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Post-COVID Reality: What Was Happening Inside Hospitals That We Never Heard | 3/18/26
Episode 218th March 2026 • At The Mic With Keith Malinak • Keith Malinak
00:00:00 02:06:00

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The long-term effects of COVID didn’t end when the pandemic did, and many of the outcomes were never fully explained.

Nurse Kimberly Overton shares what she witnessed inside hospitals and why the story may not be as finished as people think.

The long-term effects of COVID continue to raise questions, especially when it comes to what was happening inside hospitals during the height of the pandemic. In this episode, Nurse Kimberly Overton joins Keith Malinak to share firsthand insight into patient care, hospital protocols, and the realities that weren’t always visible to the public.

As the conversation shifts, the focus moves from what we were told during COVID to what people may still be experiencing today. The discussion explores lingering health concerns, trust in medical systems, and how the aftermath of the pandemic may still be shaping outcomes in ways that haven’t been fully addressed.

Originally recorded during a period of heavy public debate around COVID response and healthcare systems, this episode now plays like a snapshot of a moment that continues to evolve. What was said then carries a different weight now, especially as more people begin asking questions about long-term effects and accountability.

Transcripts

Brad Staggs (:

I guess that it. I guess that it.

Brad Staggs (:

at it.

Brad Staggs (:

fell in love with a hooker She laughed in my face So seriously I took her I was a disgrace I was out of line I was out of place Out of time

To say things, see the open mouth of my suitcase Sayin' leave this place Leave without a trace Leave without a trace Leave without a trace

Brad Staggs (:

tried to get a good job with honest pay.

The benefits are okay Standing in the sun with a popsicle Everything is popsicle

without a trace without a trace without a

Brad Staggs (:

I tried to dance in a few rows, you only in style

Join the great dancers union I had to find

To do the right thing, play it straight The right thing changes from state to state Don't forget to take your mates If you're out looking late To see your face You live without a trace You leave without a trace

Brad Staggs (:

perfectly

Brad Staggs (:

Tomorrow, baby, when I take you will you be good to me?

Just make believe you got me And I'll try harder than before Is it to me or your heart?

Brad Staggs (:

you feel. I'll make believe I love you. no, I'll try harder than before. Cause it's a real love that keeps us coming back for more.

Brad Staggs (:

Just make me believe in love me And our child will live with me forever Cause it's only love That keeps us coming back for more

Brad Staggs (:

traffic lights don't you be a traffic light when all things said you turned to red don't you be a traffic light and don't you be around about no not another round about

We've come so far, yeah, back to start Don't you be out round about now baby, don't miss me by signs If you just turn the key then things will turn out fine

Brad Staggs (:

Let's not have a breakdown No, another breakdown You're on, you're on a long way from home Let's not have a breakdown

Don't misread the signs If you just turn back even things will turn out fine

you

Brad Staggs (:

Pushing Pushing me a bike, taking me a bike, so don't pass, taking me a bike, so don't pass, me a bike, don't pass, me a bike, so don't pass, taking me a bike, so a bike, so taking me a

Come to find your special star Don't you be trapped in time For it's all been said You've come to it Don't you be out of your mind Just take me away from you.

Brad Staggs (:

Don't let me down

you

you

Keith Malinak (:

you

Keith Malinak (:

Hey, hey, boy. I hope you can hear me. My goodness. What a mess. What a mess. I lost all audio there right before we went live. So I am, I am definitely looking forward to hearing from you in the chat to make sure we're even doing anything here. Or if I'm just talking to myself. So I'm an only child. I've done a lot of talking to myself over the years. So please let me know if the audio is good.

I see that we made it to YouTube where Susan has chimed in over there. All right, cool. You hear me? Excellent. Thank you so much. Hello, Douglas. Mary, I hope you feel better. She's got the flu. Hello, Nimbus. I will say, I don't even know where I got these, but in fact, they still have dust on them. I don't know where I originally got them, but I found them behind my dresser or my nightstand. And there's some cheater glasses. Oh, yeah, right. These are good.

That's when you can tell. That's when you will join Brad stags over at the WTV Wednesday show over the daily mojo.com. We're to join him in just a few minutes. Coming up in less than an hour, Kimberly Overton, a nurse that was working in the hospitals during COVID. She will join us and she's got a lot to say about her experience during that nasty, insane era and what she's doing now to help with health care.

for all of us because my goodness, just six years ago, everything fell apart and her perspective is unique. But when I started to about the cheaters, this is when you can tell, this is when you can tell that your regular glasses, it's time to get into the eye doctor, is when you find cheaters and go, my gosh, I can see again, look at this. I mean, this is seriously. In fact, what does that say? Whereas they should be up close and now,

Stuff that's far away is clear that used to be fuzzy. That's not good. That's not a good sign. Hang on. I got to put this earbud in. OK, yeah, I can hear Brad. So that's good. That's good. So just to recap what we do on the Wednesday wild card and whatnot. Hold on a second now. Hold on. What's five by five? My audio is five by five. I hope that's good. Don't throw math problems at me because I don't know. Hi. Did we just land on the

Keith Malinak (:

I didn't touch a thing. I'm sorry. I'm now appearing magically on the What the F**k Wednesday show for Brad.

Keith Malinak (:

Wednesday, well, Kurt. Yeah, I don't know. could, whatever.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, oh, you know what? sitting here. Sorry. I'm nodding along. guess I should put you on my show on my feed. I'm just sitting here. Oh, Mm hmm. Mm hmm. Mm hmm. Yeah, very.

Brad Staggs (:

okay. Look, at least you're at least you're not as whipped as Jerry O'Connell. Jerry O'Connell is now quitting podcasts after he went on Bill Maher and told everybody that his wife and daughter beat on him.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm sorry, hang on, let me give me a moment to catch up here because I see the headline. not to continue the beating that Jerry O'Connell is apparently taking from the females in his life, but I don't know who he is.

Brad Staggs (:

Yeah, you do. He was on sliders. He was

Keith Malinak (:

yeah, I him now. I see his face. Yeah, okay.

Brad Staggs (:

sorry. He was Stand By Me with Will Wheaton and whomever else was in Stand By Me. He's been, Sliders, he was really good. I like that show.

Keith Malinak (:

I see the subheading, continue.

Brad Staggs (:

So he was at home I guess this was on election night and they were watching the elections and Then when Kamala started to go When Trump was probably should say it that way when Trump was obviously winning He made the comment because he had been a big Kamala Harris supporter. He said Wow, we should have had a primary

Keith Malinak (:

How dare he?

Brad Staggs (:

And because of that, wife and family, he has daughters and they became quote physical, which I think that means they beat him up.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, so can I just ask a quick question?

If you're attacked in public physically by a female, you have the right to fight back, yes? You can meet force with force, that's fine. It seems a little tricky.

Brad Staggs (:

He was overwhelmed. He had, don't know how many daughters he has. said his wife and their daughters. So there were at least three of them. So their two daughters and the wife, they became physical with him after he criticized the Democrat party's lack of planning on election night.

Keith Malinak (:

That's not even TDS, man. That's that's that's

Brad Staggs (:

It's weird is what that is.

Keith Malinak (:

That's so weird! Yes!

Keith Malinak (:

I'm so- Look, you joined early today and so it threw me off and now I don't even know how to push-

Brad Staggs (:

technically used to be two minutes late but that's alright. There. So now everybody can drink it in. Hold on. He's quitting podcast altogether after he went on Bill Maher. Mm I why do you admit this is my

Keith Malinak (:

That's the thing! If you're that much of a cuck, just don't-

Brad Staggs (:

So it was the right word that we used to call it pussy with.

Keith Malinak (:

Just pathetic is what it is.

Brad Staggs (:

and now that's the new word and I and is he serious? Who knows? Is he really going to quit podcast? He said he would go on to the pardon my take podcast. Yes, he wouldn't be he wouldn't be a guest on any more podcast after that. He says he will do the fantasy football, but that's it.

Keith Malinak (:

Interesting.

Brad Staggs (:

hang on a second. a second. Hold on. He's married to what? Ramjin? How do you say her last name?

Keith Malinak (:

Rebecca Romaine? No? That's just the closest name I could think of there when you said that.

Brad Staggs (:

He said. Name I mean that's.

Brad Staggs (:

But that's how he is it wrong. R O I J N I have. I've always put the J in the.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm obsessed with our audio. I'm sorry. That's just the closest name. Okay. No, no. Sounds good on my end. so that's all I care about. It sounds good on my stream. No, um I'm sorry. I I can go and check yours too if you want. You want me to do that or do want me to look at

Brad Staggs (:

So fabulous over here.

Brad Staggs (:

I do that. Ed, well, hold on. If it sounds good, what are we going to do? Nothing. And if it sounds bad, what are we going to do?

Keith Malinak (:

Wait for the post audio when Wes gets in there. Hang on a second. Let me see. Let me see. How do you? I think that's Rebecca Romaine. I don't know.

Brad Staggs (:

somebody else deal with.

Brad Staggs (:

I think that for some reason I've always transphased letters in her last.

Keith Malinak (:

I just haven't seen the spelling of her name, if that's still her. I haven't seen her in 30 years. yeah. Uh-huh. There you go.

Brad Staggs (:

That's how you what? not how you spell Romaine. Romaine is spelled R-O-M-A-I-N-E as in Romaine.

Keith Malinak (:

Well, her nickname growing up was lettuce. That's how I remember.

Brad Staggs (:

It's a weird nickname, but I'll go with that. No, I think you're right, because I have two. guess I never put the two together. And then, and it's funny because it's right here on the screen over there, sometimes there's too much technology. We have too much opportunity. And there's too many ways to, look, that worked. This is, where did it go? Here we go.

Keith Malinak (:

I don't know to pronounce that way. don't know.

Brad Staggs (:

It's actually the other story that I wanted on Chelsea Handler down here because.

Keith Malinak (:

I hate to make her post what Hang on, hang on, hang on. I'm just making sure because I just checked. Susan, you can hear Brad now. Yes. Please. No, no, no. I'm just making sure that she's not referring to minutes ago before we connected. So I'm just making sure that now everything is fine. Right, Susan? I swear I'm going to spend the next two hours.

Brad Staggs (:

you couldn't before?

Brad Staggs (:

you know, here's the thing that it looks really easy doing this, but it really isn't. I mean, it's easy in the sense that if this was 1978, we'd be in a rocket, but this is not easy. Doing what we do is not, especially the way we're doing it, because I was talking to a producer, Ron, this morning, and I said, it's amazing that we can get this done the way, because the way we're doing it, you shouldn't be able to do this.

Keith Malinak (:

hahahaha

Brad Staggs (:

It's and we are going to be considered pioneers in the broadcast industry. We're look back on us They're gonna go those two those two guys who and and people gave him shit all the time Because the audio wasn't right because and you know what they can all kiss our ass because we're gonna be famous one day And we're gonna we're gonna be in the word will be in the encyclopedia

Keith Malinak (:

No, won't. Is Philo T. Farnsworth in the encyclopedia for inventing television?

Brad Staggs (:

He might be, I'm glad you said that. Because this business, Edwin Armstrong, did I talk to you about him?

Keith Malinak (:

Sorry, I'm distracted by the ad that's playing on your feed there. Why don't you hit that X for me there? I'd like to drink whatever they're drinking. Denver. Okay. That's good for drug.

Brad Staggs (:

of there's a there's a story out of Denver. We'll get to that. Okay. But it's a damn, it's a it's a damn story out of out of Denver but Edwin Armstrong was the guy who invented FM radio and I was reading about him the other day in the nineteen let's see in 1930s, 1940s. He invented FM radio. AM radio was a big

Keith Malinak (:

Continue.

Brad Staggs (:

television was coming on the scene and RCA, the Radio Corporation of America had all of these interests in AM radio and television. Edmund Armstrong comes along and he's like, hey, we've got this FM thing that we can do now. he, there was the, originally the station numbers were like lower. They were like 55 to 80, whatever. That's off too far off in the weeds. But he,

They change a few things around. FM starts sounding really good and he gets a patent for all of his stuff. He offers to sell it to RCA and RCA is like no and they sue him saying that they keep him in court. They keep him tied up in court because FM radio sounded better than AM radio and was considered a competitor to television. So this corporation just kept suing Edwin Armstrong, the guy who invented the damn thing.

and sued him until to the point the guy had sold all a bunch of his stuff to cover all of his legal costs. One day in New York City climbs out on the balcony of his 13th floor apartment and nosedives down. They find him on a third, third, third floor balcony.

