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Doctors' Duty: Travelling to Gaza
Episode 20528th October 2025 • Blueprints of Disruption • Rabble Rousers' Cooperative
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After answering a call for general surgeons, Dr. Monica Chaudhuri, an Ontario doctor and activist, recently returned from Gaza. Dr. Chaudhuri shares what it was like working alongside the brave Palestinian healthcare workers, how cruel the Zionist entity can be, and reflects on what its been like returning to Canada while the genocide continues.

Dr. Chaudhuri also talks about the sense of duty many Canadian healthcare workers feel, being the only international professionals, and thus eyewitnesses, allowed into occupied Gaza. A duty that extends beyond her role as a doctor, and into her community where she organizes with Health Workers Alliance for Palestine, Simcoe County 4 Palestine, and the Sustain Campaign Network.

Hosted by: Jessa McLean and Santiago Helou Quintero

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Transcripts

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Greetings, friends. My name is Jess McLean, and I'm here to provide you with some blueprints

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of disruption. This weekly podcast is dedicated to amplifying the work of activists, examining

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power structures, and sharing the success stories from the grassroots. Through these discussions,

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we hope to provide folks with the tools and the inspiration they need to start to dismantle

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capitalism, decolonize our spaces, and bring about the political revolution that we know

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we need. Today, we are talking to Monica. an activist and surgeon who recently traveled

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to Gaza on a humanitarian mission. From the insane conditions placed at the border to the

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stories of the brave doctors in Gaza who have been working non-stop for over two years,

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this conversation was a stark reminder of the extent of the cruelty imposed on Palestinians

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by the Zionist entity. I wish I could say I was surprised to learn that although Monica

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has made themselves available to major media since returning, her story has been ignored.

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First-hand accounts like hers are too few and far in between, which makes it that much more

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important for us to welcome her onto our show today. Good morning. Good morning. Doctor,

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introduce yourself to the audience, please. Sir, my name is Monica. I'm a general surgeon.

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I work in Orillia, Ontario. And I recently went to Gaza to work as a surgeon. I was working

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with a group called Humanity Auxillium, which is a small humanitarian organization uh based

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in Canada and the US. I went as part of a WHO EMT team and I was there for a couple

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of weeks. That is, that just opens up a plethora of questions, right? I mean, I don't know how

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much you witnessed that you actually want to share, but What can you tell us about that

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experience? I think to be honest with you, my big takeaway from the experience is that this

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has to stop. That's all I could think of from beginning to end. This has to stop. um What

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you see or what I saw is the utmost cruelty that I've never seen in my life from beginning

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to end. From even just preparing for the trip, you could tell that the Zionist entity just

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has an agenda to commit the most cruel acts to prevent people from living. As doctors,

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oh we first of all have to be approved by the WHO. uh And then once we're approved, then

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we have to start preparing for our trip. And we're only allowed to carry one suitcase and

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one backpack. We're specifically told not to bring medical supplies. Medical supplies are

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not allowed for distribution. Diapers are not allowed. Even baby formula is not allowed.

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And I had the idea, I remember, I'm like, okay, I have to bring in baby formula. I have to

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bring it in. You hear all these appeals for baby formula, especially premature ah baby

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formula. And I thought, okay, maybe I could sneak some in. Maybe I could just like. it

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into something, I'll say that it's milk because we have to bring all our own food in anyway.

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So I thought maybe I'll sneak it in. But then I was specifically told, do not do that because

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they're literally going through your suitcase, looking for formula, throwing it out, looking

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for bags that look like milk, that um that could be formula that you're sneaking in and throw

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it out. So just think about that for a second. Like what what other entity does this. And

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I mean, I've never like I've worked in a lot of different humanitarian contexts in the past,

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I have never in my life been told, you can't bring food for babies who are being starved.

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So all that to say, I mean, that was just even the big I hadn't even crossed into Gaza

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at that point, you know, but I could tell like, this is a cool entity that is bent. on causing

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maximal destruction, starvation, extermination. And honestly, it's disgusting. That's all I

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can say. You must have been bracing yourself, right? So you've not been naive to what you

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were walking into, then start to feel it so early in the process. mean, yeah, absolutely.

