Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:05.600] I'm Dave Champion. It is no surprise that over the last nine or 10 months, government [00:05.600 --> 00:12.360] has derived significant power from keeping the American people scared. And media has [00:12.360 --> 00:18.680] made huge profits by keeping the American public terrified. Two of the stories that [00:18.680 --> 00:23.480] they've been telling in order to keep the populace scared is that young, healthy people [00:23.480 --> 00:28.120] are dropping dead of COVID-19, and then they're talking about something called long haulers. [00:28.120 --> 00:31.360] I think it's time to set the record straight about that. [00:31.360 --> 00:44.360] Let's start with the media narrative that young, healthy people are just dropping dead [00:44.360 --> 00:50.400] from COVID-19. Okay, so no, that's absolutely false. In preparation for this presentation, [00:50.400 --> 00:58.040] I reviewed about 50 different articles. Some of them were, I guess you might call them [00:58.040 --> 01:05.000] clickbait. Others were dominant mainstream media articles. Others lean towards perhaps [01:05.000 --> 01:09.360] we could say the medical side. But here's what they all had in common as I read through [01:09.360 --> 01:18.120] them, that there was absolutely not one single example. They didn't say, hey, look, here's [01:18.120 --> 01:23.960] this young, healthy person who dropped dead. Okay. And of course, that's because there [01:24.120 --> 01:32.280] are no young, healthy people dying of COVID-19. I noticed that in a lot of these articles, [01:32.280 --> 01:42.640] they don't name names. They don't show photographs, which is absolutely key. They just talk about [01:42.640 --> 01:48.120] that, yes, young, healthy people are dropping dead. Okay, show me one. I don't care what [01:48.120 --> 01:54.120] you tell me. I don't care what you write out in your article. Show me a young, healthy [01:54.120 --> 02:00.440] person who dropped dead of COVID-19. Show me that. Name names. Let me go look into that [02:00.440 --> 02:04.920] person for myself. Just don't tell me it's happening. Give me some fucking examples to [02:04.920 --> 02:10.200] go look at to show you're right. And of course, in the, like I said, about 50 articles I reviewed, [02:10.200 --> 02:17.800] there's absolutely none of that. However, there are stories of youngish people dying. [02:17.800 --> 02:23.360] One of them is a guy named Joshua Obra. I hope I'm pronouncing his last name right. [02:23.360 --> 02:28.880] And Joshua was 29 years old, lived in Anaheim, California near Disneyland with his sister. [02:28.880 --> 02:34.720] By all accounts, he was a super nice guy. And several months ago, he contracted COVID-19 [02:34.720 --> 02:42.900] and he passed away at 29 years of age, which is pretty young, right? So was Joshua the [02:43.900 --> 02:51.900] healthy person? Here's a couple of pictures of Joshua. Yeah. You can see for yourself, [02:51.900 --> 02:58.620] right? He was morbidly obese. And I want to be very clear. I'm not attacking or criticizing [02:58.620 --> 03:03.540] Joshua. I mean, again, from all accounts, he was a super nice guy and it's a terrible [03:03.540 --> 03:08.380] thing that he's gone. The point that I'm trying to make is that these characterizations [03:08.380 --> 03:14.020] that younger people who are perfectly healthy are dropping dead. And so we must all be in [03:14.020 --> 03:17.980] fear because if you have a child and your child is young and healthy, your child is [03:17.980 --> 03:27.260] going to die. It's bullshit. 42 is not young. But in terms of COVID-19 deaths, it would [03:27.260 --> 03:32.660] be indeed young. So a gentleman by the name of Gabe Morales, who's a corrections officer [03:32.660 --> 03:41.540] in Kansas, recently passed away from COVID-19. Yeah. And here's a couple of photographs [03:41.540 --> 03:50.860] of Gabe. I feel terrible for his family. I mean, Gabe has young children. This is one [03:50.860 --> 03:55.900] of the things I don't get about people. I'm going to share a personal story I haven't [03:55.900 --> 04:00.600] shared before here publicly. But there was a friendly acquaintance I had in Las Vegas. [04:00.600 --> 04:04.720] I live about an hour outside of Las Vegas. And it was a friendly acquaintance who was [04:04.720 --> 04:10.680] morbidly obese. And he had been having health problems for a couple of years. So several [04:10.680 --> 04:17.560] months ago, I reached out to him. And I have an ethical thing. I never, ever give my books [04:17.560 --> 04:24.440] away for free. But he had a young daughter. And I was concerned based on what I had seen [04:24.440 --> 04:30.720] and heard that if he didn't straighten himself out health-wise, that he was going to leave [04:30.720 --> 04:39.080] his young daughter fatherless. So he was one of the very, very, very, very rare cases where [04:39.080 --> 04:47.160] I sent him a complimentary copy of body science. And I said, hey, man, read this. Get yourself [04:47.160 --> 04:56.400] healthy. Be there for your daughter. OK, so he blew it off. He didn't do it. Six weeks, seven [04:56.400 --> 05:02.040] weeks ago, he died. And by the way, he had body science and plenty of time to fix his problems. [05:02.040 --> 05:08.560] But now he's dead. And his daughter is fatherless. And so I look at the story of Gabe Morales, [05:08.560 --> 05:16.440] the correctional officer. His kids don't have a dad. This to me is appalling that anyone would [05:16.440 --> 05:23.360] allow themselves to get in a position where a virus would come along and take them and leave [05:23.360 --> 05:29.680] their children fatherless. I'm just amazed. But the point is, obviously, whether it was Joshua [05:29.680 --> 05:36.760] Obra or whether it's Gabe Morales, these people are not young and healthy and dying of COVID-19. [05:36.760 --> 05:43.400] They are already sick. And then COVID-19 is making matters worse. And then they die. We're going to [05:43.400 --> 05:52.560] get into that in a minute. Search as I might, I could not find a single story where we could [05:52.560 --> 05:56.600] actually say, OK, here's the guy. Let's take a look at this guy. Let's look at his history. A [05:56.600 --> 06:07.560] single case of anybody who was young and healthy, in reality healthy, dying from COVID-19. I've [06:07.560 --> 06:14.440] showed you a couple of pictures of people who have died at a young or youngish age from COVID-19. [06:14.440 --> 06:23.560] Let me show you a photograph of the kind of person I have never, ever seen any case of them dying [06:23.560 --> 06:30.760] from COVID-19. Somebody who looks like this. Yeah. That guy, he's not dying of COVID-19. [06:31.400 --> 06:38.520] Are really young people dying of COVID-19, like seven or eight or 12 years old. They are in [06:38.520 --> 06:45.800] infinitesimally small numbers. And of course, when you read what the media wants you to know [06:45.800 --> 06:53.960] about that, they never, ever discuss the health condition. They say this seven-year-old girl in [06:53.960 --> 07:02.680] Paris, this eight-year-old boy in wherever, died of COVID-19. And they never, ever discuss [07:02.680 --> 07:08.360] the medical condition. They never say they died and they had this comorbidity factor or that [07:08.360 --> 07:12.840] comorbidity factor, which they absolutely do. But the media doesn't want you to know that because [07:12.840 --> 07:16.520] the media wants you to be terrified that completely healthy seven-year-olds are dropping dead of [07:16.520 --> 07:20.840] COVID-19, which is not happening. There was a case many, many months ago, and unfortunately, [07:20.840 --> 07:26.040] I don't have the picture because it was many, many months ago, of a, I believe it was a 12-year-old [07:26.040 --> 07:31.480] that had passed away with COVID-19. And I read through the article and there was absolutely no [07:31.480 --> 07:37.160] mention of any medical condition, any comorbidity factor, any chronic disease, but his name was [07:37.160 --> 07:41.640] fairly unique. And we're going to have another example of that in a moment. His name was fairly [07:41.640 --> 07:48.120] unique. So I Googled him and hit images. And in the images area, there's pictures of the 12-year-old [07:48.120 --> 07:55.480] who had passed away. And he was morbidly obese. Are you detecting a theme yet? I'll never forget. [07:55.480 --> 08:02.200] Some months ago, somebody tried to convince me that people who have no other preexisting illnesses [08:02.200 --> 08:07.240] are indeed dropping dead from COVID-19 and gave me the example of some Broadway star. I forget the [08:07.240 --> 08:14.600] name as I'm sitting here now. And so I looked this Broadway star up. It was some male. Fortunately, [08:14.600 --> 08:19.560] one of the articles actually detailed the sequence of events in the hospital. So within an hour of [08:19.560 --> 08:25.000] checking in, they put him in an induced coma. The next morning, they amputated a leg and so on. [08:25.000 --> 08:30.280] And I'm like, OK, he may have tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, but this sequence of events in [08:30.280 --> 08:35.640] the hospital has nothing to do with COVID-19. There was something else going on. And so I [08:35.640 --> 08:39.720] pointed this all out to the person who had told me, oh, yeah, he died. He was completely healthy [08:39.720 --> 08:43.560] and he died. So I pointed this all out and the person says, well, I'm just referencing an article [08:43.560 --> 08:48.280] where his wife said he was completely healthy. To summarize on young, healthy people dying of [08:48.280 --> 08:54.920] COVID-19, it's not happening. Are young people dying of COVID-19? And yes, in very small numbers. [08:54.920 --> 09:03.720] And they are already sick with chronic disease, one or more. They are already sick before they [09:03.720 --> 09:11.560] get the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Young, healthy people are not dying of COVID-19. Let's talk about the [09:11.560 --> 