Keith Malinak (:

What a loser. couldn't even make it all the way to the bottom. Like your last act is to land on the ground below and you hit the third floor and stop there. That sucks. Edwin Armstrong, and like to put it into more modern terms, he's kind of like the Iver Mekton and RCA is the Dr. Fauci and Pfizer. Yes. Now. yeah, absolutely. OK, so before you get any further down the road, just do me one favor.

Brad Staggs (:

I actually...

Brad Staggs (:

Yes, exactly. This stuff has been going on forever.

Keith Malinak (:

open up yourself a Google tab and type in West Virginia. We've done this before, I know. just can't remember. no, West Virginia radio and Loomis. L-O-O-M-I-S. Get ready to be...

Brad Staggs (:

O-O-O-M-I-S

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, that's it. do you got here? Look at that, huh? Click on that fella there. Pioneer Radio, the second one down. that guy. second one down. It doesn't matter. Wikipedia, I couldn't tell that Same one. Whatever. Click on one of them. Do an invented

Keith Malinak (:

before

Before-

Keith Malinak (:

Yes, Mullen. Sure, I don't. I don't know.

Brad Staggs (:

Mullen, American dentist. You should have known that a dentist would have invented radio because it's so painful.

Keith Malinak (:

because he's implanting radio stations in your teeth. It all started in the- What year did he invent radio? I gotta-

Brad Staggs (:

to my. Wait a second. 1826. was he's alive from 1826 to 1886. He is an American that was an American dentist. Did you know I played a dentist in a student film once? So, I do have some credibility and I feel like I'm in the same company of another professional just so you know. Uh he was known for proposing a wireless communication and electric power generating system based on his idea that there was

Brad Staggs (:

Was he related to Tesla? Is it zero point energy?

Keith Malinak (:

Honestly, as you're reading about this genius, it's almost like you guys are the same person. You've lived very similar lives. You both were dentists. You're both pioneers with radio broadcasting. And you're both geniuses, obviously.

Brad Staggs (:

good looking. He's a good looking man. Look at that. He's a good looking man. I mean, you take away the mutton chops and he looked like he could walk out of 2017 right now. His theory was that the earth's upper atmosphere was divided into discrete voltage layers rising from zero at ground level to higher voltage with altitude and that these could be tapped using kites. He stole that from Benjamin.

was gonna say Benjamin Harrison. Benjamin Franklin. are many Benjamins, thank you. And that these could be tapped using kites to fit with metallic screen conductors and 600 foot long copper cords flying high above the hills and mountains. Wait a second, this sounds like heart.

Keith Malinak (:

dang, sorry I'm in severe pain right now, just give me one moment here, I just cracked my surgically repaired elbow on the wall behind me, cause that's what you do when you're a dumbass.

Brad Staggs (:

You sit on your balls. mean...

Keith Malinak (:

Not that I would ever admit.

Brad Staggs (:

I'm good. Thank you.

Keith Malinak (:

Is that how they got Mickey Mouse's voice? Like the animator guy sat down and he's like, okay, so we're gonna do the Mickey Mouse voice. We're just playing with some ideas on what we should do. Do that one. Do that. That's good. And you didn't realize it's seven. Okay.

Brad Staggs (:

do that one!

I gotta get into character! You reminded me of a different girl! I didn't say she was crazy!

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, I'm sorry. I'm distracting you. That's what friends do.

Brad Staggs (:

No, you're not. It's okay because people have come to expect absolutely nothing from this program, which is the beauty of it. I mean, at some point it will be on one of the, if we still had America's stupidest home, loziest home videos, we'd be on it. Yeah. All right, so this guy.

Keith Malinak (:

Harp.

Brad Staggs (:

Yes, you say cloud or clown.

Keith Malinak (:

I don't know. Did they have clowns back in the 1850s?

Brad Staggs (:

They did actually, they were killer clowns. They're frightening. Yeah.

Keith Malinak (:

In the 1850s, forgot to pee before we started broadcasting. Was that out loud? damn, bro!

Brad Staggs (:

Alex, good luck.

Brad Staggs (:

to get up a lot in the middle of the night. Have you considered prostatex? Alright, he claimed in 1868, he set wireless telegraphic transmissions between two Virginia hilltops, 18 miles apart using apparatus based on his theories. Historians take on what he actually did range from his claim being unproven to theories that he may have inadvertently sent electromagnetic wave or radio signals between the two hilltops.

despite his impractical ideas about atmospheric electrical charges. So was he just sending an AM radio signal?

Keith Malinak (:

Can I just?

Keith Malinak (:

wireless communications. think it was the yes, but can I just say that there's not many shows, especially it's even more scoped down when you're talking about simulcast shows that use the word apparatus.

Brad Staggs (:

That's true. I'm on a campaign. I'm glad you brought that up. I'm on a campaign to bring back the word apparatus. So you know.

Keith Malinak (:

Is there a... Okay.

Brad Staggs (:

as as part of his dentistry practice, Lumis also developed a process for making dentures entirely out of porcelain. What is he like?

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, now he's I don't know, but I just did the Dinta show about a month ago. we were talking about fillings and stuff and you never want to get the metal. I think that's what I learned. Go back and watch.

and the

Keith Malinak (:

That sounds like something she would do.

Brad Staggs (:

she didn't.

Keith Malinak (:

No, it does. I don't know for a fact, but it sounds like something she would done.

Brad Staggs (:

it. Because the mercury in there in the the in the fillings causes all kinds of crap to go wrong with your brain. I'm not saying she has things wrong with her brain. No, that's what it does.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah.

Keith Malinak (:

But seriously, your brain, body is connected to the teeth, we learned in that show about a month ago with the dentist that went through just, you know, one tooth connect, like that's part of this part of the body and this one.

Brad Staggs (:

you saying that the tooth bone is connected to the jaw bone?

And then the jawbone there is connected to the skull bone and the skull bone is, and then you, then we got down through all these cervix and the lumbars.

Keith Malinak (:

My phone always autocorrected dumb shit. Like fillings, don't want to say filings.

Brad Staggs (:

have never once, by the way, said ducking. Not in a text. So this guy used it. This guy, what are you drinking?

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, thank you. No.

because I'm coffee. got a pee though. And I like this is stupid. What am I doing? Continue. I'm sorry.

Brad Staggs (:

So he used the kites and the gilt covered balloons.

I'm working on a line. There has to be somebody that was full of guilt and it's a different kind of guilt. Anyway, his notebooks included illustrations of ideas for using elevated open flames. So wait a second. Did they come along after he died and then steal all of his notes like they did with Tesla?

Keith Malinak (:

Right. just know he you know what the only thing if you do an image search for him. He was in the donkey. I'm sorry I shouldn't say that. He if you do an image search the only thing you'll see is a roadside sign in the middle of nowhere there in West Virginia and that's it. I mean the guy gets no credit.

Brad Staggs (:

He died in Terra Alta Westford. He died when he was 60.

Keith Malinak (:

probably a lot of radio waves and whatnot.

Brad Staggs (:

He did all this stuff before he was 60.

Keith Malinak (:

When did he die?

Brad Staggs (:

in 1886.

Keith Malinak (:

that sucks.

Brad Staggs (:

that's like the the the wife of the dude who invented the x-ray

Keith Malinak (:

I know you're talking about

Brad Staggs (:

he discovered it. Yeah. what was his name?

Keith Malinak (:

But the chick doesn't get enough credit for doing the x-ray.

Brad Staggs (:

I know he grabs his wife all the time. Sit down.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm take an X-ray. Yeah, but no, but she was really smart. Just look up like, she? Yes, female. Was she? Chik. Inventor. That's not who I'm talking about. Nah, there's somebody else. There's some chick inventor.

Brad Staggs (:

Wilhelm Röntgen, right?

Brad Staggs (:

Yeah, no, that's it. Anna Bertha Ludwig.

Brad Staggs (:

Hola.

Keith Malinak (:

Shit

Brad Staggs (:

Chick. Yeah. X-ray. Door.

Keith Malinak (:

for

Brad Staggs (:

Okay, I wrote Chick X-Ray and it came up with what I just say her name was Elizabeth Fleischman.

Keith Malinak (:

That's not. No.

Brad Staggs (:

Who are you thinking of?

Keith Malinak (:

I'll find it, it's some like a-

Brad Staggs (:

Alright, the first image is but Elizabeth Fleischman, Ashcom, I should. Rockin is the inventor. Other researchers like Elizabeth and

Keith Malinak (:

Curry curry

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah. Yeah. Anne Marie Currie or Madame Currie. That's what I couldn't think of. Like I wanted to say lady. Hey, Hillary says she doesn't have any mercury fillings.

Brad Staggs (:

She brought her name.

Adam, Adam Curry.

Brad Staggs (:

He's a Polish-French physicist and chemist. remember...

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, and she didn't get no credit. You know what mean? Like she would teach classes and stuff and I don't know. The end.

Brad Staggs (:

She was a sturdy woman.

Keith Malinak (:

What? What's he? Okay.

Brad Staggs (:

mean, she may have needed a little makeover, but.

Keith Malinak (:

She looks pissed right there. That's probably... Yeah, you gotta sit still for those pictures back then. What if you just smiled for three... Could somebody not hold a smile for three hours?

Brad Staggs (:

They all look pissed.

Brad Staggs (:

three hours, right?

Brad Staggs (:

Is that asking so damn much? I mean, seriously, people. Now, here is the

Keith Malinak (:

The future's gonna live forever!

Brad Staggs (:

She didn't know that. They didn't believe this stuff would last till the end of the day. You're welcome because as soon as you brought up the voice of sitting on your balls, I thought of this guy in the wheelchair. Don't laugh because he's in a wheelchair. If you laugh, you're a racist. And so he's zipping to do along the, I think he's in, it doesn't matter where he is, he's on a street.

Keith Malinak (:

So this is the Bradley Challenge. laughing.

Right? can play at home. No,

Brad Staggs (:

This is man versus robot. Man versus robot. Man versus robot. a delivery bot allegedly goes rogue, the street fight was waged between a robot delivering food and a guy on a mobility scooter. The video is going viral. A disabled man on a scooter encounters a robot that he says is repeatedly cutting him off. Back, back. Seriously? Then the man and robot collide.

I spoke to Mark Cheney, the human whose street battle with the robot has gotten 25 million views on social media.

Kimberly Overton (:

tried to go right and it went right, then I tried to overtake it on the left and then it kept going so I kept going.

Brad Staggs (:

Don't you laugh you racist son of

Keith Malinak (:

Is this what Robert Kennedy sounded like when he was four?

Kimberly Overton (:

forward, it slammed on the brakes, I hit it and then it backed up into me.

Brad Staggs (:

it

Keith Malinak (:

Stop stop the robot cart backed into him like it was like road rage time for the robot car. It was trying to make a point

Brad Staggs (:

don't know because I wasn't there exactly what happened but it sure looks to me like the whoever is joystick in the robot back at headquarters.

Keith Malinak (:

you think that's what's happening?

Brad Staggs (:

Yeah, you need to buy a better microphone. You started yelling and your microphone didn't like that.

Keith Malinak (:

What happened?

Keith Malinak (:

let me fix that. I'll fix that right now.

Brad Staggs (:

beat the beat the snot out of that thing. Kick it. Keep it in the **** I said, keep it. Yes. Actually, that is much better. See, I, no, no, no. I said, that's what a friend does as a friend. You know, if you, if you have lettuce on your face somewhere, a friend says, hey, you got some lettuce on your face. They don't just let you go on with lettuce on your face.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm just gonna keep yelling.

Hey, is this better?

Keith Malinak (:

Alright, apologize for...

Keith Malinak (:

a sandbox, And the people, the early investors here, which by the way, I've got a lot of thank yous that I want to get out there at some point, but thank you all for the donations. One day, five years from now, when everything's perfect and it's crystal clear and blah, blah, blah, you're say, I remember when that audio sucked ass.

Brad Staggs (:

Yeah, and remember that was back when Brad was alive. horrible accident with the kangaroo and the wheelchair and the and he was a midget, right? was a midget and the kangaroo in the wheelchair. was really I mean, no one saw that coming. I can tell you that. I found plenty of the robots loaded with food and out for delivery. Let's see what happens when I stand in front of it. It seems to see me. Let me.

Now I step back. The robot blinks its eyes at me and off it goes. Some online comments accused Chaney, a Los Angeles therapist, of actually staying. OMG. He's a ther... Can you imagine? Go ahead and sit on the couch. Tell me all your problems. He's alleging the crash, which he denies. What do you want to say to people who would claim you're doing this on purpose or you made this happen?

Kimberly Overton (:

Well, I mean, the first thing is... wait, pause it!

Keith Malinak (:

That is Mickey Mouse! That came full circle!

