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Pandemic Amnesty Revisited

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https://drdrew.com/2022/dr-harvey-risch-mrna-adverse-reaction-data-suppressed-by-cdc-with-dr-kelly-victory-ask-dr-drew/
The complete interview, linked above, is absolutely worth watching.

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Video Transcript:

I asked you one last question since I started with my little thoughts about healing for lack of a better word in those search of things. It was an article written in the Wall Street Journal a week or so ago suggesting blanket amnesty for people. Amnesty, forgiven forget for all the people who were wrong because we quote didn't know then what we know now and therefore we need to let people whether it's you know, never birx or Anthony Fauci or Rochelle Walshky or on and on and on all the people in the mainstream media. We need to let them all off the hook because we're that kind of people. Where do you stand on that and do you think that that's the answer to moving forward on this? Well, I'm in favor of a just society. One that recognizes this behavior and deals with it through legal processes. And I think that this was not these were not crimes against humanity from ignorance. They were intentional that these people knew this and there was planning the bent 201. Even before that there was planning about the virus that this virus was an engineered virus. We know that from studies of the RNA sequence of the virus and that the idea that people should be forgiven. There's a very fundamental theological assumption here and that is the only people who can forgive are the ones who are injured and still alive to be able to choose to forgive. That the people who have been killed who died because the treatment for them was suppressed and they weren't able to get treatment in time. They are no longer able to forgive and those people you can't expect somebody else to come along and say, oh, I forgive you, they have no right to forgive for the person who died and can no longer forgive. That's opportunity is long gone. I think that people who were fear-mongered into making bad decisions deserve some degree of sympathy and leniency so to speak. But the people who organized and led the campaigns of bad decisions, horrible destructive decisions on the country, who demonized people who disagreed with them either through smears in the media or smears from the president saying that half of the society were bad people because they disagreed. That kind of demonization is still going on. Dr. Fauci said the same thing today or yesterday that all of the, there's going to be a bad winter because of all the unvaccinated people. This is still continuing demonization. You cannot forgive problems that are still going on. All the people who have been injured by the vaccines, they are still injured. They still have to suffer their daily lives, you know, dealing with their injuries and trying to recover. They're not going to forgive when they still have to cope. So you don't get a free pass for bad behavior. You have to, first of all, you have to, a country bad behavior. You have to apologize. I don't see anybody apologize. So the first step in forgiveness is the apology and it has to be a sincere apology. I don't see that happening. So there's no room for forgiveness until people at least start apologizing. I agree with you wholeheartedly without contrition. There is no forgiveness as a starter. I come from, you and I come from different religious backgrounds, but I think we agree precisely on that particular piece. And I also agree with you that without legal recourse, we will never fully heal and move on. So I'm going to let you go. Thank you again so much for coming on the eve of a major holiday. Taking time, your expertise, your wisdom, greatly appreciated your fearlessness is unbelievable. You have, as I really mean it when I say you have been a beacon of hope during this debacle. So thank you again for coming back and sharing with us.