09:17.400] so-called long haulers. The definition of long haulers is somebody who gets COVID-19. Normally, [09:17.400 --> 09:23.320] it's a relatively severe case. And then they recover. They're now testing negative for the [09:23.320 --> 09:31.720] presence of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. And yet they have one or more usually rather unusual symptoms [09:32.280 --> 09:36.920] that continue for months and months and months and months afterwards. And again, these are called [09:36.920 --> 09:42.280] long haulers. And of course, the claim by the media is that it's the SARS-CoV-2 virus [09:42.280 --> 09:48.280] that's causing these long-term consequences. So no, that's not what's doing it at all. [09:48.920 --> 09:52.840] There was a story I read. It wasn't long ago. I didn't realize I was going to do this video or I [09:52.840 --> 09:58.120] would have kept the article and I would have kept the photograph that went with the article. [09:58.120 --> 10:06.040] But there was an article I read that was featuring long haulers. And I have an interest in how the [10:06.040 --> 10:11.960] media distorts and misrepresents these things, so I was reading the article. And the article's [10:11.960 --> 10:19.560] author talked about a 36-year-old black female who was healthy, got the virus, got COVID-19, [10:19.560 --> 10:25.640] and is now a long hauler. I want to draw your attention to the word healthy. That was the [10:25.640 --> 10:31.640] description used by the author of the article. She was a 36-year-old healthy black woman. [10:31.880 --> 10:40.760] Okay. Fortunately, she had a very unique name, so I was able to Google her and click on images. [10:40.760 --> 10:44.360] Now, again, because I didn't realize I was going to do this presentation, I didn't keep that [10:44.360 --> 10:49.640] photograph. However, I did, for the purpose of this video, dig up a photograph which is highly [10:49.640 --> 10:56.120] representative of what that woman looked like, and here it is. Okay, so would you consider this [10:56.120 --> 11:03.720] a healthy woman? No. This is an obese woman. So this woman has obesity, which has long been [11:03.720 --> 11:11.160] considered a chronic disease, and yet the author of the article is calling her a 36-year-old healthy [11:11.160 --> 11:15.720] black woman. I think it's really important to note that when the media makes a representation [11:15.720 --> 11:22.040] that this young person or this middle-aged person who was healthy dropped dead of COVID-19, the media [11:22.040 --> 11:28.440] is always lying when they say that. If somebody dropped dead of COVID-19, you can bet your ass [11:28.440 --> 11:33.480] they were not healthy before they got a case of COVID-19. Before I get into what's really going [11:33.480 --> 11:36.520] on with these long haulers, I do want to point out something that's probably going to irritate [11:36.520 --> 11:42.520] a lot of people, but it's true nevertheless. There are, especially like young people, [11:43.320 --> 11:50.760] that they get the SARS-CoV-2 virus, they get a little touch of COVID-19, and they're drama queens, [11:50.760 --> 11:57.320] they're hypochondriacs. So this is a great opportunity for them since they had COVID-19. [11:57.320 --> 12:05.160] They can milk that for months. So we have to separate people like that from people who truly [12:05.160 --> 12:11.080] have long-term symptoms, not because of COVID-19, but in the wake of having had COVID-19. [12:11.640 --> 12:15.320] We know that virtually everybody that gets COVID-19 has some sort of [12:15.320 --> 12:25.560] pre-existing chronic disease. Again, people who are healthy don't get severe cases of COVID-19. [12:25.560 --> 12:32.840] The point being that cases that are serious involve one or more pre-existing chronic diseases, [12:32.840 --> 12:37.560] and that's important to understand when we're talking about long haulers, because here's what [12:37.560 --> 12:45.400] happens. Their immune process is already struggling. I don't know how far to go on this [12:45.400 --> 12:51.240] because I don't want this to be like a 30-minute video, but the human body's immune process [12:52.200 --> 13:02.200] was never designed, never developed over millions of years to deal with ongoing disease 24 hours a [13:02.200 --> 13:08.360] day, 365 days a year, which is what people who are obese and they have type 2 diabetes, [13:08.360 --> 13:12.040] or they have insulin resistance, or they have metabolic syndrome, when you've got that sort [13:12.040 --> 13:20.360] of chronic disease, your body's immune process is having to cope with that 24 hours a day, [13:20.360 --> 13:28.120] 365 days a year. Guess what it was never designed to do? Yeah, that. So it starts to deteriorate. [13:29.080 --> 13:34.040] It can't hang. It would be a layperson's way of phrasing it. The immune system, the immune, [13:34.040 --> 13:38.200] what I prefer to call the immune process because it's this highly complex ballet, [13:38.200 --> 13:42.840] the immune process simply can't