Home Page
cover of N8WUNZ 20230614 (W) Naming and Shaming the Beast
N8WUNZ 20230614 (W) Naming and Shaming the Beast

N8WUNZ 20230614 (W) Naming and Shaming the Beast

N8WUNZN8WUNZ

0 followers

00:00-59:50

Nothing to say, yet

Audio hosting, extended storage and much more

AI Mastering

Transcription

The speaker discusses a document called the treason document and its implications. They talk about the Crown and its relationship with the New Zealand government and the Treasury. They also mention the use of money to push for vaccinations and the connection between debt and labor. The speaker goes on to discuss the Plandemic documentary and the Bayh-Dole Act in the United States. They also mention university research commercialization in New Zealand and the patenting of inventions. The speaker raises questions about the development of vaccines and the financial incentives in university research. Okay. Sorry about the delay. I'll just sort of be clicking back and forth on this occasionally and see if I can get it to connect. No problem at all. It might have been decided that I didn't want to do it otherwise. Anyway, so what are we talking about tonight? We're talking about naming and shaming. I actually put suing on the, when I sent you the name of it. Because we're going to do a bit more than shaming. Oh, sorry about that. It's okay. Not a problem. I have a bit of a habit for not reading things properly, I'd have to say. Well, no, we're all trying to do about 90 things at once. American Squash Truth Ministry about four months ago. Is that right? That's good. Okay, so we're taking a quite direct approach. I talked a little bit about it on the last Seymour Friday night, I believe, that we've got a case that's going into the authority. It's been sort of around the houses a bit. But it's going into the authority, so there's not going to be any more mediations or anything about it. Just a moment. Sorry. People sending me stuff while I'm on a Zoom is not really helpful. So if people are watching the Zoom, don't send me stuff. Right. Okay. So what was I going to say? So we've been around the houses with this, and so we decided that the treason document could be of great assistance. Now, if you don't know what I'm talking about with the treason document, you need to go back. How many Zooms, Em? About three? Yeah, I'll go fish up the link from Rumble, from our Rumble. Yeah, and I'll just tell them which one it was that I went through it, clause by clause. Yeah. The most interesting part, really, was the, it's divided into two parts. One is called Declaration, and one's called Order. The Declaration is pretty much the people variously known, but sometimes called Hei Whakaputanga, sometimes called Whakaminga, have said we're not part of the Treaty. The Treaty partner has flown the coop, and we've just found out about it. Thanks, Alicia. We've just found out about it, and now it appears to us that you guys need to move aside and let us take the reins. So basically, the Crown, they're talking about the Crown here, not the New Zealand government. People keep thinking about government as one body. It's not. It's divided into three arms. This has always been about the Crown. This has always been about the Executive. The Executive and the Crown are the same thing, different names for them. Right, so there are parts of the Executive that they had to activate, if you like, or deactivate, were the Prime Minister's Office, which is the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, right, the Prime Minister's Office, the Governor-General, and the Treasury. Now, the treason document is addressed to Helen Winkleman, who's the Chief Justice, but it got signed in the Treasury, because in actual fact, nothing gets done without the Treasury, right? So when you take over, they say it was a new government going into place, right, after an election, and they asked the Governor-General if they can form a government, right? The Governor-General is part of the Crown. So they asked the Governor-General and the Governor-General CCS, and they get the keys to the Treasury, basically, because you can't carry out any policies without money, right? You also can use money to punish by withdrawal, which is basically how the Treasury, directed by the Cabinet, pushed all of the government departments into saying you had to get people vaxxed. Now, you would think, what's the money link here then? Why would the Treasury want people vaxxed, right? We were paying for those vaccinations, right? I mean, as in the public purse, because that's what the Treasury is made up of. The Treasury hasn't got any money of its own. It is all of the money that you guys pay in taxes, right? So where is the payoff for them? Well, if you look at the way that this declaration is addressed, you'll find it's addressed to Her Majesty the Queen in right of New Zealand, and then it's the