From uncertainty, disruptions, illness, and losses, an unlikely band of heroes emerges from the unsteady Covid-19 crisis, echoing the spirit of global movements seen in the past, in which brave souls from all walks of life stood their ground to save the lives of others. Never forget that thousands before you have stepped out to make a difference, and you are just as strong and capable. As you make your stand, you may find that you are a leader or even have a talent hidden from yourself. But, most importantly, when you help others, you will never be alone; no matter how impossible the odds may seem, hope rises when we all choose love over fear.
Since the 1940s, our nation has had the utmost respect for the Rosie the Riveters that gave their time, efforts, and heart so that the U.S. could put all of its efforts into saving lives and preventing the expansion of the forces in WWII that allowed the death of millions of innocents. I am familiar with some of the hard WWII stories, as my grandmother was an immigrant from Germany who moved to the U.S. and became a citizen before the war.
Also, During WWII, while my grandfather fought in the war, my grandmother stepped up to become a “Rosie the Riveter” at Keesler AFB in Mississippi. Later she became a Nurse. She was quite a woman, and every one of these women was a hero!
[The resting place of my grandmother and grandfather, who served at Keesler AFB.]
Many of the wartime “Rosie the Riveters” are now remembered for their efforts that should never be forgotten. While I recall stories of the USO dances and I was introduced to the songs of this era by my grandmother, it was the stories of the comradery of these amazing souls that stole my heart. For them to be remembered and recognized through a Congressional Gold Medal seems like a fitting way to document their sisterhood. According to the Smithsonian Magazine,
“For more than 30 years [Mae Krier], the 94-year-old resident of the Philadelphia area, has been promoting awareness of the roughly five million civilian women who served in the defense industry and elsewhere in the commercial sector during the 1940s war years. These working wartime women filled industrial jobs, like fastening rivets on aircraft and welding, vacated by men who left to fight...
Mae Krier has watched members of her World War II generation die over the years, many taking their rich historical stories with them. And she is determined to preserve that history while she is still here to do it.” Found in the May 8th, 2020, article, “Rosie the Riveter Gets Her Due 75 Years After the End of World War II: Forever Changing the nation, the women who worked in American factories during the war have been collectively awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.” https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/rosie-riveter-gets-her-due-75-years-after-end-world-war-ii-180976474/
In our story, we set out to first honor the bravery and history of the WWII Rosie the Riveters; they should never be forgotten for their sacrifice and accomplishments.
While we honor the women of the past who have inspired us, in this story, we now recognize the volunteers who have given up their lives and dropped careers to help the world and save lives in this unprecedented global pandemic. My affectionate name for them is “Rosie the Riveters 2.0.,” or simply “Riveters.” They go by the names of the organizations where they volunteer, but their dedication in this pandemic era should be recognized and brought to the world. To us, they are heroes.
Stronger Together:
In WWII, tiny, little metal Rivets were used to fasten together the components of fighter jets and other machinery. Many aircraft from that era are still held together and operate the same as they did so long ago. Rivets are still used today in metal fabrication and more. Rivets hold up massive buildings to this day.
The “Rivets” and the “Riveters” in this little-known global pandemic humanitarian movement are the many courageous people from all “edges” of the globe who save lives and are also integral to the structure of this global network of unlikely heroes that formed together and who cooperate on national or global projects to help those who have suffered Covid-19 or Covid-19 vaccine illness, injury, or loss of a loved one during the pandemic and who do not get help from the organizations that typically help their ill and injured citizens.
You will learn that this little-known non-partisan, global volunteer work operates many times without a CEO, a vast funding source, a board of directors, advertising budgets, etc. Instead, we are all part of the team, and everyone is simply doing what people do for one another; they help each other in times of need.
I began referring to “my tribe,” whom I work with closely on a regular basis, “Rosies” or “Riveters,” as they selflessly have given up much of their own time to help advocate for the ill and injured and to give them a voice. These words are so dear to my heart, and this tireless and selfless work of the Covid-19 pandemic volunteers brought me to think about my grandmother’s own wartime volunteer efforts. This nickname stems from the heart.
The strong, fearless, and kind souls are made up of more than just women, but the spirit of these volunteer efforts and dedication makes me think of the selfless souls that left all they had in WWII to help save lives. If someone wants to be a volunteer, they don’t have to pick a name, they don’t have to have a resume, and they don’t have to live in a certain area; they just have to want to save lives and be willing to fill in the gaps for those in need after injury, illness or loss of a family member from Covid-19 or the Covid-19 vaccines.