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It's like and it's one of those things that you like. mean, all of us, probably everybody

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who who listens to this podcast, I mean, you've got some awareness. But then to be faced with

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that, like literally, you cannot bring food for starving children, starving babies. And

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another interesting thing I found was just the thought that we're all just tiptoeing around

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the Zionist entities policies. Like, I mean, sure, they have these policies, oh, you can't

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bring food, you can't do this, you can't do that. There's literally a sign, by the way,

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at the Allen B crossing that says no medical supplies allowed. Like there's a sign in red,

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no medical supplies allowed. Like it just makes me think like, why are we, how is it

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that they're able to do this? How can they control so much? How can they dictate you can't

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bring food in? How can they dictate you can't bring medical supplies in? just, and it's

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like, we're complying with it. I don't even know what to say. Like, how is this even possible?

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And you'll still have people out there saying it's not an occupation. Well, I mean, that's

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just like, I don't even know how. people can say that of course it's an occupation. I don't

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know. I don't know if that's willful ignorance or if that's just trying to hide the truth.

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I suspect it's just people trying to hide the truth. But it's shocking, isn't it, that they

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have these rules and we're all following them. And I'll tell you one other thing that's interesting.

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So when you apply... to these organizations, these WHO EMT uh groups. You have to be approved

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by the organization that you're applying with. You have to be approved by the WHO. And then

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you prepare all your supplies. You fly down to Amman, Jordan. People are going through

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Amman, Jordan right now because the Rafa border, as you know, has been shut down. In fact, I

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actually tried to get into Gaza over a year ago and it was right May 5th when they attacked

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the Rafa crossing and it was closed since then basically. um anyway, so you get everything

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ready, you fly to Amman, Jordan. The night before, literally the night before you are scheduled

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to go into Gaza, you can be denied. And so we found out late in the evening, the night before

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we were leaving, all of us in Amman, Jordan, that you know who was approved to go and who

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was not and Kogatz who is an arm of Israel they have the power to say you can go in you

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can you cannot and at one point a few months ago the rejection rate was about 50 percent

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I don't know the exact number right now but it's high some organizations have had all of

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their delegates denied some organizations are delisted in my particular group there were

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three doctors Two of us were approved to go, one of us was not. And there's no rhyme or

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reason. And the person who got denied entrance was a highly qualified, specialized uh physician

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who had been to Gaza before. And a lot of people say, okay, well, maybe we shouldn't speak out

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against this because if you speak out, you'll be denied entrance. Of course, that's a manipulation.

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They don't want us to speak out. They don't want us to tell the truth. But the thing is,

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I don't know if it makes a difference because in this particular case, this was somebody

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who kept a low profile, know, didn't have a large social media following and so forth,

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but still got denied. So it's like, you can decide not to speak out, so you can go back

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into Gaza, but you could still get denied anyway. Literally, they do whatever they want. and

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they do it to dissuade you from going. It's an inconvenience. You get everything ready,

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you take time off work, you go down and then you're denied entrance and then you're like,

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okay, now what do I do? So that likely would dissuade people from going. So I think that

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the Zionist entity uses that to dissuade people, to dissuade organizations. Again, how do they

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get away with that? How? Just how? They do a lot to dissuade people from journalists,

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politicians, you name it, uh but they fail, right? There are still doctors that will go

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into Gaza. I mean, like, if you aren't deterred by the situation you know you're walking into,

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uh some administrative crap from the Zionist entity isn't going to thwart you. You you've

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got people on the flotilla, uh anticipating what is going to happen to them. We are just

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seeing more boats go over. What drove you to need to get into Gaza in the first place?

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I mean, maybe you can just reflect on it in general as a doctor who goes into conflict

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zones. This is not, you know this is not something everyone would do. um Not even every doctor.

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So can you talk a little bit about that drive? Yeah, so I'll just, I'll start by saying, uh

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I've previously worked with MSF and the Red Cross and I've never actually previously gone

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to Gaza. And one of the reasons why is because I'm a general surgeon. don't have like a particular,

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I do have a fellowship in critical care and trauma, but I don't, you know, I'm not a neurosurgeon.

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I'm not a reconstructive plastic surgeon or anything like that. And the, although the

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healthcare system in Gaza has been operating under a siege, there are still exceptional

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physicians and highly specialized physicians within Gaza who are doing amazing work despite

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all of the restrictions that the Zionist entity holds over them. So they're doing excellent

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work. there wasn't, in the times that I've worked with MSF and the Red Cross, there's never

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been a time where me as a general surgeon would be... would be deployed there necessarily.

