Episodes
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Roman Bystrianyk has been on my podcast many times over the years. He co-authored Dissolving Illusions, the book that effectively changed my opinion on all vaccines — leading to my son being completely unvaccinated.
His co-author, Suzanne Humphries, appeared on Joe Rogan in early 2025.
Roman chatted to me about his new book.
➡️ Please go to my website—jermwarfare.com—for video episodes and more stuff in general.
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Ken McCarthy has written a few books on various health matters, and this time he's back with a deep dive into the shadowy history of the hepatitis B vaccine.
Right off the bat: avoid all vaccines.
This particular vaccine is based on junk science — no actual virus, no clinical trials, no nothing. And it's targeted at mothers and babies.
This vaccine, like all vaccines, is a pharmaceutical scam.
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Missing episodes?
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Ray McGovern was an analyst at the CIA for almost 30 years. He briefed seven US presidents, starting with JFK, the same year he was assassinated (by the CIA, as confirmed by Ray).
It's not easy finding a guest who not only worked for the CIA, but worked there this long.
Ray chatted to me about JFK, Israel, China, Russia, and all the bad stuff the CIA was involved in.
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I've known Steve Falconer for years. We became friends during the Cover era, after I watched a superb video of his in which he argued that viruses don't exist and, therefore, that vaccines are harmful.
He's a great filmmaker and chatted to me about his newest massive multi-part documentary, Apocalypse Infinity, which breaks apart the lesser-known history of the world, showing who's in control of everything. (And no, it's not the Jews.)
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As an African, I would love to see the continent on which I live prosper. I live in South Africa and, yes, our country is the most developed in Africa, but we're still an African country, and that means massive amounts of corruption, broken infrastructure, crime, and a life less ordinary.
But it's my home, and I have no intention of leaving.
In our weekly UK Column banter, Mike, Charles, and I chatted about why it's a good idea for people to learn more about Africa, and why Chinese investment is superior to Western investment — which we're already seeing.
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Kimberly Biss is an OBGYN with over 30 years' experience in the medical industry, and has never seen this many miscarriages since the rollout of the Covid jab.
Not just miscarriages, but stillbirths too. She says it's next level, and obviously related to the vaccine.
I recorded this conversation with her in 2024, but want to share it again, as it will be relevant for years to come.
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I love thinking about the pyramids and how they were built (and by whom). Nobody actually knows. And I absolutely don't believe the mainstream narrative.
Roger Cunningham, AKA the The Ethical Skeptic, has been researching this for a long time, and makes the following arguments:
the established timeline is wrong by thousands of years;they were built by advanced people;the truth is being covered up; andthe pyramids ended up underwater for centuries, following a cataclysmic event.How can you not find that fascinating?
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PD Lawton was on my podcast a few days ago, chatting about violence against Christians in Nigeria. Her knowledge of Africa is so good that I invited her back to discuss a topic nobody knows about: a high-speed railway network being built across Africa.
One reason nobody knows about it is that it's part of the Belt and Road Initiative (which is Chinese), and Western media doesn't like that. Another reason is that it's an uplifting, positive story, and people tend to consume negativity and doom-scroll.
📺 The video is on YouTube.
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Todd Hayen is a psychotherapist who has been a regular on my podcast for years. We mostly riff about abstract nonsense, but I enjoy it, which is why he is a regular.
His Substack is called Shrew Views.
This time, we chatted about gay marriage and whether or not AI is an existential threat.
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We're in an information war. In fact, we're in multiple information wars at once — a helpful term for it is 'poly-war'. In other words, we're being attacked from many sides: health, mental, and physical.
It's why I do what I do — to fit the many puzzle pieces together, try to see the bigger picture, and figure out what's true.
UK Column's Mike Robinson and Charles Malet joined me for our weekly banter, where we threw around ideas on how to effectively fight all these wars.
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Chris Waldburger wrote a book in which he argues that Nietzsche and Christianity can be reconciled, and that Nietzsche's antagonism towards the faith is far more complex than the cartoon version of "God is dead.
