Episode 433: May 12-13, 2020
Dan and Jordan discuss a particularly frustrating couple days on The Alex Jones Show.
Topics covered include:
Alex thinks that amateur astronomers discover most of the Near Earth Objects, and that professionals do not do much. This is definitely not true.
Alex claims that Mark Cuban was threatened with indictment because he was going to distribute Loose Change. The emails Cuban received were unrelated to his insider trading case, which had nothing to do with Loose Change. The guy just seemed to hate Mark Cuban.
Also, the director of Loose Change doesn’t care much for Alex, and isn’t as much of a conspiracy theorist anymore.
Alex claims that he was offered the starring role in Guardians of the Galaxy, but turned it down. This is a completely absurd claim, for a hundred different reasons.
Explanation from the WHO about the roots of the misrepresentation that there is hCG in vaccines
Alex’s primary source paper, “HCG Found In WHO Tetanus Vaccine In Kenya Raises Concern In the Developing World,” is a bad paper. It’s authors have a history of having papers about vaccines retracted, and the paper itself is not good.
Alex claims that Bill Gates was thrown out of India and Pakistan. He in fact has not been thrown out of India, nor Pakistan. These are both lies Alex is reporting.
Alex lies about how no meat-packing plant employees are dying from Covid-19. At least one employee at the specific Triumph Food plant that he brings up repeatedly has died.
Alex references a 1985 paper about a birth control vaccine that he claims is an instance of the Globalists putting sterilants into vaccine, and that Anthony Fauci was involved. There doesn’t appear to be a connection, and his interpretation is incorrect.
Alex claims hCG comes from the ovaries and testicles. This does not appear to be true.
Alex’s First Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is a 1993 article about Gursaran Talwar’s research into a birth control vaccine.
Alex’s Second Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is an article in Trends in Immunology about research into birth control shots.
Alex’s Third Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is about some dark moments in American history that involve sterilization, but still is unrelated to the claims he’s presenting.
Alex’s Fourth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is about sterilizations in India, but is unrelated to the larger point Alex is trying to present.
Alex’s Fifth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is just about a government reorganization in India, where the state took on the responsibility of some of the funding for programs that the Gates foundation had previously been funding. The Gates Foundation stayed involved in the program afterwards, and according to Alex, Gates should have been thrown out of India at this point already.
Alex’s Sixth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is just another article, from the July 1997 issue of Human Reproduction Update, about Gursaran Talwar’s research into birth control shots.
Alex's Seventh Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is a product of the Population Research Institute, which is disqualifying on its face.
Alex’s Eighth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is just Alex saying “contraceptive vaccines,” which is meaningless.
Alex’s Ninth Headline doesn’t make his argument. He just says “Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction” and pretends it’s something he’s read. It’s not something he could read, it is an entire organization, so I have no idea what text he’s even referring to.
Alex’s Tenth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is an article about opposition to birth control shots in India. Alex claims that this 1998 article involves the HPV vaccine, which did not exist until 2006.
Alex’s Eleventh Headline doesn’t make his argument. There are two articles titled “Antifertility Vaccines” on Science Direct. One of them is just the same article as his Second Headline, which he already cited when it was posted on a different website. The other is a 1989 article by Gursaran Talwar about his research into birth control shots.
Alex’s Twelfth Headline doesn’t make his argument. I think it’s something about ink cartridges making you sterile, but I have no idea what he’s talking about.
Alex’s Thirteenth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is just the original paper from the Open Access Library Journal that started all of this.
Alex’s Fourteenth Headline doesn’t make his argument. It is an op-ed in the Sunday Guardian which miscites an article in Nature Medicine about Gursaran Talwar’s continuing research into birth control shots, even though he was older than 90.
Alex’s argument about Globalists putting sterilants into the vaccines has not been made in any way, this was a complete failure on his part.
Alex’s guest, Rich Granville, organized a very-clearly QAnon themed conference, then got mad at Mother Jones for calling it that.