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It was typically more specialized surgeons and so forth that would go. Another thing

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too is like I have always known that like the Zionist entity has so much impunity. They just,

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I've always been a little bit nervous to be honest with you about going into this area.

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um But what drove me Recently is the fact that number one, there was a specific call

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out for surgeons, particularly general surgeons. And number two, there are very few people

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who are able to get into Gaza. And it's surgeons, surgeons, they're calling out for surgeons.

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And there was a siege on Gaza. And I really felt that I'm a surgeon, have a duty to try

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and get in, try and bring supplies in, try and help as best I can and just be there. So I

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saw it as a duty, it would be almost like if the only person who can save a child from a

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building is a podcaster. Like of course you would go and try and do something. If the only

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person who could go, who could, get in through a border is X person. Like, of course, like

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I feel like there truly is a duty. When you were there, did you feel like, I mean, this

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is almost a ridiculous question to ask, given what we're seeing, did you? There are no

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ridiculous questions. Did you feel like you were in danger? Because when I heard that you

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were there, like that sounded terrifying, you know, hearing so many doctors who have been

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killed in Gaza. uh And I believe the hospital where you were at had been bombed previously

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as well. Just what was that like? Well, I think that's the threat to me. You just have

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to also think about the like I was there for a very short period of time. And just imagine

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how people who are there and have been working in these hospitals for two years, how they

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must feel, you know, living under this every single day, the bombardments. And not only

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that, it's being up all night doing all kinds of complex surgeries on patients. For me,

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the times that I was nervous were at the borders because I was questioned. quite a bit, particularly

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going in. I did have some supplies with me, so they questioned me a lot. But then later

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after I talked to other people, they said, no, no, no, that was nothing compared. Some

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people get questioned for 16 hours. I was just questioned for a much shorter period of time.

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And I was also a little bit nervous uh going between the border and our hospital. You know,

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just we were in an armored vehicle and we were specifically told you cannot film anything,

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you cannot. you know, take any pictures and like I complied with that because I was just

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nervous. I don't know what right they have to say that we can't take pictures, but you know,

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that's what they said. And I I kind of listened. em So I was a little nervous then em when I

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was there. There certainly there were bombings that you could hear. But there wasn't anything

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really that close to where we were. I will admit that on the first night I heard a bomb go off

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and I thought it was close. don't know. I've never experienced this before. So I remember

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I heard something and I actually saw a light too. And I remember we're instructed, make

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sure you have a safe bag and if anything happens, bring it with you. And so what I did was in

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middle of the night and I grabbed my safe bag and I went out to the hall and Everyone was

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just sitting there drinking coffee and smoking and nobody was faced by it. And they said,

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oh, yeah, yeah, no, that's far away. Don't worry about it. things you never want to get used

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to. The whole picture thing really grabbed my attention. And I know that for so many of

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us, we've seen so much on social media, the pictures, but I I want to get your account

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if that's OK, of like, what did you see that they didn't want you? to take pictures of

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on your way to the hospital. What was that scene? Yeah, so basically the road was almost like

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sand. When you look from side to side, you see the remnants of buildings, a lot of rubble.

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And you can see what looks like miles. And it looks like there's miles and miles of this.

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Rubble destroyed. homes. um One interesting thing is that the air is different. mean,

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that's not what I saw, but the air is different. The air just feels heavy and thick. You know,

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it's not like the air of Simcoe County where you breathe in and it's like fresh, clean air.

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It's very thick air and it's almost like it's almost hard to breathe. It's different. It's

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not what you're used to or not what I was used to. um I will mention that it's not all destruction

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though, so I don't want to create the idea that it's only destruction. um In between areas

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there's flowers, there's really beautiful flowers and trees, sometimes there's kids running

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around with their bicycles, sometimes there's families, there's little shops, little tiny

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like... you know, people selling various different things, like whether it's water, cookies, or,

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you know, household items. um Close to the hospital, there was like a tea shop that somebody

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opened. so although there is a lot of destruction, there is also life, a lot of life. It's not

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the only thing that's heavy, the air in Gaza. I mean, this is... um Not that we haven't been

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talking about Palestine, but I think hearing the first-hand account is very, very heavy

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for me. I want to go back though to your duty as a medical professional, because it is a

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unique position for doctors right now and healthcare workers, because you know, journalists are

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not allowed in when they are. There's been small examples of our aid planes going over and dropping

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boxes and even then they're told. don't take photos. like literally nobody is getting in.