It's kinda ironic.
Nietzsche claimed he was an atheist, yet spoke about God more than any Christian.
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I recorded this in 2024, but am sharing it again because, while I am not entirely persuaded by the arguments made, Kent Hovind is someone I've wanted on my podcast for a very long time. I greatly admire him and his passion, and his sense of humour is contagious.
In short, he argues that the Bible is literally true, that God created everything in six days, 6,000 years ago, and that dinosaurs lived alongside humans before the Flood.
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Another myth-busting conversation coming up! 🔥
This time, PD Lawton explains why there is no genocide of Christians in Nigeria, and why both Christians and Muslims are indeed being brutally killed — but it's not a religious war.
It's a geopolitical war, backed by Western interests and the very corrupt Nigerian government, with groups like Boko Haram serving as useful tools of destabilisation.
It's about what's under the ground.
The 'Christian genocide' narrative is a distraction.
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This is a topic that gets pushback from many folks who see themselves as 'conservative' or 'libertarian' or whatever.
Their argument goes something like this: collectivism leads to communism, so individualism leads to capitalism or freedom.
The problem is that they're making a rookie binary error. Life is a complex system — it's not a zero-sum game. Putting family before yourself, for example, is collectivism, since it focuses on a group rather than an individual. I certainly put my family first. Does that mean I'm endorsing communism? No.
Richard Storey attempts to explain this.
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This is a follow-up to a conversation Simon Roche and I had a few days ago about the Soweto Uprising of 1976, now known as Youth Day. We discussed the morally indefensible decisions made by the South African government at the time — and how Soviet and Jewish interests then exploited the event for gain that had nothing to do with South Africa's interests.
A lot of people were angry after listening to the episode, so this is a response to the triggered.
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In this week's UK Column banter session between me, Mike Robinson, and Charles Malet, we chat about what is meant by the term 'free speech' and when, if at all, it is acceptable to restrict people from speaking freely.
As it happens, there are indeed times when it's okay to restrict speech — in a cinema, for example. Do you want to pay money to watch a movie and, instead, listen to the people next to you chatting about what they had for lunch? I pointed out that I won't allow people to come into my home and swear at my family.
Sadly, it seems that some people don't do well with absolute freedom of speech and prefer to be chaotic trolls who ruin it for those around them.
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Cynthia Chung is an amazing researcher, writer, and filmmaker, and is currently writing a mammoth series on Substack, The True Origins of China's 'Social Credit System', which will later become a documentary, in which she exposes social credit scores as a Western invention, not a Chinese one, as we are led to believe.
This matters a lot because we constantly hear about China leading the way in technocracy and why it's a model for Western countries, but the reality is an inversion of what we think we are told.
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HIV/AIDS does not exist.
It's a hoax.
More specifically, according to biochemist David Rasnick, who has been researching this stuff since the '80s, there is no evidence of any virus causing AIDS. To be clear, AIDS does exist, and it's pretty much a collection of known symptoms such as severe weight loss, chronic diarrhoea, recurring fever, persistent fatigue, swollen lymph nodes, and opportunistic infections like pneumonia and tuberculosis, but all of it is caused by environmental factors.
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David Rasnick, a biochemist of many decades, argues that cancer is caused by aneuploidy — an abnormal number or balance of chromosomes — not by individual gene mutations as mainstream medicine claims.
David was on my podcast a few days ago, where he discussed his decades' worth of research in both AIDS and cancer. However, it proved too much for an hour, so he's returned to focus solely on cancer.
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In this weekly banter between UK Column's Mike Robinson, Charles Malet, and me, we discuss ways to navigate what's true and what isn't in both mainstream and alternative media, noting that just because alternative media often counters mainstream narratives, doesn't automatically make it true.
And just because something is said in mainstream media, doesn't automatically make it false.
In other words, always do your own research and don't blindly trust any of them.
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