When I originally wrote this, the volunteers that I worked with personally were women, but countless men who are soulful, helpful, and dedicated medical professionals and volunteers have helped in many areas of this humanitarian movement. To me, they are heroes or simply volunteers; but they all deserve recognition.
The Time of Need:
The Covid-19 pandemic brought us to a place in which we came to rely on a volunteer humanitarian workforce to support and assist our independent medical physicians beginning in 2020. Unfortunately, this became necessary when we witnessed the major universities, medical “leaders,” public health organizations, certain medical journals, and media outlets “abandon their posts” in objectively serving its citizens. Their controversial public health emergency declarations and protocols divided our medical community and country when they favored universal protocols and treatments for all people. Many brave world-renowned physicians warned that these protocols were dangerous and, at minimum, not suited for everyone. The fundamental idea that not all people respond to treatment the same way was ignored.
However, most mainstream organizations insisted that every citizen and hospital system worldwide should follow each of the government’s pandemic policies. For the Covid-19 patients, these protocols dictated that patients would not receive care until they were critically ill, even though physicians were taught in their education that viral replication had a chance to be slowed when patients first fell ill. Sadly, we saw hospitals and physicians ignore this age-old knowledge and follow the pandemic “orders” globally, refusing to treat these patients until they were near death. It sounds surreal, but the early Covid-19 death toll kept rising, and as a result, we saw some states enact laws to protect citizens from these federal decrees that harmed patients.
These unprecedented failures meant that our country found itself in a wartime-like crisis where lives would need to be saved by all who were willing to be brave and think independently from the government decrees.
Still, we didn’t know that the death toll and injury had just begun. The public health agencies’ response to these death tolls was to push for Covid-19 vaccines to be developed to “prevent” these hospitalizations. But the unsavory truth is that for this vaccine emergency funding to gain approval, the medications that thousands of physicians found effective for Covid-19 were condemned. As proof, stories of lawsuits and loss found their way into the media, describing numerous legal battles in which families attempted to compel the hospitals to provide these emergency treatments to their loved ones. Many died.
So, with the seemingly “unstoppable” virus, the “vaccines” were promised as an end to the pandemic by these agencies, and their word was “law.” However, we would learn that the vaccines had a tangled history, and years of alarming safety claims on some components were kept from the public. But, almost like a movie trope, most people trusted government agencies.
Sadly, when the Covid-19 vaccines were administered, countless newly vaccine-injured patients fell victim to these rushed and untested vaccines. It was a surreal experience to learn that the hospitals refused to acknowledge the vaccine injuries. But this is not new; we have seen stories like this before, such as the toxins in the water that Erin Brockovich and others exposed in the past. We have a similar fight for the truth to be told, but in this case, it is unprecedented that the ill and injured have to fight to find physicians and hospitals to treat them as well.
The world would now see more illness and injury. For the hospitals and the government to stop the shots, this would admit that the vaccines were dangerous, possibly assigning liability. This time, senators, governors, and world-renowned physicians spoke out, calling for an end to the injections. But they remain in our country even as other countries stopped mandating them.
So vaccine injury was not acknowledged in these settings, and patients went without vital care. Like in the Erin Brockovich story, my family knew the lack of acknowledgment of injury from these toxins, along with countless others who experienced this same lack of care or abandonment when falling ill after their Covid-19 vaccines.
But in this case, it was evident when such a large number of global volunteers, organizations, and advocates stood up to help the independent physicians and vaccine injury patients that vaccine injuries were a new medical crisis seen within the ongoing pandemic.
Although in the pandemic, there wasn’t a “war” to have our soldiers go off to, instead, there was a battle and an odyssey for our healthcare workers, physicians, and medical minds to traverse through in order to learn about a novel virus and to care for the Covid-19 and vaccine injured patients. This work would have to be done without the support of the large agencies and universities that had historically worked with physicians to bring about education and treatment for novel illnesses. This meant that independent physicians would learn about and treat these patients without relying on many traditional forms of information and communication that previously allowed them to network together.
Likewise, at first, many of the ill and injured patients worldwide were left on their own to seek out independent physicians and treatment outside the large medical systems to receive care.