securities number. They addressed it, and they took it, and the headquarters of this, and this is what it says on the front page, the headquarters are 1, the Terrace National Provident Building, Wellington, New Zealand, and the mailing address is Care of the New Zealand Debt Management Office, Treasury, 1 Terrace PO Box. So it's called the Treasury, and it's called the Debt Management Office of the Treasury, okay? Right, so who's the debt owed to? The debt is all of the money that supposedly gets borrowed from overseas companies, or overseas governments, or the, they're all companies, right? Not just New Zealand, a whole damn lot of them. So why is the security for the debt? Our labour, right? Because if you think of that, why do you get, when do you get taxed? When you make money. How do you make money? Usually by labour, by your intellectual or physical labour, sweat equity, right? Yep, okay? That's how, so these things called New Zealand Government Bonds, they're the bonds around us. We are bonded, we are bonded to them in servitude, to provide the money so they can do what they want with us, right? Now, there's been something else that's come to my attention. So, sorry, I'll keep on with this treason document. Yes, birth certificate bonds, because the birth certificate is the first place that you, you know, the baby of course is not making any money. People say that the baby is, is, you know, that there is a birth, you know, there is a value in it. But I'd say that they get back to the Stats Department and they find out how many of those babies have reached maturity, what sort of work they're doing, etc, etc. You know, all of the stuff that we put in, provide the Stats Department with all of this information and then they do a calculation and the New Zealand Bonds are worth whatever the, you know, what, how much work we're producing as the basis of those bonds. Now, the others, but what they used, I believe, too, was the, that they, because they were killing us all off, or hoping to, get rid of a whole lot. And, of course, they were wrecking the economy. So the, so the bonds on each of us would have been worth a whole lot less. So what was the security for the money that they were so-called borrowing to buy all of that poison, rat poison? It was, it was the lands of New Zealand, I believe. And this is what I pointed out to the Governor-General when I wrote to her about New Freeland, that they were borrowing a whole lot of money. And I believe that they were securing it, they were securing it against, you know, the land. Because under another Act of Parliament, they can put, and I'll find it, somebody just sent it back to me recently, and I'll find it again. But it's another Act of Parliament, I think it's 19, it's in the 1950s sometime. And it's New Zealand Public Lands Act or something like that. And it's got all of the legislation in there, got all the legislation in there about being able to mortgage land, public land. So, so, so the first part of that was, you know, as I say, the first part of that was all about the declaration about how they discovered that, that it was the company, how they discovered that, that in actual fact the, that the Queen had vowed out, either in 1986 or probably, they were saying, back in 1901, when she died, because the contract, well I don't say the contract, but they say the treaty didn't extend to her ears in the signs, okay. So the deal with, with Māori to give her first option on land in exchange for, for the protection of the law, actually, not the protection of the Queen. The protection of, of the law had run out in 1901. So the treaty is out of there, so all of this stuff about principles of the treaty and everything is all long gone, according to these people. But the most interesting thing, from the point of view of a business deal, is the second part, which is called Order, and that's page five of six. Now the Order is addressed to Helen Winkleman, Patsy Reddy and Jacinda again, and it's due to the failure of the Office of the Minister of Justice, Andrew Little, to provide, provide proof of an international maritime contract between ourselves and a foreign offshore private company masquerading as the Government of New Zealand. Confirms that all statutes maritime admiralty jurisdiction in the Acts of Parliament are unlawful. I wouldn't go as saying the Acts of Parliament are, I wouldn't go as far as saying that the Acts of Parliament are unlawful when they're based on common law. It's the maritime jurisdiction that's unlawful, actually, they're correct. So what do they want her to do? Because remember they sent it to three women, I guess they wanted the three women, to suspend all authority of this imposter Government under the leadership of Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, acting on behalf of Her Majesty, the Queen in right of New Zealand, effective immediately. So