Brad Staggs (:

you think it was? Of course it is. It has to be Mickey. You know, it actually does kind of look like the streets of Anaheim. I mean, he may have that maybe Mickey out there on his lunch break. I mean, not very many people know that he's in a wheelchair. Restaurants in many cities across the USA are increasingly using these robot carts to deliver. Yeah, the rest of it,

Keith Malinak (:

Right.

Brad Staggs (:

But now you're you you laughed. You are you're now a racist. Congratulations. You did. I watched you. I saw.

Keith Malinak (:

I didn't laugh. I mocked. didn't laugh. I smiled because I thought somebody in 1868 was taking my picture.

Brad Staggs (:

not that's not what you were doing but that's okay. All right I've got to figure out how I can go over here and look at because I feel like I've ignored people in the comments and and usually I have

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, I'm usually the one that ignores people in the comments. I mean, that's my job.

Brad Staggs (:

I usually have the ability to get over and look at people in the comments, but today, this has been very challenging. It's been a very challenging day for me.

Keith Malinak (:

Wait, hold on. timeout. First of all, get the stupid video off the screen. I want to see you because you know, this sounds like a serious moment in your life and we need to address this.

Keith Malinak (:

Hold on. I'm sorry. There we go. I can do it. Do it my damn self. I forgot. There's too many. I still have to pee.

Brad Staggs (:

I know. I thank you. It's a whole lot

Keith Malinak (:

I've got 30 minutes before my guest arrives. You tell me when it's a good time for me to go pee.

Brad Staggs (:

all right. Hang on a second. Where in the hell is that other schmendigl? Where is it? Where is the other schmendigl? okay. You go ahead. You go pick. I wish I knew how to

Watch out for her food carts. Uh Wisconsin Jackhole. Lad 86 original babe. I I would say hi to anybody over on Keith's stream but I can't see his his stream and especially now I don't want to see his stream. Uh and thank you. Uh yes, it was Marie from Madam Curie. Hey, this robot called me a called me a **** nothing beats an

Brad Staggs (:

the whole whole afro man. Hang on. I gotta get I can't tell you. Afro man. If you missed it this morning, the afro man controversy is beyond amazing. Oh, hold on a second. I've come up here.

Keith Malinak (:

So I could read without having a panic attack Man right so I've seen headlines yesterday and today you sent me a video Let me am I putting you on the

Brad Staggs (:

All right,

Brad Staggs (:

Did you watch any of it?

Keith Malinak (:

yeah, yeah, but I don't know the con- like I don't know why it's at trial.

Brad Staggs (:

Okay, so what don't you know?

Keith Malinak (:

What's with inside edition, lady?

Brad Staggs (:

I'm trying to get rid of her. I was trying to just get rid of her and just have it be something else, but it won't it won't go away.

Keith Malinak (:

Hold on. So hold on a second. I want to point this out. We can sync our shows, and we can talk at the same time, on camera at the same time. But when it comes to just taking a video.

Brad Staggs (:

take something away. Yes, you'd it'd be easier but it's not. That's the effect of it. Man versus. No, that's just man versus robotic. I don't know. No, it's Mickey. Uh so, that's true. Sorry. I hate for that to happen to somebody like that. Alright, so, the Afro man story. Why now I'm sick of her. I want her to go away. Oh, oh, oh, hang on a second. I think I see the thing. I do. Look at that. Hold on and

Keith Malinak (:

robot. Sorry.

Keith Malinak (:

should I take her on?

Brad Staggs (:

no longer the Daily Tea, Maja.

Afro man in:

Keith Malinak (:

Why does Apple live?

Why does he live there?

Brad Staggs (:

You'd have to ask that from.

Keith Malinak (:

Afro man to live at the beach, but continue, I'm sorry.

Brad Staggs (:

the sheriff's department. They go and they raid Afro Man's house and for those of you who don't know who Afro Man is, he of course, you get, can't. on your live stream. You'll get all panicked because you'll think that you can't you can't play it because it's

Keith Malinak (:

What did I do now?

Keith Malinak (:

It's always me, huh?

Brad Staggs (:

It kind of is. I don't know where it is anyways. doesn't really matter. anyway, they they raid his Look what they look what they did to Nick Shirley, by the way all of his all of his The video where he was exposing California fraud, but they yanked it from YouTube Do that now because you're not looking

Keith Malinak (:

Why did you? Well, that's because I'm trying to figure out where all audio is coming from, from my new phone. I'm retarded. Where am I going?

Brad Staggs (:

Yeah, just looking at the screen that would the thing in front of you.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, yeah, video on availability. I don't what the fire was all about, yeah. I know, but they're doing the... But you're actually, you don't realize it, you're such a genius, a low-key genius, that this is actually bringing it into the lake through the boat ramp, and you may not even realize it because you're that good of... You're the master of segues.

Brad Staggs (:

Yeah. No, no, no. This is Nick.

Brad Staggs (:

I am going through the tunnel under the lake.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, so they're taking

Brad Staggs (:

up right next to the program. Yeah, doesn't matter. So anyway, AfroMan, they go to AfroMan's house and they kick down the door and they go searching his house for a kidnapped victim and drugs because he's dealing drugs. They just know it because a confidential informant told them that he's dealing drugs. And they go in and they don't find any drugs. Well, they find a little bit of pot and no kidnapped victim, just AfroMan's wife who has been at home and who starts videotaping the

Sheriff's Department busted into their house, breaking their gate and breaking their door and leaving a general mess and almost almost eating his pound cake.

Keith Malinak (:

Wait, time over. First of all, we know for a fact they weren't roleplaying. Like, I'm kidnapped. No.

Keith Malinak (:

even close to it.

Brad Staggs (:

No, there was no, yeah, was no, there was no hostage there.

Keith Malinak (:

There's no pancake coming to it.

Brad Staggs (:

Well, the pound cake, will, if you'd like to see, will tell you where the pound cake comes in because this is pretty amazing. My technology has to catch up with me. It's you. Lemon pound cake. This is Afro Man.

Keith Malinak (:

Sorry. My bad.

Brad Staggs (:

Back to Adams County Sheriff Kicked down my door And I heard the glass spray

Keith Malinak (:

Ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-ir-

Brad Staggs (:

They found no kidnapping victims, just some lemon pound cake. Mommy, made a pound cake. It tastes so nice. It made the sheriff want to put down his gun and cut him a slice. Of what? Of what?

So, the sheriff's department was pissed that he

that he put this song together and put it out there. They were, they were pissed because he then wrote another song. I think it was called Lickum Low Liz or Lickum Low Lisa. And apparently there was one of the deputies there that I don't know what her persuasion was, but in the video, it would seem that she may have had lesbian proclivities.

and so he wrote this song and he put the song together and it was a actually it's not a bad little song. it's not. Believe me, the big one that really hit hard was Randy Walters is a son of a bitch.

Keith Malinak (:

you

Keith Malinak (:

I like that song. That was good. That's when you sent me.

Brad Staggs (:

you hear that one? Yeah. Yes, that's the one that I sent you. we did we we recorded a different version of it. I don't think I can show that to you. I might be able to though. Hang on a second. Hang on. Just a second. Aha. There it is. Can you see that?

Keith Malinak (:

Take your time.

Keith Malinak (:

sorry. I'm still trying to figure out where this audio is coming from. I feel like it's in my head now. you Havana syndrome type stuff through your setup? What I see is just your Afro man library and all of those tabs that you probably don't want showing to everyone. I'm kidding.

Brad Staggs (:

What are you?

Brad Staggs (:

I'm always doing that.

Brad Staggs (:

Damn it.

Keith Malinak (:

What am I supposed to saying right now?

Brad Staggs (:

Well, I don't know how I can show you can see it up there on the.

Keith Malinak (:

so you're leaving my audience out of it. that's nice of you.

Brad Staggs (:

trying to figure out how to make this happen because it's the revised version of Afro Man because I did cut a couple of words out simply because I didn't want to offend anybody. I didn't want to get the explicit rating on the particular episode and so I was trying to be business savvy.

Keith Malinak (:

Before today, had you ever heard of that Loomis fella with the radio stuff?

Keith Malinak (:

Before today, most people probably hadn't heard of that Armstrong guy that tossed himself off a building either. Mr. TV, Or FM radio. I'm sorry. FM radio. Mr. FM radio. And find old T. Farnsworth. A lot of people don't know about him, that farmer who invented TV. Why do I feel like Brad and Keith are going to be with Armstrong, Loomis and Varnsworth. Anyway, I'm sorry. Continue.

Brad Staggs (:

But I thought you were going to say, a number of people were familiar with Afro Man because he was going to go to school, but then he got high. And then he also gave us the fabulous hit, The One About Hunter.

Keith Malinak (:

You can't

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah!

Brad Staggs (:

So.

Brad Staggs (:

oh, i forgot to tell you, when they bumped into the they also took $4400 a month now, they gave it back, all except $400, because they didn't- still owed $400 bucks yeah, man

Brad Staggs (:

He should have let Hillary bleach his whole hard drive. Yeah, honey guy. Honey guy.

Keith Malinak (:

No, I gonna go

Brad Staggs (:

He was gonna go visit his dad

Brad Staggs (:

he thought he had a secret stash but hunter got high the white house got shut down we all know why yeah hunter got high hunter got high what were you about to say? he never took part what the fuck

Keith Malinak (:

as you can say if you wanna play that song for your kids

Brad Staggs (:

Oh. of the original original word gets out. Okay. I didn't know that. I didn't know that there was a a really explicit one but then again, the one that

Keith Malinak (:

until I found out the hard way. Two of my kids got to enjoy a couple of lyrics before I could sprint to the damn phone.

Brad Staggs (:

Surprised. Now, the, did you watch any of the of the trial?

Keith Malinak (:

No, just the clip you saw. Talking about his wife.

Brad Staggs (:

the guy.

Brad Staggs (:

And now I'm not going to say that that seemed a little odd.

Keith Malinak (:

Well, I know what he's doing. I know what this guy's doing.

Brad Staggs (:

Well, one guy's doing.

Keith Malinak (:

the cop guy or the sheriff or whoever the hell he's trying to make it seem like and i assume this is just a here's my deep analysis of this clip considering i have not seen any of the trial except for this clip he's probably trying to leave it out there that he's being defamed so he can't say yay or nay he's got to leave it out there for the jury to decide whatever

Brad Staggs (:

What is he doing?

Brad Staggs (:

Beer!

Brad Staggs (:

I see what you're saying. Yeah, I do. Now, for those of you unaware, this is the latest song that Afro Man put out was, what I say it was, whatever it was, is an SOB and then in the lyrics that you'll have to listen to for yourself, he says, so I F'd his wife and got rich. And so the attorney is asking the deputy on the stand, well, are you saying that

Afro man had sex with your wife or didn't? Which I thought was a pretty clear cut question and you should be able to answer that one. I mean, I could answer that. Could you not answer that question pretty like right out?

Keith Malinak (:

I'm trying to take Afro man for whatever money he made off of that video there on YouTube

Brad Staggs (:

All right, let's see.

Kimberly Overton (:

So you're claiming that is the defamation statement is that he said he had sex with your wife. Yes. And that's painted you in a false light. It's caused tremendous pain in my life. I'll get to that. We have to go through false light first. So does it paint you in a false light? Yes, that my wife is cheating on me with Mr. Foreman. We all know that's not true, correct? I don't know.

Brad Staggs (:

I hadn't even

Wow.

Keith Malinak (:

because he can't say no it's not true, well then how can it be causing you pain, you know it's not true, blah blah blah.

Brad Staggs (:

I have not considered that.

Keith Malinak (:

He's got to leave that doubt out there for people to assume the worst and therefore he can take and make bank off of this.

Brad Staggs (:

he's gotta throw his wife under the bus. For money. Here's what he's gotta do.

Kimberly Overton (:

Wait, you don't know if you're watching on your not. You wanna go there? No, I just wanna ask that question. As you said, we don't know I just been with that woman since middle school. I would hope she wouldn't. But you know what? Once somebody puts it out there for the fun and entertainment, it's.

Brad Staggs (:

Now wait a second, when he says once somebody puts it out there for the fun and entertainment, is he talking about Afro Man or his wife?

Keith Malinak (:

the claim

Brad Staggs (:

okay, gotcha. I was just trying to make sure I didn't want to make any assumptions.

Kimberly Overton (:

And it's a problem. So it's something we cannot verify the truth of.

Kimberly Overton (:

thing that can be very.

Keith Malinak (:

Is this Afro Man's attorney questioning him?

Brad Staggs (:

it must be. This must be cross. has to be. So, that's why he would. Okay. So, that's why that make because I could not figure out the life of me. Why you wouldn't just

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah. Yeah. And so that's why playing Koi.