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And that's why that sign says no medical supplies is because that's the people using the crossing

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for the most part. And they also decide who comes out. Exactly. The entity. uh But when

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you come back, you're still a doctor. How does your rule change though? I mean, it's probably

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a lot clearer. You're given tasks, you probably worked. the bone, there's no shortage of patients,

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you are helping, you're in there, but then you have to leave and you have to come back

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inside the imperialist beast that is Canada that plays a clear role in this genocide and

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your general surgeon skills need to be transferred a little bit, you know, for the cause. They

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still do good work, General surgeons are needed here in Ontario, but how do you do that shift?

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inside yourself and change roles? Like, and how do you take that experience in Gaza and,

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and use that energy here? Well, one interesting thing, and this isn't exactly what you're asking,

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but I, there's just a little point I want to address. So one of the things I will mention

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is the Palestinian healthcare workers that I was working alongside were top notch, like

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they were top notch. And being around people who have that degree of excellence actually

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motivates me to do better, to like up my game, you know, to as a surgeon. Yeah, absolutely.

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Absolutely. And, you know, I'll just give you one small example. I was doing a case with

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somebody. It was a resident. There's the residents are great. And he at the end of the case, I

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was like, so what year are you? Are you R4 or R5? He's like, no, no, I'm R1. R1 that means

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basically first year resident. He was a first year resident, but he was operating like he

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was an R4 or R5 resident. And I said, you're R1? And he said, yeah, I've been volunteering

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for the last two years. We've been doing this for two years. I mean, every day they would

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have several cases, you know, like, and they just, they just learn fast. and out of necessity

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and they've got, you know, incredible experience with trauma. I mean, I would rather have no

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bombing and less experience with trauma, but I mean, they've just got this high degree of

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excellence. So it's motivated me as a surgeon to, as I mentioned, my game. But I think you

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were talking about advocacy more. um So what... For me, it's just motivated me further to

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do what I mentioned earlier, which is to stop this, to do everything I can in my power to

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stop this. It's really made me think about how it's important to figure out what is most

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effective, what is most impactful, what is going to directly stop this. You know, I feel like

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sometimes our activism can feel a little bit performative. It's like we're doing, you know,

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and I don't want to like all act, it's important. I mean, I think that, you know, the tide is

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shifting obviously, and, you know, we're protesting and we're writing letters and we're disseminating

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information on social media. So it's all important and all of this has been crucial, I think,

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for shifting the narrative. and even putting pressure on our governments, not that our

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governments have stopped, but there have been some shifts, I guess. um But yeah, I think

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we just have to step it up. The same way I have to step up, I want to step up my game

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as a surgeon. Like I want to step up my game as a person who is trying to stop this.

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And I just think that we need to escalate in our efforts. You know, we need to think about

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how can we have a more direct impact on stopping this genocide and stopping the Zionist entity.

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And I think that uh in my mind, it really makes me want to focus on weapons, getting the

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weapons out of their hands, and also on boycotting because obviously people are not going to stop.

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A genocidal entity is not going to stop on its own, but if the Zionist entity crumbles because

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of economic pressure, then they will. I'm hopeful that the occupation will end. So those are

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the two things that I've been really thinking a lot about is how to step up the boycotts

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and how to directly affect eh the transfer of weapons. Well, we've talked to those people.

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We'll link those episodes where Arms Embargo Now is doing some great work, World Beyond

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War. Folks just tried to shut down a arms convention in London, Ontario yesterday. Yeah,

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that was good. Yeah. folks are are listening, but you have like a unique experience as like

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an eyewitness inside Gaza. And a lot of what happens in the media is playing this both

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sides. Hamas health officials say versus Israel says, I know you won't call it Israel. I was

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going to ask you about that later. But kudos. I understand where you're coming from there,

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but you're quite diligent in that. If I did a search afterwards on the transcript, the

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Zionist entity will come up many, many, many times. quite often, despite all we've seen,

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their word is given equal weight in most media to refute all of the claims coming from Hamas-run

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health officials or Palestinian journalists uh or video proof. um What do you do with

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that role where you are a Westerner who apparently has more credibility than any Palestinian that

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lives there? But in all honesty, we talked to Dr. Yehbeng G as well and Ben Thompson and

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just how they've come back and they're trying to talk to politicians and tell them all of

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the horrible things that they've seen and reaffirm the death rate and the targeting of children