basically she was supposed to, Lynette, can we have a stop about the tomatoes because it's coming up in front of Emma's face and it's distracting. Suspend all authority, effective immediately. Now that was under the leadership of Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. Okay, so that actually happened eventually, didn't it? She stepped down. So that kind of got done a little bit late in the piece because you've got to remember this is 2020, December 2020. Cease and desist all activities pertaining to mandatory vaccinations, that got done. Cease and desist all activities pertaining to coerced vaccinations, that got done. Cease and desist the use of all 1080 and Brodyfacorum poison usage, that didn't get done, right? Any pandemic or epidemic that is proven to exist is to be managed under inherent rights, customs, procedures and practices, whānau and hapū. Now that looks like, you know, if we go to a wholly, what would you call it, Māori based health system under their inherent rights and customs and practices that the future ones would get managed. But of course we don't want to have any future ones so we don't need to go there. Rescind New Zealand's participation in the United Nations Agenda, Agendas, Agenda 21, 2030 and Agenda 2050. Now this would be amazing, however they have no intention of doing that at all because we know pretty much that one of the guys who was involved in signing this up is linked to the United Nations anyway and in actual fact some of the people who drew this up, they're not on here, but are linked to the United Nations as well, okay? So a lot of this stuff, and so what else do we have, refuse consent to 5G or 6G and other technology rollouts and infrastructure without verified independent confirmation of health and safety. That's not being done, they're not going to do that. Your Majesty, the Queen and White Corporation Royal Assent stamp has rescinded and revoked in its entirety. They are without valid contract and were never granted the right to govern. The power of Royal Assent is with the Māori Nation Collective from this day forward. Okay, now people say, well that sounds quite, a lot of that sounds quite nice, and why? You know, so what's the problem? Well the problem is that they just want to, you know, it's out of the frying pan into the fire. They obviously said nothing about it, you know, never claimed all of those things that had happened as, they've never said another word about this publicly. However, we remember that not long after Ngāpuhi got 150 million, I believe it was hush money. So what can we do with this, right? How can we use this to our own advantage? What we're doing is we're, and I think I, did I have it in the last Zoom, Emma, about the, I had it in the last Zoom, the front page that we were going to use? Yes, yeah, yeah, yes. So basically we got to the point of putting together how the front page is going to look, because the union is going to come in as a second applicant, and the second respondent is going to be the Queen and Rt of New Zealand. Okay, we're not going to put the, what do you call it on? We're not going to put the security number on, because apparently that security was paid out in 2009. But we are going to get people from Treasury, especially this person called Anthea Williams, who's on the back page, remember her? She's the Treasury solicitor. She even names herself as that. We're going to get her into the authority, hopefully, and the Prime Minister's, the ex-Prime Minister's Secretary, she signed it off, and this person called Gregory Bourne, who is still the Secretary to Cindy Cairo, okay, the present Governor General. So we want to know what you thought you were doing signing all of this stuff off, and we can see that, you know, you obviously agree. So how come you haven't come out and said, you know, Maori is no longer the Treaty partner for a start? Right? And of course, they had no right to do that at all, because these people aren't elected. If we're going to have a new, well, we're not going to have a new Crown. Definitely, I'd say that's the end of the Crown in the picture. But if we were going to have a new administrator, right, someone who was going to oversee how the government departments were all coordinated, etc., it certainly wouldn't be by people who elect themselves, right? That is not, because it's our money that's getting spent. It's our money that's making all of this show run. There was also something else that came to interview. Oh, now, people might have start to get soon part three of Plandemic, or Plandemic part three. That was divided into three parts. I hadn't watched, I think I've seen parts of it, you know, people have taken clips out and showed it. But now you can watch the whole three. Plandemic, the first one, has had over 1 billion views. 