Brad Staggs (:

say no he's not she's on me with him

Keith Malinak (:

What's Afro man's net worth? Because these things we know are always correct. says I'm worth internet says I'm worth 42 million, 46 million. Right? What is Afro man's net worth?

Brad Staggs (:

How much is AfroMan worth in?

Keith Malinak (:

Lower millions, whatever that means. Just show me

Brad Staggs (:

Booking fees for his performances often start in the range of $25,000 to $40,000.

Keith Malinak (:

Right, right, right. Okay, but it says low millions. So in other words, he's not up to Keith Malinak of the Malinak Media Group.

Brad Staggs (:

He's nowhere near. He's nowhere near your status in life. That is not even that is not even close. That's not even we don't even discuss the two names in the same. Thank you. In the same breath. does on the richest. says he has a worth of four to six million.

Brad Staggs (:

According to the Sun, his net worth is estimated to be $100,000.

So it could be an approximate forecast of his worth according to Pop Novel, Hop, Hop, Hop whatever the hell this website is, anywhere between 307 and $406,000. So it's all over the place. I mean, his house didn't look too bad. He looks like he lives in a suburban neighborhood up in Ohio. And he looks kind of middle class. The rest of us.

Keith Malinak (:

Hmm.

Keith Malinak (:

I figured out where that audio's coming from. It's your live studio audience murmuring in the background.

Brad Staggs (:

it's the Dirty Turtle Bar and Grill down the way. We do have a camera in there. The camera's been broken for some time, but the microphone still works.

Keith Malinak (:

Tell me about it.

What's the fair like in the Dirty Turtle Barn Grill?

Brad Staggs (:

It's an old English tavern style bar and grill and it's greasy. You can still smoke there, I think.

Keith Malinak (:

Ha ha!

Brad Staggs (:

It's that good. Now the sploothing squirrel is a little higher on the class level.

Keith Malinak (:

The who?

Brad Staggs (:

the sputum squirrel. It just opened, I think, within the last six months. Are you not familiar with the sputum squirrel? Are you not familiar with the squirrel sputum?

Keith Malinak (:

No,

No, I'm afraid to follow up. See, we're getting close to where my guests may tune in. I don't know how much I want to be setting you up here.

Brad Staggs (:

I will, let me just show you a picture.

Keith Malinak (:

no. I don't know.

Brad Staggs (:

you a picture of a spluting squirrel. Is that fair? Okay. Here you go. This is a spluting. I'm surprised you didn't know this. There is a spluting squirrel.

Keith Malinak (:

Wait, what? Sorry. All right. I like it. That's a gosh, man.

Brad Staggs (:

It gets hot and you'll see a lot of animals do this. It cools off their undercarriage. That's important. You don't want to have a no hot, sweaty undercarriage. Not in weather. It's bad for you. So, the bottom line is I am on Afro man's side and he got wronged.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah.

Keith Malinak (:

NO

Keith Malinak (:

huh, yeah.

It's free speech after the police kicked in his frickin' door for no good reason.

Brad Staggs (:

Right. I don't understand why they thought that that was a good idea and why they thought that taking it to court was a good idea.

Keith Malinak (:

This is insanity. Who swatted him in the first place? Do we know that?

Brad Staggs (:

Uh, all it said was it was a CI, a confidential informant that handed them a tip. And somebody brought up a good point in the chat room this morning that was probably somebody getting some time off their sentence if they gave some solid info to the popo. And it turned out that the popo didn't get the solid info. They got, they got the shaft.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay.

Keith Malinak (:

But hang on.

I like that. So you're welcome. You know what it might have been? It might have been a woman scoring. It might have been that deputy's wife.

Brad Staggs (:

have been. I I hadn't thought about this either. The fact that you know, Afro Man is married. His wife was home at the time of the of the the kick down and then he puts out the video. You're SOB and I have your wife.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm telling you, have we brought her in for questioning? The wife.

Brad Staggs (:

No, well, I don't believe I just learned about this this morning.

Keith Malinak (:

Was she on the stand yet? Do we know?

Brad Staggs (:

Do not know. It's an ongoing trial and the all I can say is it's better so far just with these clips that I've seen than Johnny Depp and Amber Heard.

That was a good one.

Keith Malinak (:

You pooped on the bed, Brad.

Brad Staggs (:

And what was Amber heard sniffing and snorting every time she would go out and then she'd come back in and she'd be sniffing something and there was something on her nose.

Keith Malinak (:

Right. That's like the only current event that my kids kept closer tabs on than I did. They were telling me things during that trial. like, what, where are you getting this free time?

Brad Staggs (:

What the

Brad Staggs (:

see a lawn that needs mowing. see floors that need cleaning and I don't know how you were doing this.

Keith Malinak (:

And you can tell me the the intricate details of their bedroom and and and how many times a day she goes to the bathroom It's like what my kids I'm ashamed that you know this We put this on the screen there I gotta get my

Brad Staggs (:

I just saw this

if you want to profoundly shocking. I don't I just saw this pop up profoundly shocking allegations against these are Chavez spark soul searching movement.

Keith Malinak (:

you know what? I saw that yesterday. I started to scroll through it thinking. Yes, he's a racist according to your turn.

Brad Staggs (:

Why is someone whose tears tearing him down?

Keith Malinak (:

But then just as I was scrolling through and expecting to find those old charges of things that he has said, whatever. Just as I closed the article, I saw something about children. And I was like, oh, wait, whoa. And then I said, I got other things to do. So it's something about kids, I think. I don't know. Check it. Scroll down. Let's find out.

Kimberly Overton (:

that

Brad Staggs (:

bursting in

Keith Malinak (:

I really don't know this shows you how much I care about Caesar

Brad Staggs (:

against well, Cesar Chavez was a here's the thing he did not like the

Keith Malinak (:

That's what I'm saying. And so now I assume that it was people that don't like ICE that were like, hey, let's go and stop changing. And let's go change all the names back on the roads that are now Cesar Chavez Boulevard because of that, because of immigrant stuff. And then I saw something about kids or something. I was like, OK, allegations that very young women or girls may have been victimized are crushing. See, I don't know what this is. I have no idea.

Brad Staggs (:

Well, they're trying to tear him down apparently because he would have been.

Keith Malinak (:

yeah.

Brad Staggs (:

he would have been out there with ice. the hell out. He would have been helping because they were taking workers. They were taking jobs away from his his dudes. canceling events Chavez Tower national figure joined the great picker strike in 19. Remember the big great picker strike of 1965? Remember how much trouble that caused? I mean you you couldn't find a great anywhere on the streets of LA. It was horrible.

Keith Malinak (:

was like

Yeah, he would have been.

Brad Staggs (:

with people wandering around with, with a grapple. I would say no.

Keith Malinak (:

Not in America. Through the 60s. mean, the civil unrest and the war overseas, that's a backseat thing. You couldn't find a grape to save your life. that's horrible. What a strong generation to power through.

Keith Malinak (:

We got assassinations. There's one of them right there that fell victim to that. The Vietnam War. You name it, it was happening. But I've never really put the grape shortage into proper perspective.

Brad Staggs (:

That's because we weren't taught the right history. The things that we were taught, they lied. It's a bunch of lies. It's a bunch of lies. Nothing but lies.

Keith Malinak (:

great strike of.

Brad Staggs (:

great, great, great, great shortage of 1965. was, they were tough times, which is why Americans are considered some of the tougher people because they did, they powered right through the great, great shortage. It was tough. I tell you, it was tough. I was only a year old, so all I heard was stories, you know, passed down from the elders around the fire as we were sitting in the smoke lodge.

Because back then you could bring the kids into the smoke lodge and people didn't their crap over that. I'm trying to be polite because you... Well, you know, when you're a baby sometimes you're around naked. I may or may not have been fully clothed.

Keith Malinak (:

I see an advertisement there. I know you're not in the sports, you're filling out a bracket.

Brad Staggs (:

am not filling out a bracket. are we the March Madness, right? March crazy. When do we get April craziness? I love March Madness. You can't tear me away from the soccer field during March Madness. It's amazing. I love to watch the the touchdowns. I mean, they're flying across the the goal. It's amazing. you know, in some sense, couldn't be done and the first dude to do that, you know,

Keith Malinak (:

The half-core touchdowns.

Brad Staggs (:

that the guy that did that first. He was the first guy and he's left a legacy that will surely be decades before anybody comes even close.

Keith Malinak (:

Well, the guy you're talking about is Cesar Chavez and the problem is about Cesar Chavez is now his legacy of course being tainted because the Who's who's allegating? Alligator? I swear. Help me. I would you would think that there was something in this cup besides coffee. Who's alligator? Who's alleging these? Do we know? We don't care about this article enough. Do we?

Brad Staggs (:

I say tainted.

Brad Staggs (:

I'm glad I'm

Brad Staggs (:

Stupid people. It does not say.

Keith Malinak (:

What's that Epstein headline? What's that say?

Brad Staggs (:

at a Missouri pastor suspended after the church learns that she managed to have scenes private.

Keith Malinak (:

Wait, she managed his island? What now?

Brad Staggs (:

who dares let women be pastors. Am I right? What kind of crazy, what kind of crazy is that? This is the problem. We have women pastors. They end up managing private islands somewhere. I don't know. The one thing I do know is that the Epstein files have not exactly pointed for the Democrats the way they wanted them to point. It's been a big, big, big disappointment to the

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah.

Brad Staggs (:

don't know it's been a big disappointment to Jasmine Crockett or not. That's been a fuster plug.

Keith Malinak (:

Well, I that'll happen when you redact half of them before you release them.

Brad Staggs (:

That's the point. who just got subpoenaed? Bondi, right? Yeah. She just got.

Keith Malinak (:

But she better hope that the Dow is above $50,000 before she has to testify again.

Brad Staggs (:

Hold on a second. Let put it out over here. Right there, James Comer has subpoenaed the Attorney General over the Epstein files. It's, it is crazy. I don't know what's happening. I have no idea. There's nothing to, there's nothing left. I think we've squoze every last drop out of the Epstein files that there is.

Keith Malinak (:

like you're alligators.

Brad Staggs (:

it's possible that there were some errant alligators running around and doing that because it's horrible. Horrible when that happens. But there's nothing, if there was anything else in the Epstein files, would we not have by now seen it?

Keith Malinak (:

sure. Going forward with the charges. there's some people being held to account over there. Not for the pedophilia though.

Keith Malinak (:

they're given inside information, classified information to Epstein so we can go and make some K, Sean.

Brad Staggs (:

So they were done dirt cheap is what you're saying.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah. And then, I mean, if you get back to black, that's when you can... That's best I could do on the fly with ACDC lyrics.

Brad Staggs (:

back at you

Brad Staggs (:

I guess you have to move on. No, but with the abscissa, there's nothing there. There's nothing. If there was anything, if there's any juice left in that grape, see what I did. I Tied it all together. If there was any juice left in that grape, it would be squozed by now. But there's nothing there. There's nothing to put forward. There's no big, there's no secret gotcha file that's sitting on her back credenza.

That is not a euphemism. I'm sure the Pan body has a credenza right behind your desk and there's nothing there.

Keith Malinak (:

The allegations first surfaced in 1996. If something had been done then, how many young women and girls lives could have been saved? And honestly, mean, for three decades, American foreign policy and so many other countries, feel has been completely, they've gone through the Epstein filter, unfortunately. And I think that is the answer to a lot of votes and a lot of policies in the last 30 years.

Brad Staggs (:

don't care.

Brad Staggs (:

I wonder if that has, if it had any effect. Remember back in the, in the nineties when Putin went after the fall of the Soviet Union, Putin goes to Clinton. Let you join NATO. Clinton's like, I gotta go ask the rest of the club members. I can't just, I can't just help you do that for you. And he goes and comes back. Yeah. I said no.

Keith Malinak (:

Let me draw a

Keith Malinak (:

They said no. Yep, that's right.

Brad Staggs (:

I'm sorry about that. I wonder if that had any connection to the Epstein files. That would be a biggie. That would be huge.

Keith Malinak (:

So before you say there's nothing in the files, it's more like nothing has been pursued. How about that?

Brad Staggs (:

Uhhh... yes.

Keith Malinak (:

You could if you wanted to.

Brad Staggs (:

If yes, if they wanted to, would have by now, but they don't want to, so they won't.

Keith Malinak (:

Well sir, I'm gonna bid adieu to you and I hope to see you on Friday for the Friday live stream. Rebecca will be here by all counts. Kelly will not be because remember her son's doing the she he's trying out for for the the Hunger Games.

Brad Staggs (:

That's right.

