start the audio on your computer. Put on headphones. The audio will play and repeat all night while you’re asleep.
What’s on it?
Statements strung together in a loop. Some of them are from Dr. Fauci. Others are pandemic news clips from CNN. Three weeks of this every night should help.
All right. Should I have sex with my husband?
That’s an odd question.
Well, we enjoy sex. Sometimes, afterwards, I feel, I don’t know how to describe it, “free from concerns.”
I see. Would your husband object to taking a break from sex for the next month?
I don’t think so. If I say it’s temporary and part of my therapy, he might be all right with it. He respects the advice of doctors. He once wanted to be a doctor. But then he went into the shoe business. ... ... ( FULL ARTICLE : https://blog.nomorefakenews.com/2022/01/13/help-me-i-stopped-believing-in-the-virus/ )
PROTEST ispred Osnovnog suda u Novom Sadu
23.08.2021. (ponedeljak) ujutru u 10.00 casova!
Porodica Rađenović - PRAVDA ZA NINU!
Siri dalje!
#RAZBIJANJEMEDIJSKOGMRAKA
#STOP_CENZURI
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