1 billion. That came out in 2020. And it's, and the maker let it be sent out to, let it be sent out to, and put on any platform that you want to see. You'll see it on Rumble. Now, I got an email today from something I just subscribed to, and it's got links to Plandemic, Plandemic two, and Plandemic three. So I thought, well, seeing as I haven't, I'm sure I hadn't seen Plandemic one the whole way through, so I'll have a look at that. Well, I got a little way into it, and Judy Mikovic, is that her name, Emma? I think so, yeah. Yeah. She was the one who was chucked in prison and threatened and everything, because she was basically calling out Anthony Fauci early on in the piece. So Anthony Fauci, and there was something that she said in it that really, really struck me, and it was that how, back in 1980, because I did a bit of research as soon as I heard this. Back in 1980, there was an act passed in the United States that allowed, it's called the Bayh-Dole Act. She says it's Bayh-Dole, but it's actually B-A-Y-H-D-O-L-E Act. And what it did, it committed ownership by contract, by federal employees of anything, that ownership and then patenting, because you have to have ownership and then patenting, of inventions or processes or anything, while they were in the employ of the universities. Right? Now, I thought, what? What is that about? Because I don't know if you guys have ever, if any of you have ever worked and invented something in your workplace, right, which is worth money. That belongs to your employer. That belongs to your employer. Okay? So you were not allowed to patent it, because your employer will come after you and say, you produced that while you were working. You used our equipment or you used our resources. That belongs to me. That's the rules as far as I knew. And I thought, well, I wonder, because she was saying, once they got that, then the big money started to roll in. You know, it's kind of a revolving door between companies. They'd leave the university and then they'd have the patent, right? But it was developed off the back of taxpayer funding. Now, have you guys ever heard that the internet, the internet, for example, was developed for the military, right? The military, of course, had it developed by scientists, you know, had the scientists in the military develop it, right, for communications. Who funds the military? The taxpayer. Bill Gates got patents on material that was developed by American taxpayers' money. Oh, God, that'd be right, wouldn't it? Yes, it would. So I thought, is there such a thing going on in New Zealand? I don't know if it's going to come up because I'm offline. Oh, yes, it does. It's still sitting up on my screen. So I had a quick look. There's a paper, and I think I sent the link over to Erica, maybe. It's called University Research Commercialisation. This whole process is called technology transfer. Paying dividends for New Zealand, right? But it's not paying dividends for New Zealand because what's happening is they're developing all of this stuff in the universities. The people in the universities are patenting it, okay, or the university is, and then selling it, but then it doesn't get to, we don't get to use it without buying it, right? So this is how it goes, right? Market capitalisation of university start-up companies. In 2003, there were, I think, seven. The year 2008 marks the 20th anniversary of the establishment of New Zealand's first university commercialisation company, the University of Auckland's Uni Services. In the intervening 20 years, the other seven universities have all established commercialisation entities to capitalise on the fast-growing research outputs of the universities. Today, their combined activities have grown to a business worth $350 million a year. So this was written in 2008, this research paper, this paper. In 2005, the eight universities set up UCOMS. UCOMS, yeah, that's well-named. University Commercialisation Offices of New Zealand to bring together the commercialisation offices in all the countries' universities and establish closer links with government in commercial research partners. Well, you know, seeing as the universities are funded by government, because even if you take into account what they get paid for in student fees, right, that probably only covers the teaching salaries, etc. Pretty much, we pay, and even then, student loans pay for all of that. Student loans are our tax paid on, aren't they? Between 2003 and 736 new invention disclosures were received by University Commercialisation Offices. 