Yes, he's going to be he's going to go be in the Hunger Games. I shall bid you adieu as well.

Keith Malinak (:

So.

Love you, bye. I already miss you. Okay, see ya.

Brad Staggs (:

Love you more.

I might be back.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, I'll pull you down here and I'll keep an on your screen there. I'm gonna get to my guest now. I'm gonna pull Brad down off of here. Let me make sure that I have, yeah, okay. Just making sure that I'm pulled off of his show. Very good. Let me get back to this screen and get nurse Kimberly Overton. Hello, how are you?

Kimberly Overton (:

I am doing well. Thank you so much for having me, Kate.

Keith Malinak (:

Absolutely. sorry. Tinkled up in earbuds and all sorts of stuff here. So just bear with me here. This is the first time I've gone to a guest and still been connected to Brad's show. So okay, there we go. Much better. Okay, so let me let me kind of establish who you are, what you do. And thanks for making time. And if I get something wrong, jump in here, interrupt me, please. The way I learned about you is through our mutual friend, Rebecca.

Kimberly Overton (:

I sure will.

Keith Malinak (:

who is here every Friday. Well, every Friday that the new baby lets her be on here, I should say. So, which isn't every Friday, but she does what she can. And she was telling me about some incredible stuff that you're doing. And I definitely wanna spend some time talking about that. But first let's establish, your background and what led you to where you are today. And...

And let me, you know, I made a fancy graphic for you. Let me, Kimberly, I want to get this up here and you tell me if I have anything wrong here. Let's see. No, that's not it. I made a graphic. Where is it? There it is. Hang on. Let's see. Boom. Nursefreedom.org. And your sub stack is sub stack.com slash at Nurse Freedom Network. Did get that?

Kimberly Overton (:

No, but it's okay. It's closed. it's nursefreedomnetwork.substack.com. Okay. And the nurse freedom network site is good, but I would definitely, I would put up the remnant healthcare. That's kind of what we do more of now and where we do more of our advocacy workout.

Keith Malinak (:

OK, hang on. Now we're going to get this right. We're not going to just half-ass this here. nursefreedomnetwork.substack.com, right? OK. And what's the website again?

Kimberly Overton (:

That's correct.

remnanthealthcare.org.

Keith Malinak (:

see. I'm a bad producer. Let's see. RemnantHealthcare.org.

Kimberly Overton (:

If I didn't have so many things going on, right?

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, right. So here we go. Does that that? Remnant healthcare org. Yep nurse Rita. Okay now I'm gonna just I'm gonna clean that up a little bit here because I want to put a little space between the two because my OCD won't allow that to just be out there like so there we go. There we go. All right, so so Kimberly Overton I was introduced to you through Rebecca you correct me if I'm wrong. You are a nurse in Nashville, Tennessee I got that right then these and screw that up

Kimberly Overton (:

world prank.

Brad Staggs (:

Thank

Kimberly Overton (:

That's correct, yes.

Keith Malinak (:

Apparently you're in a band of some sort as well. That looks like fun back there.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, yeah, not, so much anymore, but I can play the saxophone mediocre, but there I try my hands at all of them.

Keith Malinak (:

Do you play all of those instruments back?

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, all right. Well, very cool. Well, look, at some point, if my questions get kind of absurd or whatever, just start playing on the saxophone or something for us there. But I wanted to talk to you. I want you to take us through 2020, because a lot of people, it's shameful that that era, as horrific as it was in the United States and worldwide, but particularly the United States for various reasons.

Most people, it just seems like they just want to move on. We don't even have to talk about it. There's been nobody held accountable. Nobody that made these horrific decisions and these policy decisions. Nobody. this is a life or death situation in so many respects. And I want to hear from your perspective as a nurse working at a hospital during that time. And please just walk us through what your life was like.

before COVID became a thing, and then once it did become a thing. This is something we need to revisit.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah. So before COVID, I've been saying this a lot lately. I was living my best life, right? I was working as a nurse. I was just kind of loving every bit of it. I've been in health care for, this is my 30th year in health care. I hate to say that because it's of a big deal a bit, but this is my 30th year in health care. I had worked, my lifelong dream was to become a registered nurse. I went back to school later in life.

a nurse every single day. And:

for nearly 30 years at that time. And I started to see things that were happening that really didn't make any sense to me. Policies that we have long adhered to in healthcare started to kind of go out the window. Like we weren't paying attention to these things anymore. One of the biggest ones that I noticed was infection control, right? So prior to COVID, we would not be able to wear the same N95 mask for

days on end, literally days on end, they would give them to us to wear for three shifts. We would wear them the entire 12 hour shift. We would wear them in the rooms with our COVID patients. We would wear them into the rooms with our non-COVID patients. That's not something that would ever happen prior to COVID. I mean, we're essentially spreading it all over the place. Right. People for some reason thought that, if they it's a COVID unit and it's only COVID, that isn't true.

I worked in a 20 bed ICU at the time and it was not only COVID patients by the time, by the time we got done going into their rooms, was unfortunately. but, but it was, it was things like that. That just didn't make any sense to me. I started asking a lot of questions. another thing that really had me asking questions was everybody is coming in with COVID.

Kimberly Overton (:

And they're not getting better despite all of our best efforts. They're just, they're not getting any better. And we're using this medication remdesivir medication remdesivir. If you understand that it's an antiviral medication, when you use an antiviral medication, you have a certain amount of time that you, a timeframe that you need to get that because viral replication occurs usually between days seven and nine. After that,

it's you're not replicating that antiviral medication is not going to work anymore, right? It's not going to be effective at treating COVID or any other virus. So by the time that these patients were getting to us in the ICU, they were well past the replication phase, clearly into their symptomatic phase. And I started asking the question of why are we continuing to use this medication? Because it was clearly doing more harm than good. What we saw happening was we saw this medication shutting down people's organs. Yeah.

Keith Malinak (:

It just yeah, that was supposed to be a solution. It was creating a whole new set of problems. And yeah, go ahead.

Kimberly Overton (:

It supposed to be this one.

Kimberly Overton (:

If you look back and you think about that time during 2020 at the height of the pandemic, where was everybody dying? Nobody was dying at home. Nobody was dying. If you think about our homeless population that didn't have access to any kind of treatment, nobody, we weren't pulling bodies off of the streets. No, only place anyone was dying was in the hospitals. And that was my biggest

Keith Malinak (:

That is so important.

Kimberly Overton (:

The biggest thing that I would just scream to everybody who would listen is it's not COVID that is killing millions of people. It is the treatment. It is the protocols.

Keith Malinak (:

And same in Africa. Like if you look at the numbers around the globe, they weren't going through state of the art health care and procedures. And yet their death rate was much lower there. And you mentioned the N95 mask. You know what I should have had ready for this show today is it is it's it's not even laughable. It is absolutely depressing.

to think of how the healthcare authorities in the land, they would constantly say, well, like you gotta wear a mask, like you just said, the same mask for how many hours from patient to patient. But there's videos that circulated of the, the N95 mask, but the stupid blue ones there. And they're being manufactured literally, I'm not exaggerating.

literally on the floor of a sweatshop in a third world country over in India or somewhere like that. And their bare feet are all over these masks. And these were supposedly our savior during this pandemic. Just insult me more and don't even get me started, which we will get down the road of the vaccine here.

Brad Staggs (:

the apple.

Kimberly Overton (:

That says right on the box, Keith. It says right on the box that it does not prevent transmission of virus. all you have to do is Google the size of the virus and then look at the material of the mask. All you're doing is putting a petri dish on your face and you are breathing in all of these microbes and all this bacteria. And then we wonder why people were so sick during that time.

Keith Malinak (:

So in my job over at the Blaze, Pat Gray Unleashed show, I specifically remember holding up the box, showing the warning on camera. I also specifically remember showing the droplets of COVID and the mask and how you just said it fits right through. Boom. It might stop other stuff, but it wasn't stopping COVID. But from our vantage point, we were just, you

Kimberly Overton (:

No, not at all.

Keith Malinak (:

raving lunatics, broadcasting, saying, look at this, look at this, from your position as a healthcare professional, as frustrating as it was for us, I can't imagine you pointing this stuff out to those above you. What was their reaction when you would point out this kind of common sense?

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, you know, what was really infuriating to me was that how many things were happening, like the dumbest things, like they would say that ibuprofen was contraindicated for COVID patients. That was like the go-to that we would always use. What they stopped doing was they stopped mitigating damage, right? They weren't using steroids. If they were using steroids, they were using them in such a small dose that it wasn't effective.

So they stopped mitigating damage. just, they, and if you remember when patients would come into the ER and they would, they would tell them to go home. They're like, well, there's, know, if you have COVID, you're fine, go home, come back when you can't breathe.

Keith Malinak (:

And you can't breathe. I was going to that out from your Substack article. That is, I mean, is, come home when you're, or come back when you're a cash cow.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yes, exactly. Come back when you are a prime candidate for the ventilator. Because a lot of times they wouldn't, I don't care how sick you were, if you didn't hit that number on the oxygen saturation level of, think it was 88 or below, they would go home, go home, go home. I don't care how sick you were. When you were a candidate for the ventilator, come on. And it's like,

when they would test positive for COVID and they kind of fit all of those criteria, it was as if they had a bounty on their head, because depending on the state that you lived in from test to toe tag, was about close to half a million dollars per COVID admission. When they put them on the ventilator, they got financially incentivized. If they kept that patient on the ventilator for 96 hours or more, that number went up.

Keith Malinak (:

So hold on, you have COVID, you go to the hospital, you now are worth, you represent income for that hospital, correct? Yes, that's Okay, and you're saying for each escalated level, that patient is now worth more and more, correct?

Kimberly Overton (:

That's correct. But in order for them to get this money that they had established these funds, in order for them to get that money, they had to follow the protocol, the protocol right to the T. So you had to use the remdesivir. You could not use things like vitamins and steroids. You had to go on the ventilator. All of these things, you had to follow it to the letter or you were not going to get that money.

o back to the Ebola trials in:

But so my bigger question was, why are we using this? Again, it's already too late. They're already past their viral replication phase. They're well into their symptomatic phase. So it's already not going to be effective. We know that it is causing a decrease in renal function, an increase in mortality.

And we, Lord help me. get so mad. I get triggered. I get triggered. My PTSD comes back. I just get so angry.

Keith Malinak (:

You live this nightmare every day and I do want to talk about some of the experiences you had along the way because they're heartbreak. Some of the experiences you had with patients and you would still show up to work every day. But let me ask you this here because I want to point out, Kara, approved, encouraged and legitimized population control. I mean, I think that says it well. What I wanted to do.

I'm to go back to where you first said, I want to become a nurse or I want to first get into health care. How old were you when you said, this is the path that I want to pursue?

Kimberly Overton (:

When I first decided I wanted to be a nurse, was two. I was two years old. That's all I ever wanted to do. I got into it, I was 19. I got into healthcare at 19 years old.

Keith Malinak (:

So, all right, so there you go. for quite a while, this was your passion, taking care of people, helping people, the healthcare industry leading to where you're a nurse at a hospital in Nashville, Tennessee.

What happened during that era of COVID?

What were you going through mentally thinking? And I want you to just to tell us what because you have spent decades helping people and now all of a sudden you're helping them to lead. You're helping lead them to this conclusion of death. And I'm not accusing you of that, obviously. I'm just saying you're a part of this system that is doing this to them. What kind of internal battle were you going through?

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah.

It was horrifying. And that's why I ended up leaving my job at the bedside because I could not do it anymore. My heart couldn't take it. I was so burdened by the fact that we were watching these people die. Not only were we watching them die, but we were part of their fate. mean, the most egregious thing that I saw happening, in there was the early intubation debacle. They started intubating patients that were not in distress.

They started doing that. If you understand with a ventilator, it's a closed loop system. Once you place the patient on the ventilator, the virus is no longer disseminated into the air, right? So they said that their reasoning was to stop transmission and protect the healthcare workers. The virus we'd already been exposed to, by the

Keith Malinak (:

Bye!

Kimberly Overton (:

But they did this knowing that there was an 80 % chance that the patient we put on that ventilator was never going to come off of it. And they did it anyway. They did it when they were not in distress. And that to me was the most horrifying part of it. And that's when I knew I couldn't stay silent. I knew I had to start speaking up and speaking out about what was happening. And I just couldn't take it anymore. I ended up leaving the bedside and going and doing telephone triage nursing from home.

I that would be a little bit of a better option. It turned out I ended up having to leave that as well because yeah, not so much.

Keith Malinak (:

So, I have so many questions and I'm just kind of scattered here because like you said, I'm triggered. You know, I'm so angry. It's like we went through that era and I just recall being so frustrated with everything, everything. And yet I wasn't dealing with this death and destruction on a daily basis like you. I can't imagine the internal struggle, like you said.