cope with that anymore because it was never designed for that. [13:44.280 --> 13:53.640] So it's already deteriorated, it's already broken down, and along comes the SARS-CoV-2 virus. [13:54.520 --> 14:01.240] That infects them because their immune process is already degraded, it develops into COVID-19. [14:01.960 --> 14:08.760] Now that immune system, that immune process, which is already damaged, it's already struggling, [14:09.400 --> 14:16.280] now it has to deal with the pre-existing chronic disease and this vicious virus. [14:17.480 --> 14:21.960] How does it do that when it's already experiencing fatigue, when it's already degraded, [14:21.960 --> 14:27.720] when it's already compromised? It can't. Now, again, I don't want to spend 20 or 30 minutes [14:27.720 --> 14:30.280] talking about how this all goes down, so I'm going to give you a way of looking at this, [14:31.320 --> 14:35.560] which is pretty damn accurate. I mean, it's not physiologically accurate, but as far as a way to [14:35.560 --> 14:38.600] look at it and understand what's going on with these long haulers, it's pretty damn accurate. [14:39.400 --> 14:44.760] So let's say somebody is 30 and they're obese, and that obesity has brought on a number of things, [14:44.760 --> 14:50.120] hypertension and type 2 diabetes and so on, okay, and their body is struggling that whole 24 hour a [14:50.120 --> 14:55.880] day, 365 day a year, struggling that the immune process was never designed to cope with. So it's [14:55.880 --> 15:00.840] degraded, it's compromised, it's breaking down, it's fatigued, and then along comes the virus. [15:00.840 --> 15:09.160] What that scenario does is it takes the existing chronic disease, and a good way to look at it is [15:10.120 --> 15:16.440] it pushes it forward on the timeline, okay? So again, let's say the person was 30 years old [15:16.440 --> 15:21.400] and they've got that level of chronic disease. When their body is done fighting the chronic [15:21.400 --> 15:29.960] disease and the virus and COVID-19, then instead of being as sick as they were or are at 30, [15:30.840 --> 15:37.640] now, physiologically speaking, where their chronic disease is at is now like they're 42, [15:38.200 --> 15:45.080] because the body couldn't clamp the effects of the chronic disease down and fight the virus. [15:45.080 --> 15:50.040] So what happened is the chronic disease was getting free. It was running more rampant. [15:50.040 --> 15:59.800] So the chronic disease advances in years, even though the patient may have advanced in weeks or [15:59.800 --> 16:06.360] months. Their chronic disease has advanced in the sense of years, and that's why they're having all [16:06.360 --> 16:15.240] of these, what to them are highly unusual physical ramifications that are referred to [16:15.240 --> 16:22.840] as long haulers. If they had actually lived from 30 to 42, by the time they got to 42, [16:22.840 --> 16:27.800] those symptoms might not be unusual. They might say, oh, yeah, I've been feeling this way for [16:27.800 --> 16:34.520] years now, right? Because it came out over time. But when suddenly they're 30 and the SARS-CoV-2 [16:34.520 --> 16:41.480] virus hits and they develop COVID-19, so suddenly their chronic disease leaps forward 12 years in [16:41.480 --> 16:45.800] a matter of weeks or months, yeah, suddenly it seems like this is completely weird. This [16:45.800 --> 16:51.080] makes no sense. Why am I experiencing all of this? Yeah, because your chronic disease advanced [16:51.080 --> 17:00.280] significantly while you had COVID-19, because the body can't do it all. That's the evil, if you will, [17:01.160 --> 17:07.800] of allowing yourself through lifestyle choices to get chronic disease. Now, there is a small [17:07.800 --> 17:13.480] percentage of people that have chronic disease that it's not a lifestyle thing. For instance, [17:13.480 --> 17:16.360] type 1 diabetes would be an example of that, and there are several others, [17:16.360 --> 17:21.720] immune compromised conditions and so forth. But in America, the vast majority of chronic disease, [17:21.720 --> 17:27.160] the overwhelming amount is lifestyle choices. And now the chicken's coming home to roost with [17:27.160 --> 17:33.880] SARS-CoV-2. So whether the media is trying to scare you with young, healthy people dying of [17:33.880 --> 17:41.640] COVID-19 or trying to terrify you with these long hauler stories, the reality is this is far more [17:41.640 --> 17:51.000] about chronic disease than it is SARS-CoV-2. SARS-CoV-2 acts as the catalyst which dramatically [17:51.000 --> 17:59.800] exacerbates the preexisting chronic disease. And that's the truth of the matter, that it's blowing [17:59.800 --> 18:06.280] my mind that there seems to be a complete blackout in the United States from the medical community [18:06.280 --> 18:15.320] and from the media, a complete blackout on that truth, that this is really this pandemic, [18:15.320 --> 18:21.640] is really a pandemic of chronic disease being exacerbated by a virus.