303 new patents were applied for and 97 patents were granted and 156 licences were issued. This was between 2003 and 2006. Revenues from technology licensing have increased from just under $4 million in 2003 with 97 active licences to over $10 million in 2006 with 210 active licences. Now, I'll just have a look at that graph again. Yeah, they're only taking it up to 2006. So, it was going exponentially, right, and I'd say it's still going. Now, the questions that we then have to, and then it gives you all of the inventions, all sorts of things like this power without wires, a new process developed by the University of Auckland researchers has produced a safe, clean, reliable way of transmitting an electric current without the need for wires. Research, da, da, da. So, they've sold that to something, sold that on. New Zealand is then sort of buying all of this stuff back. They've got all sorts of lab testing, what's this, Magri Tech, high solutions for high-tech industries, McDermott Institute, that's an interesting one. But you can see why they had to, we're basically the petri dish of the world by the look of things. It would be interesting to find out if New Zealand had anything to do with the development or part of the development of those vaccines as well. Right, so, they really got us in a little petri dish with all of these, you know, very clever people at the universities who always have a financial incentive to push for inventions and technologies as far as they can. There's no moral, you know, they have guidelines, they have ethics guidelines, but there's obviously so much money to be made on all of this research. It's not just getting good grades and getting awards, it's getting lots of money because it looks like here it's the universities who hold the patents, but it could be, we don't know, you know, because this was written in 2006, there's probably been something, some amendment to some law somewhere where they've got people doing, you know, they're taking their own patents out on it. This is how, what's his name, Got So Rich, Fauci and all of them. They then are able to move the discoveries and what's going on in the labs out into the commercial space without us really knowing what's going on, all sorts of companies and shell companies and God knows what. One of the things in here is Eco NTM, Nutrification and Inhabited Technology, helping New Zealand stay clean and green. Treated paddocks on the Lincoln University dairy farm, the equipment in the foreground, you should see all the picture is all of these poor cows, like, you know, it's like Centennial Beach on a hot day. Oh God, yeah. You know, they're all, you know, whereas you'd usually have, I don't know how many stocks you'd have per acre, this is only about an acre, two acres, so I've got about 200 stock on there. It's a product that reduces environmental impacts of dairy farming and increases farm productivity and sustainability. Developed by Lincoln University and Ravenstown Fertilizer Cooperative. The invention originated in a research program funded by Foundation for Research, Science and Technology conducted at Lincoln University. See, this is the thing, you might have a whole lot of money, but you need, basically, you need the workers and resources that they can work with for these things to actually turn into something usable. Yeah, yeah, they're not creative. You know, all of these places who went with, what would you call it, sort of like Fonterra, for example, or, what do you call it, you know, the trucking companies, or probably people like Ravenstown Fertilizer Company, you know, probably said to their staff, I don't know, maybe they didn't, but there is so much money in this business. So, but the rules of disclosure, etc., and conflicts of interest have to be complied with, and when we sue the Treasury, we're going to be putting in, as one of the documents, the, what I call the treason document, because it's treason by the company against us, against its shareholders, if you like. Yeah, well, the, oh gosh, I'm now going to have to plug this in. The, can you see? Yeah. I'm going to get my laptop back on again. All right. Lots of long calls. So, you see how important it is that we stop thinking about the Crown as being King, whatever his name is, Charles, and just think of a company. Okay. It's like the throne room in the Wizard of Oz, or the Emperor room, or whatever. And Toto has just pulled that cord across. And, you know, what did she get? She got out of the lands, didn't she? She got out of the wizard. She got out of the kingdom, the Emerald Kingdom. Yeah. The Emerald Empire. Yeah. She got the balloon to get out. Okay. So, the balloon's gone up. The crazy little man sitting on top of the pile of books, Legius, I suppose it is, Chris Hipkins, and Jacinda, of course, or at least her secretary, is going to get called, as is Greg Bourne, as is that solicitor from the Treasury. Okay. And we're going to find out about this document. Yeah. And, yeah. So, all of this stuff about, you know, this is why they keep saying, whenever, you know, people make inquiries about what was in the contract. It's commercial interest. Commercial interest. What has the government got to do? You know, what has the minister got to do with commercial interest as part of the