What were your fellow nurses? What were they? Were you guys talking in the break room, in the hallways? Was it just be a good little soldier? What was the conversation like behind the scenes?

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, unfortunately, I think there were a lot of nurses that had questions that were not and they would say them quietly. We would they would say, well, we agree with you. But, know, I've got a I've got a job. I've got a family. I've got a mortgage. You know, I have all those things, too. But I can never imagine putting a paycheck above a human life. But if you remember during covid, they were throwing down all kinds of incentives for nurses, travel nurses specifically.

I was an ICU nurse. can remember getting offers to go to Texas, to go to New York City where all of these COVID hotspots and these were paying like $10,000 a week. That's a lot of money for a nurse, right? Oh, wow. I call that hush money because that's how they're keeping the nurses quiet. They're not going to turn. Well, I mean, I did, but you know, and a few people did, but a lot of them aren't going to turn down $10,000 a week for an ICU assignment.

And I think that that's how they were able to keep so many people quiet.

Keith Malinak (:

Where were these pots of cash originating? The taxpayers or Big Pharma or?

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, who knows? Probably all of the above, probably the same plug, streaming in from the half a million per admission that they're getting on these.

Keith Malinak (:

Right. Tell us about when you were on the night shift and the 51 year old woman who coded repeatedly. What happened there?

Kimberly Overton (:

I will never forget this woman. I still, I literally, still see this woman's face. I will get emotional when I, I'm sorry. I still see this woman's eyes in my face all of these years later. She was 51 years old. She was a reasonably healthy woman. I think she maybe had, I mean, she was a little bit overweight, but other than that, she didn't have any other, you know, illnesses or anything like that, but she was really struggling with COVID. And they kept on pushing.

They kept on pushing for us to talk to the family because she kept coding. And they said, you know, have to make her a DNR, make her a DNR. family didn't want to. They wanted her to be a full code. And I can remember the last time the alarms were going off in that room. And I went in there and this woman, she was on the ventilator, but she was awake. She was alert. And I'll never forget it. Like her eyes locked on onto mine. I saw one single tear just streaming down her face like she knew what was happening.

And it didn't matter like everything that we tried, every medication we pushed, every compression that we did. We could not get this woman back, unfortunately. But it was this happening over and over again that these people who are otherwise healthy, and I will tell you, I would say the majority of our sickest patients were otherwise healthy middle-aged males. And to me, it felt very targeted.

Keith Malinak (:

So hang on a second.

Middle-aged males.

Kimberly Overton (:

They did the worst, absolute worst.

Keith Malinak (:

When you say targeted, do you mean the virus was almost DNA specific for them?

Keith Malinak (:

In your anecdotal experience, you just saw more middle-aged dudes in there than any other demographic.

Kimberly Overton (:

I did. And to me, felt intentional. said, well, what are they doing? What are they trying to accomplish here? And to me, it seemed like they were trying to target and take out the protectors.

Keith Malinak (:

That's very interesting. just point of clarification, are you saying that's who would get admitted into these, as you described them, hospital holocaust? Or do you think it's something in the virus?

Kimberly Overton (:

I thought it was something in the virus and how they accomplished that I don't know. I'm not a scientist in that realm so I don't know but I mean it's it makes it's enough. It's very interesting to me and I just the patterns I recognize patterns.

Keith Malinak (:

Well, my goodness. OK, let me see where we're going to go next here. I want to talk about the vaccines, but I don't want to get there yet because we still have a lot to talk about with the with the hospital situation itself. You know, that whole era, it's like all of the and you alluded to it earlier with the ibuprofen anything

like medicine started over in:

Kimberly Overton (:

It did.

Keith Malinak (:

Common sense, I guess, is the word I'm looking for here. Intellectual honesty. It should be pretty obvious, I think, that, and the phrase, follow the money, is applicable in all things. In all things. And it applied here. And the fact that nobody has been held accountable. Nobody.

Kimberly Overton (:

Nobody's been held to account for what's happened. Everybody's ready to move on, but we're still sitting here. Many of us, those of us who lived through this and who watched this, it's too much. We want to see people held to account, Anthony Fauci, all of them. We want to see them held to account. it's, back to your question about, know, I would ask the doctors and I would say, why are we doing this? This doesn't make any sense. And the only answer you would ever get

from the doctors is well, it's protocol and my hands are tied. That's it.

Keith Malinak (:

Absolutely.

Kimberly Overton (:

That's maddening to me.

Keith Malinak (:

Yes. all right. The hospital situation was horrific. let me just time out for a moment here. Countless, and I mean countless people in the last five, six years have been in my DMs telling me about their own personal nightmare or a family member, a loved one.

who died in the hospital from the maltreatment that they got during COVID, or it's a vaccine horror story. And again, if we weren't going to, and this is a point I've made before, if we weren't gonna end up in the streets protesting vaccine mandates or the way that that whole COVID era was handled, there's nothing that will get Americans in the streets, I'm convinced. It'll never happen.

because that was some of the most egregious stuff to do to a population. And yet there was hardly any pushback. exactly.

Kimberly Overton (:

What else matters if you're not standing for bodily autonomy? Literally what else matters after that? That's why I would get so mad at the nurses that wanted to go, you know, march on DC for their, their salary being capped or all, all of these things, but they're not marching for bodily autonomy or informed consent or anything like that. I just don't understand what else matters.

Keith Malinak (:

Tell us about the pregnant nurse that

Kimberly Overton (:

gosh, yeah. I had a nurse that I worked with. She had a young child at home and she was pregnant again with her second. And they were pushing. I worked night shift. They would come around, the nurses would come around, their little box full of vaccines. And they would always, you know, kind of lining us up to get our vaccine. And I would always just decline. I was like, I'm not interested. This particular nurse, she was not interested either. It was interesting because

At first I wasn't even, I wasn't even feeling that there was anything nefarious going on. It was just, to me, it was really quick. was, there wasn't a lot of, it was a newer technology. There wasn't a lot of science behind it. And I just didn't feel comfortable and I wanted to wait. necessarily thinking that it was anything like population control or anything like that. That hadn't even entered my mind yet. But this, this young, young nurse, was in her early twenties and she did not want this vaccine at all, but

They pretty much pressured her in making it like it's your job. You get this vaccine or you're not going to have a job. Again, she has two young children at home, a young family that she needs to support. So I sat there and I watched her be forced to get the shoes, like literally crying as they are injecting her. I they may as well have held her down. She was just she was beside herself. And I just all I could do was just pray for her in that moment and pray for that baby in that moment that they would be OK.

to my knowledge they're doing okay. So, you know, I haven't heard anything otherwise. But I can just, I just remember watching her and that feeling of helplessness that she must have had, you know, thinking I have to support my family. I'd like to think my son was grown by this point. I'd like to think I would have made all of the same choices, but I don't know.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, and that kind of scene was replicated in so many different lines of work and so many and I've made the point that the leadership at the blaze, thank God, were totally against any kind of vaccine mandate or any kind of forcing us to get that. And I would have absolutely walked if I was in that position. you know, a lot of people couldn't do that. I mean, they've got bills to pay. And I understand that. So my question then

How were you able to bypass that? With just seniority or what?

Kimberly Overton (:

No, so I ended up leaving my job. So before they had really started, at first, the vaccine mandates kind of started hitting your nonprofit facilities first. I worked for, I don't care, I'll say who I worked for. I worked for HCA, which is one of the largest hospital corporations in the country. They were one of the last ones to start really implementing the mandate. They were like kind of strongly encouraging for a long time,

I ended up leaving before they were actually mandating them. By the time that they started mandating them, I was working from home at that point. I started doing telephone triage nursing. that was a good alternative for a while, but then they wanted me, I started becoming uncomfortable again with protocols. They wanted me to start recommending the vaccine for children. And not only that, but they wanted me to tout them as safe and effective period when.

We had no doubt, there was no way that we could even say that, but we literally had a scripted answer. If somebody were to call and say, is the vaccine safe? Is it effective? And we were supposed to say, yes, the vaccine is safe and effective period. And I refused. I started talking about things like natural immunity and all of all of the things, you know, I, and I knew eventually that they were going to, they were going to come after me because all of my calls are recorded. it just, got to be too much because as I was taking these triage phone calls,

at was, I believe December of:

that are 18, 20, 30 years old having heart attacks, having strokes, GI bleeds, and populations you wouldn't expect to see them, and all of these crazy things. And to the point where I started keeping my own data, I would sit here at my desk and I would keep my own data about the types of symptoms I was seeing. And I said, I can't do this anymore. I absolutely am never going to recommend this vaccine. And I just got to be too much for me. And I ended up

Kimberly Overton (:

quitting that job because I just couldn't be a part of any of it anymore. And it was not an easy decision to make. I'm just a nurse. I don't have disposable income by any means. But it was one of those, and I should back up a little bit because in between,

the ICU and when I started working from home, I did start the organization Nurse Freedom Network, which is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. And we were advocating for medical freedom and informed consent. So we started, I really, I just started with a sign on a bullhorn outside of local hospitals, just like me, a sign and a bullhorn. would go, I would try to get some local nurses to come. would come, we'd have some small crowds. But we started

building these advocacy teams around the country really quickly grew. Next thing you know, I was speaking out at events across the country. I was speaking at Defeat the Mandates in DC and LA and all of these things. So I had already started that organization. And I decided when I quit my job, I was like, you know what? I just felt like I'm taking this giant leap of faith and I need to really go all in with what I'm doing with this advocacy and making people understand.

Um, that there's a better way. I think one of the things that I found most depressing about being an ICU nurse, and this is even pre COVID was how 85 to 90 % of everything that walked through those doors is completely preventable lifestyle modifications. But the sick care system, as I call it, um, does nothing to keep anybody well. It just, doesn't, it manages symptoms and that's it. It doesn't do anything to get to the root cause. None of that.

So I started to understand, know, beyond the advocacy, I wanted to create something where we were doing better for our patients and better for ourselves, that we could have the opportunity to get out of this broken and just corrupt system. So I started, I had a vision for that and I started a private membership association, Remnant Healthcare. That is, we're just over three years old now, but it's-

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, it started just as a vision where a private membership association, we grew very, very organically. And we provide functional medicine, consultations, homeopathy, more holistic modalities that are actually getting to the root cause and getting people well. Because I was tired of being part of the system that again, just managed symptoms and did not truly take care of the whole person. These are patients that we're here to serve. This is not just

Keith Malinak (:

Look at that.

Kimberly Overton (:

They're not just numbers and patients in beds that were just here to pump through a pharmaceuticals and see you next time. This is not what we want to do. we started that organization and it's been doing amazing things. also provide professional advocacy services. So if you are in a situation like so many were during COVID, you now have a professional advocate that will go to bat for you.

who knows how to navigate the system.

Keith Malinak (:

system. Yes. I mean, it is so complicated. I mean, it's complicated to just get a health insurance provider on the phone and then and then to get to a satisfactory result. my gosh, that's like rolling the dice. So it does sound like what you offer there. And that and all that that you're talking about is through remnanthealthcare.org.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yes, yes, through Remnant Healthcare. it's our, we are a private membership association. We did not take any, I never took any funding for the organization. I self-funded the startup with what little money I had left when I did my job with what little was left. I kind of started all of that. I invested a little bit into that. And then we, I wanted to be self-sustainable.

because I didn't want, I had some venture capitalists, no offense to any venture capitalists out there, but they were kind of swarming around and trying to make offers to me. And I never wanted to take their money because you don't know what their intentions are. They wanted to change the messaging. want every, again, just, didn't want a carbon copy of the already broken system. I wanted to make something completely different.

So I thought that the only way to do that was to grow organically and to just keep it, you know, keep 100 % control of it. So we are at $30 a month to become a member. Yeah. So it's very affordable.

Keith Malinak (:

That's awesome, $30 a month. And I love how you said there, know, what was it? 85, 90 % of the stuff that brings people through the doors of a medical facility could be preventable.

Kimberly Overton (:

Exactly. Or if we just stop, stop, I mean, they put every patient on a statin, right? We know that this is causing all kinds of problems, whether that be early onset dementia or, all of the things that we are, our brains need cholesterol people made up of cholesterol. So that is a big, a big one for me is they have every patient on a statin. They have every patient.

on a blood pressure medication or whatever the pharmaceutical product may be that's causing all of these other problems, but don't worry, they've got a pill for that one too.