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and the just malicious— nature of that entity to no avail though. is just because we've actually

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all seen it. But do you still feel a responsibility as an eyewitness to document what you've seen

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to in some sort of way? Yeah, 100%. And I did provide evidence to international courts in

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regards to what I've seen. So I did keep track of everything that I saw, like every case that

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I was involved with. And uh I did provide that evidence. In terms of media, I did contact

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all of the mainstream media organizations, know, CBC, CTV, Global Mail, Toronto Star,

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and to offer... um to offer an interview or to give some words and I haven't heard back

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from any of them. I will be doing some speaking engagements. fact, I don't know if I'm allowed

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to put a plug in for an upcoming speaking image. Okay, we're going to and it's Simcoe County

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one. It'll be in Orillia November 1st and it's going to be a film screening of 1948, Creation

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and Catastrophe. which a lot of people see as uh an unbiased view of what happened in

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1948 because there's interviews of people who were on the ground at that time. I don't know

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if you guys have seen that movie or not. I haven't seen it yet, so I may drive north to Orillia

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and join you for that. Please, yeah, it would be great to see you. It would be great to see

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you. And there's also, it's gonna be a mutual aid fundraiser for families in Gaza, families

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that uh a number, one of our members, Ash, in particular, she's connected with many different

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families uh and it's to support them. So yeah, it would be great to see you there. But anyway,

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I will be speaking on that day. So that is one way that I'm uh gonna try and help get the

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word out. I also like to create social media, I'm creating slides and trying to disseminate

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that information out um based on my experience. What's the reaction been like from your co-workers

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and family after you've come back and now you're screaming from the rooftops? Not that you weren't

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before, but I mean, you probably amped it up. Yeah. Well, my family was very... My family

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was very happy to see me back. They were very worried. They were very worried, but they're

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all very sympathetic to the cause and they see it. They understand what's going on. And I

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feel like they're becoming activists themselves. I feel like that's going to happen. think

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it's, I think it's happening. um In terms of colleagues, I think it's split. Many people

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are interested. There are many people who are interested and ask me lots of questions about,

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you know, what it was like, what I saw, and then they'll go into a rant, similar to the

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rant that I started out with, like, oh my goodness, design centers are so cruel, they have to be

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stopped, they have to... But then a lot of people, I guess you could split it up into thirds.

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So maybe about a third of the people um really are passionate and really see what's going

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on and say, what I said before, like this has to stop. There's another third who really

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want to both sides it and they might be interested a little bit in maybe the medical perspective

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or the apolitical neutral humanitarian perspective quote unquote. And oh, it's so sad that there's

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so much suffering and this has been going on for centuries. That sort of. perspective,

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which is obviously problematic and harmful. And then there's another third who don't even

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ask and don't seem to want to know or maybe they think it's too controversial or I don't

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know. But yeah, there's a fair number of people who just don't say anything. So that's basically

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that in a nutshell. I've seen you post up about silencing that happens in the healthcare profession.

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And I think we did touch on it with the doctors I mentioned earlier, but have you experienced

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that? I'm not going to give that third any kind of cred, but perhaps we can say that that atmosphere

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feeds into people just being like, you know, not my business. I'm not getting involved.

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Look what happened to X, Y, and Z when they came back. and started talking about their

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experience and they started calling out the bosses, you know, and uh for their inaction.

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Santiago mentioned Honest Reporting has glommed on to you. So you must be doing something,

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right? I actually didn't know that. Really? That's like a badge of honour. You were named

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for it in something Honest Reporting did. Oh, good. You'll have to send her the link now.

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She's got to frame it or something. You know, like I was actually named by Levythean too,

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because I we renamed we renamed St. Vincent Bridge and Barry Alshifa Bridge and they were

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mad that can you believe these people named it Alshifa Bridge? um I have to say I've been

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pretty fortunate. I have not been. I have not been called to the office at work. uh Nobody

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has given me a hard time really about what I've been doing or saying. I know that it has been

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discussed in the sense that when I was speaking to somebody they said, oh yeah, what you're

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doing is fine. We talked about it. You're not on hospital property. You're not representing

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the hospital. So you can do whatever you want outside of the hospital. So yeah, I've been

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very fortunate that way. I have not really been silenced too much. and I feel comfortable

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being vocal. And the reality is like, you know, if there was a serial killer wandering

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the streets of Barry, nobody would hesitate about saying, we have to catch the serial killer

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and stop them. Like nobody would hesitate about that. And the same way we have a literal serial

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killer that is murdering and trying to exterminate Palestinians, trying to erase their existence.