company? Of course, it's commercial interest. Yep. Yep. Absolutely. The reason why they're doing it, the reason they've wrecked our economy, which seems to be counterintuitive, is because that will then make us all dependent on the one world order, which, you know, it's got plenty of, we've got plenty in this country. Plenty, plenty, plenty. So, especially with a much reduced population, you know, of compliant souls. Yeah. You know, they're on the pig's back, aren't they? And everybody will think, oh, well, you know, I got, I became impoverished because I was silly and I should have just did what they told me and taken the vacs. Yeah. That's the cheeky thing one of the, one of the law firms is arguing against one of our members. Well, if she'd taken the vacs, she wouldn't, you know, she wouldn't be up for all this money. She wouldn't be, you know, she wouldn't be poor. Wow. She wouldn't have lost her job and she wouldn't be poor. Yeah. Good on you, mate. That's shocking. Okay. So, yeah. Input by people. Input. I know it's, oh, I'll give you a little bit of an update too. I'll give you a little bit of an update. Yeah. Well, people are going to sue the company. I think they'll feel a lot happier suing a company than something. I've got some sort of emotional tie-off because the emotional tie is all this hype about democracy and, you know, if we just vote these people in, they'll keep, you know, they'll obey the law and they'll keep everybody in line and, you know, it'll be, we've chosen, we've chosen. And, you know, people don't want to think, well, you know, I've made a foolish choice, you know, so I have to live with it. They just didn't know. They didn't know that who was running the show wasn't the people that they voted into power. Those people who got in this situation, they had no power at all because those orders were secondary legislation, didn't need their input at all. They weren't in that Parliament debating orders because orders don't have to be debated. They're secondary legislation and the so-called Governor-General, who shouldn't have even had anything to do with it anyway, she should have been out of here in 1986 at the latest, right? As far as anything to do with Māori, there's been nothing, you know, they haven't been so-called Treaty partners since 1901 when Victoria died, according to them. That's in the Treaty, there's no reference to the successors of Victoria, is there? No, because it was a first option, it was a first option Treaty, that's all. You know, a sale and purchase agreement is called a Treaty as well. It's called a private Treaty. It's about the occupation of land, right? So they needed a safe place with legal titles for people to occupy, for settlers to occupy. And, you know, I've talked about this a bit too, and people need to read the official documents that are in the Victoria University files. We will find out all about the Treaty and all about the options and all about the claims about who was claiming what and why. I'm talking about Māori, because they made a great big land deal of about a good over a third of New Zealand land mass because of the doctrine of conquest. They, you know, they took all of, you know, about a third of New Zealand on the war raids that they did, which involved vanquishing vanquishing, you know, the other people there, right? So that was recognised. That was recognised. And they wanted it recognised so they could sell the land. And those sales are recorded. And they've been to court, you know, I mean, they were in court in 1841, 1842, when Commissioner Spain turned up here. So, you know, this is 1841, this is 1842. Victoria had only been on the throne two years at that stage. And she had a very long life. And she died in 1901. And died in 1901. And when she died, but even before that, all of the stuff about preemption was long gone, because you only needed the preemption until all of the, which is, and you'll notice too, the word proprietor in the Treaty, okay, means owner and seller. Right? Yep. You have to prove ownership in the first place. So one of the ways that they were proving ownership was through conquest. The other way to prove ownership was occupation and use, which is the laudio. Yeah. So, yeah, anyway, so the Treaty should be out of the picture at long last. I don't know what's going to happen with the settlements that have already been done after 1901, of course. That's a big, you know, they're all done on the basis of Treaty partner. It's a big, you know, that is one big can of worms. Really big can of worms for, you know, that'll keep lawyers going for a very long time. But yeah, so there needs to be questions asked about this, because of course, it was through the needs of the Treasury, or the machinations of the Treasury, that all of these orders got to be, you know, for reasons that the Treasury had. And I think it might be linked to, well, we