Keith Malinak (:

my goodness, I tell you can I just say I'm not a doctor. I'm not a nurse. This is not medical advice, but I want to thank gosh, Shoot was it Sean was it you? one of the individuals who watch this show Suggested and and and I just I want to go on the record of saying this has worked for me I was taking for blood pressure. I was taking

Lysartan and then Lysenopril or I might be getting the order mixed up there. And he mentioned to me that beetroot gummies.

Kimberly Overton (:

But you know what's really interesting? This is something that I used to say all the time to people, grapefruit. Grapefruit. will tell you, they'll tell you as a nurse, they will tell you, make sure that your patient doesn't eat grapefruit if they're on this blood pressure medication because it could bottom out. Because the grapefruit lowers blood pressure. And I said, well, why don't we just have the meat, the grapefruit? Seems simple enough.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, but I just I wanted to go on the record of saying that for about eight months now, I have not taken any blood pressure. And I just take the beetroot gummies. And I was actually at the doctor this morning. And everywhere I go, this is interesting. And I think this is fascinating. I think this says a lot for the last eight months. And again, it could be luck of the draw the different provider, different nurses that come in and check your blood pressure. But it seems like

Because they always ask me on any medications anything changed what have you and and and sometimes when I've mentioned the beetroot gummies, especially eight months ago, it was like Huh? Okay, and tonight today just today and the last couple times that I've mentioned that They go, you know what? That's not a bad idea or something like they they're very receptive Even if they don't know like today the chick today was like all about it. the last couple times they were receptive to it

And then when they check your blood pressure and they see that after hearing that you had high blood pressure and eight months ago, you switched to this, they go, holy crap. Anyway, I'm just telling you it works for me. And I love that grapefruit information there as well.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, grapefruit is great. But I just I always tell people, know, there's there's always a better way. We really like to focus on de-prescribing and getting people off of these pharmaceutical. They all have side effects. They are they're awful. I mean, they're just awful. I don't take a single thing. OK, pharmaceutical, nothing.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, so I wanted to ask you, this is going to be selfish question number two here. I take one drug. And so my dad died of esophageal cancer. thank you. And I take eprimenozole, something like that. don't know.

Kimberly Overton (:

horrible drug. need to work to get you off of that horrible drug.

Keith Malinak (:

Hey, there's no one to ask you. Right? Because that's the only drug that I take. But when I try to wean myself off of it, I've tried licorice, I tried whatever, I would love any kind of feedback, an all natural suggestion, but whenever I stop taking that, I feel that bile and it's just bad.

Kimberly Overton (:

What we have to do instead masking the symptoms, because all you're doing is masking your symptoms. You're not getting to the root cause of what is causing your reflux. So what you need to do is we need to dig in. need a good functional medicine consultation, figure out why you're having this, find that root cause and eradicate it versus giving you this medication that again is going to have so many side effects. That drug is horrible. Do some research on that and I think you will find that you don't want to.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm going to get Alzheimer's, aren't I?

Kimberly Overton (:

I will tell you that years ago, before I was really awakened to all of this, I was on Omeprazole for years, for years. And I've taken myself off of everything. I would not stay on that medication.

Keith Malinak (:

So this is the kind of information I'll get for $30 a month, bet, at remnanthealthcare.org, right? I've had, at some point I will detail for the audience some really bad memory issues that I've had lately. And I can't help but think in the back of my mind, I bet it's a damn epimethasone.

Kimberly Overton (:

It could be it could very well be I mean there is a lot of studies that are linking that to Alzheimer's and dementia so yeah, I would I would definitely take a good look at that and Like I I won't give anybody recommendations without doing a full, you know history and digging in and doing all of that, but I will say it's always a good bet the last pharmaceutical products You can be honest your best bet. Yeah, and there's typically

for whatever synthetic product there is, there's something, there's a natural alternative. Yeah.

Keith Malinak (:

interesting. All right. Well, I'll definitely

Kimberly Overton (:

God gave us everything that we need.

Keith Malinak (:

Right, right. OK, so I'll definitely I'll definitely look into that and see if there's a better solution. OK, so let's talk about. The the damage done to the health care industry. But that's the thing, nobody's being held accountable, but yet none of us trust doctors anymore.

Kimberly Overton (:

Right, which is a good thing, I feel like, because for too long, people have just implicitly trusted the medical system. So to me, it's a good thing. And I have tried to kind of calm down with my rhetoric a little bit. When I first came out, I was just blazing. I was like, burn it to the ground. I've tried to soften my rhetoric a little. But it's true. really feel like there's so many people that were that

that need to be into that system, unfortunately. They don't have a way out, whether that's financial or whatever it is. But if we continue to build alternatives, that parallel system alongside of it, the problem is not that the standard of care is not being met at these facilities. The problem is that the standard of care in this country is so disgustingly low and there's no alternative. There's nowhere else to go. So if we continue to build these alternative models of care,

they are going to have no choice, right, but to be held to account and they're going to have to raise their standards in order to compete.

where there's nowhere for anybody to go. So we're working on changing that. that's why my functional medicine is not historically affordable. I made sure that we kept our prices at Remnant Health Care for our functional medicine consultations. They're extremely affordable if you compare them to others, because I want this to be accessible. I want everybody to have the opportunity to have health and wellness. It's not just something that should be for those with financial needs.

Keith Malinak (:

Good.

Kimberly Overton (:

We all have a right to be healthy.

Keith Malinak (:

So have you, whether it was the COVID protocols and the masks and the insanity, or it was the mandates for the vaccine and the fallout from that, anybody that was kind of adversarial to you, whether it was a fellow nurse or a doctor that you worked with or a hospital administrator, anybody from six years ago, five, six years ago, come back to you.

in recent years and said, my gosh, I'm so sorry that I doubted you. You are absolutely right on everything. Has anyone done that?

Kimberly Overton (:

I had, I think I can count two. I had two that came by and came back and said, I'm sorry, you were right. and I, and I get it. It takes a lot to come back. So I commend them and I give them a lot of credit for being able to, to admit that they were wrong. Cause that's hard for people. most people just don't say anything at all. You know, I can tell you that I, I had so many of my friends were nurses and you know, I've been in this field for a long time and it's just like all of a sudden.

people stopped talking to me, my nurse friends, they didn't come out and say anything against me, but I just stopped hearing from them all of sudden.

Keith Malinak (:

And no offense, but they probably you're probably a reminder just just seeing you a reminder of how blind they were to their own best interest. And I can't like, OK, for example, all right, I'm stressing over here about a pill that I take to keep, you know, heartburn down. Right. I can't I cannot imagine. I know there are people watching this listening right now that got the vaccine, whether they wanted to or not.

that if I had taken that shot, I swear every little thing that happens to me, I would somehow feel is connected to that. I couldn't live with that kind of stress, that mental burden. Are you seeing a lot of that? A lot of people come to you through remnanthealthcare.org talking about issues that they're having that they think are traced back to that.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, we do. have, I mean, a lot of people ended up getting these subsequent medical diagnoses, whether that be like a cancer or a turbo cancer, or they just kept getting infections that they would never, know, bacterial infections repeatedly, things like that, because we're destroying immune systems is what's happening. So we've seen a lot of that. We've actually had a lot and a lot of long COVID, but long COVID, not in all cases, but in most cases is vaccine injury.

And I want to point this out because it's important. When we started seeing a lot of patients filling up our ICU that they would say, it's a pandemic of the unvaccinated. Well, if you remember when they first came out with the vaccine, you had to be 14 days post your second shot before you were considered vaccinated.

Some of, there's no category for partially vaccinated or anything like that. So these people that were filling up the hospitals, they had had a dose of a vaccine or even two doses of a vaccine and then were hospitalized. So they would call that an, they would classify that as unvaccinated COVID, which is not the case. I think it's really important to remind people of that, that there was that.

Keith Malinak (:

They changed the definitions of everything.

Kimberly Overton (:

of everything. They kept moving the goalposts. Oh, it's supposed to be effective for however many days. Oh, it's not really effective at all. So, kind of vaccine, have you ever remembered that needed 14 boosters? I think we're up to 14 boosters.

Keith Malinak (:

I don't even look at that, you know? And Denise, I'm very sorry of your situation. It says in the comments, she lives that stress, facing a problem with her husband.

Kimberly Overton (:

Please reach out to me. Reach out to me. can help you. We can help you. have an incredible, we're having a lot of success. I was just going to start talking about this, but you can send me an email. It's kimberly at nursefreedomnetwork.org and I'm happy to connect with you and help you. We have a homeopathic detox protocol that we are using.

And we're seeing great success with an almost 85 to 90 % symptom reduction in many cases. And what's interesting about it is it's we're doing that in collaboration, it's a case study in collaboration with it's called get detoxed.us. And we have an incredible package. There's actually a lab test that you can take now that shows the spike protein circulating in the blood, on the red blood cells. After eight weeks on this protocol, when they did the repeat test,

they found no evidence. It was completely eradicated. So, and the symptom reduction. So we're seeing incredible results. And I'll send you the link to that as well, Keith, if you'd like.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, okay. And I'll post that. Kimberly at nursefreedomnetwork.org if people want to contact you. Okay. I tell you, the first do no harm. I mean, that was thrown out the window, right? I mean, that was completely ignored. I do want to point out as I was talking about, has anybody come back to you and said, my gosh, Kimberly, you were totally right. I just happened to see this earlier this week.

Kimberly Overton (:

dot org.

Keith Malinak (:

and it's an op-ed in the New Zealand Herald. Here's the headline. Don't get too excited, y'all. Do we owe our COVID conspiracy friends an apology? Now, when you read into this, it's not somebody saying, my gosh, they were totally right. I mean, there is a little bit of that in there, but it talks about how

the government cabinet was just overwhelmed with so much information that that's probably what it was. They were just sloppy because they just had too much information on the minister's desk before they made these big decisions for the nation and so on and so forth. It's not a full-throated, you guys nailed it. That's on us. It's more of a, all right, I guess you were kind of right.

but I don't blame the government. I don't blame the authorities. It's a half ass attempt at-

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, I, you know, I could give a little bit of grace in the beginning, you know, especially with the shots in the beginning. Listen, you know, we had a lot going on, a lot of information coming at us at our leaders or whatever. And I'm a big Trump supporter. But at the same time, please stop, please stop with the vaccines, pull the vaccines like, or just admit that you were wrong. One at one of the other, you know, just that's the only thing that just Matt, it's just maddening to me. That is the one thing. And I just

I believe in calling people out on when you're wrong, you're wrong. It was an utter failure and I want him to own that.

Keith Malinak (:

Absolutely. Operation warp speed was.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, exactly and it'll never happen and and and what really sucks or it was a sign what is so wild is when you look at and and I never I Never retweeted anything like this because I didn't want to pile on but one of the things that That you would see Someone on Twitter would post something about their child suffering

Hell remember the girl who was part of the clinical trials that Ron Johnson has had up in DC on multiple occasions Maddie yes, okay Yes, okay, but but I saw multiple occasions and Where someone either was suffering from? Myocarditis or something along those lines or or they had a child that died Unexpectedly and it was a strange thing. They had a stroke or something like that

Kimberly Overton (:

Maddie.

Keith Malinak (:

You go back and you look for their tweets from when Trump was president and they should have stuck with their instincts. I'll never give my child this. I'll never take the Trump shot, the COVID vaccine, the Trump blah, blah. And then something flipped and it was so insane. I can't think of another way to describe it other than just absolute insanity. All of a sudden on January 20th, 2021, now they're...

Now they're rolling up their sleeves for this shit. can't understand that mindset. And you never wanted to go back and go, Hey, is this you? You know, but I saw it multiple times. And, for to see op eds like this, they still can't fully be like, sorry, you were right. We were wrong. And I, and I don't think that nurse Kimberly from nurse freedom network is, is saying that,

You don't want credit for this kind of like, you it's not a bragging thing. It's can we just have an honest conversation and be be deal with facts here because this shit's going to happen again with some other virus, some other government control and some other half baked vaccine. And people are going to fall for it again or be forced into it again because there's never been we don't need people admitting this shit.

What we need people to do is admit it and hold people accountable that made these decisions so this doesn't happen again because it's going to and we all know it.

Kimberly Overton (:

problem isn't even the tyrants. Like tyrannies existed forever. It's the people that are bowing down to the tyrants that are not standing up. You're the problem. The tyrants are always going to be there. They've always been there. But we, as a people, we have the power. And that's what really just frustrated me from the very beginning. When I started Nurse Freedom Network, I thought to myself, I'm building this platform and all of the nurses are going to come and we are going to stop this.

and I'm looking around and I don't see that many nurses coming. They're like little bits here and there. And I'm just, my mind is blown. And the problem is we had the power and the numbers early on as nurses to stop this. And we didn't, as a profession, we failed. We failed. We could have done so much more. But I think, you we've had the numbers to write the ship, but too many people lack the courage.