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Like we have to call it, we have to call that out and stop them. You know, so I think at

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this point, if somebody tries to silence me or says anything, like I just, I'm comfortable,

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I'm comfortable enough to say like, you know, like I don't care, you know? And I think that,

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you know, the people who are still trying to justify this, like they're the ones who

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should be the pariahs. Do you know what I mean? Like they should be shamed. Nobody should be

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shaming me. for calling out murder, calling out the Zionist entity for mass murder. Like

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other people should be embarrassed for supporting them. And if anybody says to me like, oh, do

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you support armed resistance? Of course I support armed resistance. Do you support Palestinian

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liberation? Of course I be qualifying questions for all our guests, eh, Santiago? Yeah, yeah.

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Part of the And you could ask it back. It's like, oh, you don't? You don't support Palestinian

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liberation? Why not? You know what I mean? It has to be like... Independence is the word

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they're using now. They support Palestinian independence. um Even liberation won't fall

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off. their tongues. Liberals. And even then some. And I mean small L liberals. Like the

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problematic ones we're talking about where, oh, those poor children, if Hamas would just

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give up the the hostages, why, you know. Yeah. Can I just say something that I just don't

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want to forget to say this, um just on the topic of you know, words that people use and language.

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And I really feel that the Zionist entity uses terminology like terrorists em as a racial

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slur, essentially. So they can say, we killed terrorists. And that's no different from saying

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the cockroaches, you know, the genocidal language of other genocides, you know. We killed the

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cockroaches. We eliminated the whatever racial slur. they use, um mean, Hamas is the government

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and the armed ring, the armed ring wing of Hamas is the, you know, is, know, the Cassan

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brigades, like they're, they are freedom fighters. This is a national liberation movement, but

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yet the word Hamas is used also as a slur. anything is Hamas, you know, and they use that as justification

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for murder, you know. And so I think we just have to be conscious of that language that

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these are slurs that are used to justify killing. And I'm just going to just reiterate that I'm

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not saying, like, I'm not saying anyone's a terrorist. Like I'm saying that armed resistance

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people are freedom fighters. But I just don't want to make that anyone confused, like that

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is that they're used as a slur by the Zionist entity and by other people and by mainstream

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media. I will also mention that in my opinion, the word civilian is problematic too, because

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people will say, oh, they killed civilians. Okay, so they shouldn't kill civilians. Yeah,

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of course they shouldn't kill civilians, but they shouldn't kill freedom fighters either.

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You know, I mean, you know, they shouldn't kill like this is not the jungle where you

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can just kill everybody, you know. Yeah, anyway, all that to say, I try and avoid using the

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word civilian and use the word people instead. That's a good point. I thought perhaps you

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were going elsewhere with the civilian comment because I find and take issue. with every

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Israeli being called a civilian, yet they're set... they're always called civilian. They're

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all military though. But they're also settlers actively expanding using violence in the West

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Bank. Exactly. You know, that's not civilian by definition. They're just lacking a fucking

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uniform, right? So, or a designation or maybe pay. But even that, I doubt. They always

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call Israelis civilians. And they often call Palestinians terrorists. Like honestly, it's

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disgusting. It's disgusting. And another uh term, thing that they often say is they'll

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always call uh Israeli POWs hostages. But they're actually prisoners of war. They're

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prisoners of war. They're not hostages. I think we need to always check ourselves for when

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it comes to terminology. Yeah. Oh, no. Definitely. And language matters, right? It sets the tone

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and it gives cover to the Zionist entity. Yeah, I have plenty of examples I've probably shared

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before. I won't bore the audience there. But I wonder, working alongside Palestinian health

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care workers, What do they say about you coming home? Do they say anything? Like, is it strictly

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professional or, you know, do they look at you at some point and be like, can you make this

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stop? Like, I don't know. um Did you ever talk about ending the occupation or the occupation

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itself with your Palestinian co-workers? You know what, to be totally honest with you, at

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the period of time that I was there, uh This was pre like this quote unquote ceasefire.