know what the big picture is, but it's pretty obvious that there was, that it was about money, because they won't answer questions because of commercial, you know, commercial sensitivity and proprietal information. Proprietal information. Yeah. If you bought something of somebody, right, don't you own it then? Or is Pfizer company part of our Treasury as well? You know, are they all one big company, and it's just insider trading between each of these companies? Yeah. And then they use all the universities to get all the bright people that do all the, come up with all the inventions, and they capture all of that as well. Yep. Yep. I was just looking at those Victoria University documents, Liz, and I just happened to flip back to the first one, instructions from Colonel Wakefield, principal agent of the company. How about that for wording? Principal agent of the company. And that's way back. Yeah. Yeah, it's all modelled on a company. Yeah. The administration is modelled on a company. Yeah. Yeah. It is a company. Yeah. They've always acted that way. Yeah. Yeah. No. Interesting. Very, very interesting. So they're coming, so the Queen and I of New Zealand is going to make her appearance. As the controlling third party of the business that we're, that our member has had so much trouble with, who tried to make and take the X thing. Yeah. That is going to be so interesting. What's the time frame with that, Liz, as far as when you put in the paperwork and then what happens? Probably a couple of months. I don't know what the company is going to do, really. I'm talking about the, what should we call it instead of saying the Queen and I of New Zealand, the QRNZ, I suppose. Yeah. The QRNZ. I don't know what they're going to do. It's pretty embarrassing. Queen McD's. It's pretty embarrassing. Yeah. Yeah. I'm thinking too of that company that gave them all the advice about all Maori being so, you know, and Maori and island people being so likely to get the bug and so they needed to have vaccines, you know, and all of these special people had to come up first and, you know, get vaccs first and everything. But they were, there's some sort of crazy commercial company out of, coming out of the University of Auckland as well to do with, oh, they sell programs about complexity or something. It's kind of like, sounds to me like smoke screen, a smoke screen company, something like that. Yeah. Now make something so complex that people just give up trying to work it out in the end. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. A bit of a. And none of them had anything to do with health science at all. They didn't even have a nurse amongst them. They were all zoologists or computer programmers of some kind. Yeah. That's the pink haired lady lot. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. But she's got a company and I think it was to do with dye, sort of injecting dyes into the body to track stuff or something like that. Oh, yay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Or it could have been to do, even to do, I mean, it would be good if we could find out that they had something to do, the company had something to do with PPE care. It might have been PPE care. Something, somebody do some research on them, will you? It's, they're called Something Something Matatini. Remember them? Badly. Yeah. What was she, what's she called? Susie Wiles. Is it? Yeah. Isn't it? Wiles. Susie Wiles, isn't it? Wiles. Wiles. Wiles. That's it. Susie Wiles. And she's got a company called Luciferase, I think. Yeah, that's her, Lynette. Luciferase, L-U-C-I-E-R-A-S-E, I think is the name of the company. And they're over, yeah, exactly, Susan. They're over in Grey Lynn, not Grey Lynn, they're over in Divider. What does the name mean? I think they're cheeky so-and-sos who are, who love to sort of flout the fact that they're satanic and think that we won't notice. Hmm. Hmm. When did my gates come up with the Luciferase? Pink glowing, what? What was that? Somebody put that? Lucerine. Luturine, something. Yeah. Yeah, Luciferian and Luturine. I'm not sure what the Luturine is. Yeah, but yeah, so I think, you know, we can see to a certain extent why all of these companies, you know, it's just ridiculous, fencing companies and, you know, the people who are in the agri-business, um, you know, what was that all about, getting people to get vaccinated or lose their jobs? There's a pink glowing from Gates Microdot. Oh, sorry, Tracy's got it. Tracy? Where is it in the chat? Oh, it's been in the works for years. Yeah, Luciferase is a pink glowing marker for Gates' Microdot injection product. It's been in the works. Oh, so there is a connection. Yeah. I read it for a minute there. I thought it said it's been in the workers for years. That's probably right. They're trying to put it in the workers for years. That's for sure. Far out. Yeah, I'm down to 12% of that. I'm