And that's why I continue to speak out. hope that I can inspire and encourage others to do the same. And I will continue doing that until my dying breath. I mean, this is definitely the hill I will be dying on. I can tell you that right now.

Keith Malinak (:

Good for you. Well, okay, so the nurses that had the numbers and could have said something and spoken out in mass, they were too busy making TikTok dance videos. That was what they were doing with their free time, which was still to this day is some of the most embarrassing cringe stuff ever.

Kimberly Overton (:

really is to the profession. I mean, just, and you've seen the nursing profession lately, if you're paying attention has really taken a hit when we have, you know, nurses claiming their authority as a nurse and wishing statical injury on, on Carolyn Levey. mean,

Keith Malinak (:

right.

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, I kind of let a little charge on that trying to get her license removed because I mean we don't need people like that in this profession.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, yeah, right. I know exactly what you're talking about. nurse that did that. Yeah, I say that I think that the COVID era

capitulation by so many people, think it, I think one generation, let's say you have the the baby boomer generation that is so used to just trusting authority. You can't homeschool your kids unless you have a teaching degree. You can't go against doctor's orders unless you have a medical license. And I think that that that kind of mindset locked many of them in.

But then I think you have younger generations that have been conditioned to trust the government for everything. so they were locked into that. Then you've got even younger generation that just trust celebrities and whatever the hell they say. So I think each generation had their own. And of course, all of those, whether it was Hollywood, whether it was the government, whether it was the medical professionals, all combined forces to just control.

The entire population, it's it's great.

Kimberly Overton (:

It really was, and it was really interesting to see. you know, a good example, when we look at the most absurd thing I saw out of all of the absurdities was the one-way arrows in the grocery store. You remember that?

Keith Malinak (:

yes! Yes!

Kimberly Overton (:

What is happening? I can remember looking at people, here I am just maskless. I'm not wearing a mask. I didn't mask in the community, none of that. And I'm like, I'm intentionally walking the wrong way. And I'm just looking at them. I'm like, what is this supposed to do? But the way that people were doing, I'm like, how do they not see it? It was as if, I think there's a study or something, I it's about 30%, maybe a little bit less of the population will never fall under that mass formation psychosis.

But it's interesting, the higher your education level, the more likely you are to fall into that mass formation psychosis. So that's why doctors and I feel like more nurses were seeing in a wake and aware to what was happening than doctors were. Because that level of indoctrination gets higher the more educated.

Keith Malinak (:

Interesting, yeah. And don't forget, I mean, the virus apparently spreads at the beach out in the ocean. fact, if you're in the Pacific Ocean, you're by by your cell. If you sit down in the restaurant though, so like if you're walking through, but if you sit down, apparently COVID stays up in the rafters or something. It's just remembering this stuff. It's just what they did to

Kimberly Overton (:

In your own car, by yourself.

Kimberly Overton (:

It has a little.

Keith Malinak (:

to childhoods and kids school. just, okay.

Kimberly Overton (:

Who in the fear you should see the anxiety that these younger generations have the I've I had a I'll never forget it. I had a patient when I was on the triage line that called and he was so scared because his boss had covid and he talked to him on the phone and he thought he was was like, I'm sorry, He was that afraid he was like, could it come through the phone line? And I was like.

Keith Malinak (:

Yes!

Keith Malinak (:

No, no!

Kimberly Overton (:

mad me. But they're so scared. Whenever I see a young person out there with like a mask on, it just really upsets me and it makes me so sad for the future.

Keith Malinak (:

We're surrounded.

Keith Malinak (:

Because if they're not terrified of a virus, they're terrified of the environment because of global warming or something.

Kimberly Overton (:

This is no way to live. You know, this is no way to live life. We're not meant to live in a spirit of fear like this. Absolutely.

Keith Malinak (:

I learned over the weekend that three sitting members of Congress have called for the pulling of the COVID-19 shots. That would be Thomas Massey, Ron Johnson, and Chip Roy. Do you think that we're ever going to see this poison taken away from even having the option to inject those into our veins?

Kimberly Overton (:

Right. I really don't know at this point. I honestly, can't believe I'm floored that they're still on the market. And I've been saying this for years now, because I've been screaming this for three, four, six. I mean, I want to say three years, but it's actually been more like five or six years now. I can't believe it's been that long. I'm just completely floored that they are still on the market and still available. I don't know. I would like to see them come off. But at this point, I just don't know.

My only goal is to educate and empower people to make better choices. And please take a look at the entire vaccine schedule because it's not just COVID vaccines. want to really listen, I came into this fight. We did not come into the fight anti-vax. I didn't, I was pro-vaccine my entire life, my entire nursing career. I administered vaccines, I encouraged vaccines and my child had received all of his.

Keith Malinak (:

Mm-hmm, right.

Kimberly Overton (:

But once your eyes are opened to the corruption and the things you start taking a closer look, I was horrified by what I found when I took a look at all of the vaccines and all of the injuries and the children. And that's something I really struggle with because when I think about all of the children I've vaccinated over the years, how many of those children did I injure because of my blind ignorance? Because the truth is, is that the only thing we learn as nurses about vaccines is safe, effective.

and necessary and that is it and and here's the vaccine schedule. That's all they teach us and doctors receive little more training than that. So really, really do your research and take a look. can tell you right now, like said, I didn't come into the fight anti-vax. I am sure as hell leaving that way. I will never take, administer or encourage another vaccine as long as I live.

Keith Malinak (:

I'm with you 100%. And in my opinion, doesn't hold nearly the weight that a medical professional's opinion does. But I will just say from my own experience, if you look at Keith from 20 years ago, I'll say vaccine ignorant, just like, yeah, got to get your vaccine, right? And on the eve of COVID-19, I'll say I was already vaccine cautious. But on the other side of

the COVID-19 vaccine, I'm like you. I am anti-vax and I'm looking so forward to having a doctor on in April. I forget the date, but coming up in April, there'll be a conversation with a doctor about vaccines and we will get all of this stuff laid bare and we'll have that conversation. It's interesting you bring up other vaccines because I have one last thing here and it is a, it's it's a.

quick little thing about this year's flu vaccine only being 25 % effective, they say. Now, also in this, I think it's a press release here, it says the cumulative incidence of influenza was similar for the vaccinated and unvaccinated states early, but over time, the cumulative incidence of influenza increased more rapidly among the vaccinated than the unvaccinated. In other words, people that got vaccinated were getting the flu this season more

Kimberly Overton (:

Then be-

Keith Malinak (:

They chose not to roll up their sleeves.

Kimberly Overton (:

Right, because you will, you've got the flu vaccine and then take that and then all that cumulative toxin that you're putting in with the COVID boosters, 14, 15, whatever number they're up to now. And like I alluded to earlier, they are completely destroying immune systems. So yeah, people are gonna get sicker. Interestingly enough, I again, I'm not vaccinated. I worked in the ICU directly caring for COVID patients that I'm talking about at the very height of the pandemic. And it took me two and a half years.

to get COVID. Two and a half years. I got COVID at CPAC. I didn't get it at the hospital. I went to CPAC in Dallas, Texas, and I came back.

Keith Malinak (:

wow.

Keith Malinak (:

no, our bad. Wait on a second. What time of year was that CPAC?

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, that's a weird day.

was in August of:

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, then I'm not gonna because I was at that CPAC. It's the only CPAC I've ever been to and I just walked around that place just to see what it was like and I was gone in half an hour. But I just wondered because I got COVID twice, but it wasn't that time frame. So nevermind. Okay, I was about to blame CPAC for my

Kimberly Overton (:

Yeah, I was starting to wonder, did they spray something in there? know, little conservatives?

Keith Malinak (:

Something is beyond belief.

Kimberly Overton (:

I just found it. I found it really interesting and little side note to that. I'm sure you know Dr. Peter McCullough, who I absolutely adore. He's out there in Dallas. when I called him, I had had dinner with him the night before. And I called him the next morning and I said, I said, Doc, I got COVID. He said, well, you were just fine. I said, I'm not fine anymore. I have COVID.

And this man, he is so incredible. He actually came and picked me up at my hotel. He took me to his home. He set me up in his guest room and he treated my COVID with ivermectin and all of the things, vitamin D. He threw everything in the kitchen sink at it. This man is amazing. He took such great care of me and I was better in about 48 hours.

Keith Malinak (:

That's awesome. Can I just say for the record, not that anyone asked, I take ivermectin every day now. It's just, that's just part of my vitamins and stuff, you know, just keep that in my system. I used to take it just whenever I got started to feel sick. Now I just take it every day. Why not? It's over the counter now in Texas. So when I just have it on hand.

Kimberly Overton (:

I will mention that because I sometimes forget to mention that we do also have ivermectin available. We have ivermectin and fembendazole. We use the cancer protocols for ivermectin and fembendazole, but we have ivermectin available as well. unfortunately, it's not available everywhere over the counter, but we let it go to our members at our cost. So it's less than a dollar a pill, and that includes shipping. So if anybody is in need of ivermectin, we do have that available to our members with the consultation.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, that's that's awesome and that's remnanthealthcare.org Yes, and obviously your blog there nursefreedomnetwork.substack.com Before we go, I just have to take a quick detour again selfishly but at the same time I don't want to leave Kara hanging because she asked a good question as it relates to me as a matter of fact That that's why I had trouble with the verbiage earlier. I was on the first one there asperminazole

And then they changed it to say it.

Kimberly Overton (:

of members all.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay, which one's worse?

Kimberly Overton (:

From what I under, I don't think either of them are good. I will say that to be fair, I don't think either of them are good. I've heard more negative things about the omeprazole than I have about the, yeah. But that's not to say that the other is much better. It's just that I've heard worse things about the omeprazole. But I would, again, if you're having to take any kind of medication.

Keith Malinak (:

Okay?

Kimberly Overton (:

take a look, whether you come to us or go somewhere else, just go to get a functional medicine. Do not go to a regular conventional doctor. They are not gonna help you. All they know how to do is go to the prescription pad. So get a good functional medicine consultation. Again, whether that's our organization or another, get that and get off these medications because there is truly a better way and you will feel so much better once you get off and free yourself from that pharmaceutical.

It's a prison, really, honestly.

Keith Malinak (:

Yeah, yeah, right. One last question for you here. Mainstream doctors, mainstream medical, on a scale of zero to 100, what percentage of the time do you find yourself trusting medical professionals anymore?

Kimberly Overton (:

So zero being not at all and a hundred being like, trust them a hundred percent. zero point zero.

Keith Malinak (:

There you go. So the solution is remnanthealthcare.org. $30 a month. And what all do you get for that?

Kimberly Overton (:

So the $30 a month gives you access. That's actually how we are able to operate. we're self-sustainable because as I mentioned earlier, we don't take any funding. But that gives you access to our team of practitioners. And then our prices are very, very affordable. For consultation, can get advocacy hours. You can get, again, the functional medicine consultation. Everything is super affordable. Our prices should be listed on the website.

Another thing I want to mention really quickly before I go is if you're concerned about the blood supply, something we don't talk about too often, is yeah, we've completely changed our blood supply in this country. And we partner with an organization, we've worked with Pure Blood Registry, we've worked with Blessed by His Blood, and we advocate for their members in order to get them clean, unvaccinated blood for transfusion, because now the American Red Cross is really, really pushing back against directed donations.

Keith Malinak (:

Yes, yes.

Kimberly Overton (:

But our advocates have 100 % success rate in advocating to get that clean unvaccinated blood and that directed donation facilitated. So don't go alone. it's a.

Keith Malinak (:

so important because every time I go in for surgery in the last five years, they ask me about blood transfusions and every time I say, my wife will be in the waiting room if I need blood. I'm not getting it from some rando bag you've got in the freezer.

Kimberly Overton (:

And here's the thing is you don't necessarily know when this emergency situation is going to arise. That's why I tell everybody have an advocacy plan in place. I always encourage people, get your membership. It's $30 a month. You could cancel it any time. If you hate it, cancel it. It's not a big deal. Do one initial consultation so that we have all your information so that when you have this situation where nobody thinks they need an advocate until they do. And then they're in this situation and you're already behind the eight ball.

If we get all of your information, your history, we've already established a rapport and a relationship with your practitioner. We are there and we are ready to go to bat for you if and when that emergency arises. So I highly encourage everybody to do that.

Keith Malinak (:

Excellent, excellent point. remnanthealthcare.org, also nursefreedomnetwork.substack.com. Kimberly Overton, thank you so much for making time today. We really appreciate it.

Kimberly Overton (:

Thank you so much, Keith. I really enjoyed it. Thank you.

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