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We know that the ceasefire has been violated many times. um There was a lot of blast injuries,

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bombings, violence happening at the time that I was there. And I don't want to, I don't

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want to make a statement that suggests that everybody thought the same way. I just want

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to make sure it's clear that I didn't talk to everybody, you know, I talked to a few

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people and a lot of people, I talked to several people, I'm just saying I, their opinions

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may not represent everybody's opinion. And I was there for a period of time and it's a specific

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period of time. So even the people I talked to, they could have different opinions today

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or, you know, six months ago. But at the time that I was there, um The people that I talked

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to, to be totally honest, many of them were losing hope. A lot of them were losing hope.

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And a lot of them would say things like, you know, Gaza's finished and, you know, um it's

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all done. we, you know, and many people were asking um for help in terms of navigating.

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moving to Canada, moving to another country. I think people wanted to stay in their homeland.

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They have the right to be there. They're indigenous Palestinians who have the right to be there

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and the right to return back to their homes in occupied Palestine. But many of them were

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like my kids and they want to survive. People want to survive. So, yeah, honestly, a lot

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we're losing hope and as I mentioned, a lot wanted to move elsewhere. That was a gut punch.

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I mean, I don't want you to sugarcoat it, but, know, damn. Yeah, and it was really, yeah,

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it's an awful thing to hear for sure. And I mean, like, There's not a lot you can say to

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that. You're not going to say, oh, no, no, no. Like, yeah, everything's going to be fine.

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Like, you don't. You can come live with me, you know. Yeah. And yeah. And I mean, I mean,

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I sincerely believe the occupation will end. I mean, it has to. What are we doing if if

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it's not? I and I think about like Laura Sheehy when she says the precondition is liberation.

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Do you remember her saying that you listen to her? Yeah. The precondition is liberation.

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So we have to think that. And even if some people are losing hope, we have to keep pushing. We

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have to push even harder. And honestly, it's our responsibility to stop this because it's

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our fault. know, it's our responsibility. We're the people who are providing diplomatic cover

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to the Zionist entity. We're the people who are sending weapons to Zionist entities. So

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it is on us. to do more and to stop it. I will mention too, like I know that I said that,

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I mean, a lot of people that I talked to were losing hope. At the same time, things were

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still happening. People were getting married, people were having babies, people were making

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plans. Becoming doctors. People were becoming doctors. all the medical students showed up

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for like I did a, did a, two, actually one of the highlights honestly was I did a medical

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student teaching session just on basic like suturing and how to put gloves on, how to put

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gowns on. And I mean, these medical students were just so smart and they're just so excited

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and em yeah, really, really inspiring. em A lot of them were like, my dream is to become

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a surgeon. And you can see the gleam in their eyes and they're so excited. And one of them

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said, okay, can I be a surgeon? Do think I can be a surgeon? They're just so like, they've

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got a lot of joy in them. They're so excited to learn. yeah, there is. People are losing

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hope, but there is also hope. I imagine they go through cycles of feelings, right? As the

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day goes and promises are made and ceasefires come and go, it's got to be an emotional roller

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coaster. Like, certainly no one here is going to fault anyone for losing hope or trying

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to find a safe home for their children. Yeah. Almost every single healthcare worker that

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I talked to lost their home. Like almost everybody lost their home. And people are literally,

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they're sleeping in tents, no electricity or basic amenities that most of us would be used

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to. So, you know, they finished their work day and then they have to go home and find

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water and they have to find food and they have to like, you know. And then, you know, the

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first thing a lot of people do when they arrive to work, you can see people looking for chargers

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so they can charge their devices and everything. And they're working after, like, how often

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do you, like, if you go, you know, live in a tent overnight and work a hard day at work,

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like, it's just... For two years, you know. I don't know, yeah. So, and people work, it's

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not just any work. It's not just doing like a couple... you a few cases here, a few cases

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there. No, people are doing like major trauma cases, intense cases, long cases, difficult

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cases. After sleeping in a tent, it's hard to sleep outside with a lot of noise and you're

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worried and you're vulnerable to bombardments and come into work, work all day, no food.