wondering how much time I've got left on this anyway, because I just put a, Dr Susie Wiles describes herself. Oh, it's gone. Even coloured her own hair pink. Oh, my God. Yeah, she's probably put some of that stuff on it. Yeah, well, let's hope that she'll end up as a pink dot. Yeah, in a nutshell. At the end of the sentence it says, and in the end they were transported to live on the Auckland islands for the rest of their natural. Yeah, they can go glow in the dark over there. Yeah, so we've got a bit of work to do guys, but the more of us know what track we're on, the more of us are kind of like, yeah, my time is about to expire. The more of us who can work on it, you know, spread the word around, make sure people know that the Wizard of Oz has been unmasked, okay? Yeah. And this is what they called, and stop calling them the government. Yeah, yeah, definitely right. She met with John Key in London before making the move to New Zealand, old archive photos. Oh, right, that's right. She's English, isn't she? Yeah, Tracey is a fantastic researcher, guys. So if you see her on the threads and that, you know, get talking and give her anything you come up with. Yeah, awesome. Team effort, team effort. Team effort, guys. Yep, one of the researchers. Okay, so as I say, I've had to hold my phone for this whole one, so I'll say good night. Yeah, no, that's good. Yeah, we're good to go. Has anybody got any questions I can answer? If Liz has to go, I'm happy to. Well, actually, I don't know if anybody at the project we're working on, of course, real hard at the moment, is getting the schools to stop having the sex education in the curriculum, okay? So Mike Baker, yeah, go find out about Michael Baker, what companies he's involved in as well. Yeah, he'll be into something, that's for sure. Even if it's, you know, they'll have links all over the place to all sorts of crazy stuff. But it seems, yeah, they've actually, Urena, they've got, they want to put it into preschool. They wanted to teach little ones, pre-five-year-olds about masturbation and yeah, show them all sorts of pictures. Yeah, nasty stuff, horrible, absolutely bonkers. Yeah, they're very sickening. But anyway, we're working hard on that, and we're working with Penny Marie, who you guys will have seen her videos come out, the stuff she's done. She's done two now. Working very hard, and yeah, we're going to have a new story out soon, but I can't say too much about that at the moment. Fantastic, that's awesome. Yeah, come on guys, you're doing great, New Zealanders, you're doing great. Yeah, absolutely, fantastic. Now get people to join the union, because then we can inform them. Yeah, yeah. I didn't hear about, one of the, also, you will find that a lot of the parents don't even know that it's happening. Hmm. They don't even know it's happening. No. And if parents walk into the room when something's going on, they might discover what's being read to the kids, what's being talked about with the kids. Because little ones, they don't go home and say, Mummy, so-and-so talked about such and such today. It's just, like, normalised for them. Yeah, shocking. Amy Beater, yes, Amy Beater's working hard on it. Very, very good, good work. Yeah, seeking out to inform themselves, yeah. Yeah, well, you know, people have been told, oh, you know, you're not expert enough. Let's put it to the professionals. The scourge of professionalism is very, very active. You know, this is why we haven't got that many doctors and nurses and people like that in our union. OK? We have some, but not the majority. OK? Yeah. And they need us. Yeah, they do. A nurse I know is losing faith rapidly with the nurses lot that she's with. She said they're hopeless. Who's that? A lady I know, locally here, a mandated nurse. Yeah, she's been trying to go with the one, I can't remember who she said, but she said they're just not getting anywhere. So I think you need to join the union. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, this is right. I mean, the Nurses Union, oh, the Nurses Council, they've got a new, they've joined up, they're going to support LGBTQ, the Nurses Council. Wow. You know, they've got a new, you know, rainbow slogan up and everything. Someone sent it to me today. Yeah, I know. Shocking. And of course, they're the disciplinary body as well. Oh, far out. Yeah, actually, that'll have something, I'll have something to say about that for Mandy Turner's case as well, because we've got a disciplinary, we've still got the disciplinary tribunal one coming up later in the year. But yeah, we hope to have them well on the sketch by then. So that's awesome. Yep. Okay, guys, I'd better go. Yeah, me too. Awesome. Thanks, everyone. And we'll see you Friday. Yeah, never know what's happened by then. Okay, see ya. Bye. Thanks, everyone. See you later. Bye, Michael. Bye. Bye, Liz. Bye.

Listen Next

Other Creators