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A lot of times people... I remember a few times people were like, oh yeah, I haven't eaten

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all day. Like all day, worked all day, no food, no water, nothing. Like it's just, like it's

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cruel, it's cruel. What kind of world is this where you have a belligerent pariah state

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bombing and depriving and forcing people to live like this? And they're just. somehow allowed

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to do it. Like, it's just like unbelievable. The impunity is maddening. We call it the,

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I know you don't like this word, but Israeli exception. You know, it's, yeah, yeah. Even

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the footy fans. I was talking to my husband the other day, because this is language he

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can understand. I'm like, you know, British hooligan fans, their teams, their fans get

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banned from stadiums all the time. People have to play in an empty stadium all the time. It's

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just, it's, you know, it happens. But the Tel Aviv fans, like the most racist football club

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known, you know, their fans are awful. They pretty much destroy Amsterdam and attack uh

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Muslims and shout racist chants. And so they're banned from another game and it becomes this

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global political problem, right? Where the UK PM is stepping in. I mean, it's just sometimes

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they're so, they seem mundane and silly like that, but it just applies, applies to absolutely

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everything. It's just there are different rules for this entity than have ever existed for

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a nation state, even the ones propping them up. know, I got to go back to colonial days

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right before international law. it's being inside Canada and knowing our rule is also

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very, very, very maddening. Another example of the double standard obviously is in terms

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of like what gets labeled as like hate speech. know what I mean? People can say free Palestine

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and it can get labeled as hate speech. Like there's a woman who has free Palestine on her

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van. She got in trouble with the police in Irelia for having free Palestine under her van. But

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yet people who are supporters of the Zionist entity will say all kinds of Islamophobic hate

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speech and anti-Palestinian racism. And like, they'll just get away with it. It's just like,

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I don't even know what to say. Palestine. Oh yeah. No, I think we'll have to have you back.

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to talk about what it's like organizing in places like Barrie and Aurelia and for folks outside

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of Ontario. It's, it's, we can't call them urban, they're tiny little urban centers in

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the middle of like rural areas and it's not quite Northern Ontario, but it's definitely

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not Toronto. It's very conservative, usually politically, at least when people go out and

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vote it is. And there are groups organizing like Simcoe for Palestine. despite all of

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that, right? And building momentum and just making sure it's just, I think a great example

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of organizing wherever you are. um If there's anything else you want to say about Simcoe

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County for Palestine. Well, one thing I'll just mention about Simcoe County for Palestine,

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it's a great group. um It's been active for over two years now and I remember when I

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first started to get involved, like I didn't really see the value of organizing in a smaller

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city. Like I thought, well, what's the point? I'll just go to Toronto. That was my mentality.

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But actually you could have a big impact because em the population is smaller. like proportionally,

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I guess you could have a big impact. I was really inspired by a lot of the young people

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in our group. who really were powerhouses and really helped spearhead a lot of things.

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um We do get a lot of detractors. Like I think that if you go to an event in Toronto, there's

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a lot more strength in numbers. don't get, there's detractors, but you don't get quite

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as many. I think that in a place like this, all the racists come out and they're very

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comfortable being racist. We get a lot of people saying, go back to your country. You know,

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they give you the finger. If you go on, um you know, Facebook groups like uh very concerned

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citizens, like all the racists are out there. Like I, I'm sorry to say, you know, there's

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a lot of hatred and a lot of uh very, very damaging um language and assertions that they

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make. But I think that it's very important to keep pushing in a place like this. And I have

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a unique position because I am a doctor. And I think that most people have respect for

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what a doctor says, not always. Not that I'm saying that every doctor deserves, but

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I think that having that position, there's a privilege that comes with it. And people...

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will usually take you seriously. So, you know, I can just picture a conversation like,

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sometimes I'll be at an event and maybe have a Palestinian flag or a sign and you can see

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a woman like grabbing her kid and taking us away or like, and, you know, there've been

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a couple events where we'll have the flag and they'll like give us the finger or say F off

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or something. A lot of times they'll have kids in the car. And I mean, you know, I can

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just picture a conversation like, mommy, what was that? What was that lady doing? She's

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a terrorist. Yeah, but she's a doctor. You know what I mean? And I think it's like, it's important

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for us as professionals to advocate, to speak the truth and to widen that Overton window

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so that, you know, everybody believes that um injustice and liberation. is a wrap on

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another episode of Blueprints of Disruption. Thank you for joining us. Also, a very big

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thank you to the producer of our show, Santiago Helu-Quintero. Blueprints of Disruption is

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an independent production operated cooperatively. You can follow us on Twitter at BPofDisruption.

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If you'd like to help us continue disrupting the status quo, please share our content. And

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if you have the means, consider becoming a patron. Not only does our support come from the progressive

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community, so does our content. So reach out to us and let us know what or who we should

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be amplifying. So until next time, keep disrupting.

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