When these agencies that should have cared for us failed us, a band of brave souls stood up to do this work in their place, filling in the gaps. These gaps were left, not as our “men” went to war but as our leaders and medical institutions abandoned our ill and injured. Independent physicians would now work with courageous, new, humanitarian organizations that filled in the place of health departments, and really the FDA, medical journals, and more.
A Novel Education and a Novel Approach:
In our story, in Dr. B’s quiet, independent practice, he sees his regular patients during the day and Covid-19 patients after hours. Then, in early 2022, shortly after I came to know Dr. B, we began responding as a team to patients who made calls or pleas for help on social media as they experienced unusual symptoms after their Covid-19 vaccinations. We did this work together as an independent volunteer team. The question was, why were their physicians not helping them?
Soon, I contacted the newly formed larger advocate groups (like the FLCCC, React-19, and Real not Rare), connecting patients to these groups so that they gained access to information or referrals as needed. Dr. B was added to their list of providers as he would see both Covid-19 and vaccine-injured patients (which was rare at the time). But Dr. B and I had not yet found our true role in the advocacy work yet; we didn’t really know how many volunteers or patient advocates there were, but we knew they were there. We could not connect on Facebook or Twitter as they censored discussions about vaccine injury.
Late in 2022, only a relative few physicians treat vaccine-injured patients, so Dr. B is regularly presented with patients in these emerging fields. He described treating the vaccine injured as an education. As he began to see patterns in the vaccine-injured cases and developed protocols for these patients in his care, we both worked to bring this information to others and to get the information online as best we could. He now networks with doctors worldwide, but again, sharing this information was difficult for most of 2022 as it was banned on mass media.
In this journey, I know that I, too, gained an education as the mother to a vaccine-injured son, and in time, others sought to learn from all three of our experiences. Every experience in this emerging field of Covid-19 vaccine-injured treatment was vital to bring to the world of medicine so others could learn from it and learn how it was treated, diagnosed, and managed by the patients themselves before they could obtain their medical care.
Our pandemic education certainly grew to more than what I imagined at the onset of this work. But, of course, this was part of something much bigger than us; for every effort we made, even though we had not yet encountered them directly, we knew that thousands of others were doing the same work and that we all had the same goal: to save lives and to bring out the truth of the pandemic. But direct contact with the media and a larger group of medical professionals was still a struggle. Media censorship and gaslighting still prevented conversations on these matters from flowing freely. Almost three years into the pandemic, it is still difficult for many of these patients to find treatment and be heard in the media, but they are not alone.
Much like Rosie the Riveters, we all were learning new skills and teaching others at a rapid rate so that lives could be saved. It became clear that what we were doing in the larger scope of our work was to embark on this new field of study as the pandemic was new information to us all. In nine months, Dr. B and I exchanged hundreds of news and medical journal articles, case studies, and countless other informational medical videos, webinars, etc.
We shared our information with many others, and busy professionals volunteered their time to give insight and feedback on our writing. To think we were just “nothing burgers” (as one of my well-known doctor friends calls herself) in all of this, but to realize that together, all of the volunteers and physicians were doing this similar work. In doing so, these groups have handled nearly all of the vaccine injured, related innovation, and research in these novel infections and injuries. These “nothing burgers” successfully did the work the major hospitals and medical universities should have been doing.
Even pandemic-focused medical conferences began allowing a broader attendance and audience than medical conferences had known before. A spirit of learning and working together can be seen in countless ways in this movement.
Every day has been a day of learning and sharing information around the world for us. Dr. B says, “We share with anyone that wants to hear.” And for any information we came across that needed to be heard urgently, we wrote to media, doctors, or politicians so that they were aware of these issues right away. We were a small team, one of maybe tens of thousands worldwide, but we had to believe we were making an impact. Even though, at first, we did not know the organizations we do now, and we didn’t know how many people were a part of this humanitarian movement, we had faith that we were part of a global campaign for humanity. Through it all, we have all had one goal: to save lives.
Getting the Word Out:
Early in the pandemic and for over two years, doctors, medical professionals, and families who posted pandemic Covid-19 treatment information or vaccine injury stories, news articles, or journal entries online almost always suffered a ban on their social media accounts.
When physicians and organizations discovered new information on the illness or treatments, the data (such as when a pattern of adverse events became noticeable in the patients seeking medical care after their vaccines, etc.) was shared as medicine has done throughout history. But doctors had become accustomed to using online sources for sharing this data with other doctors that were no longer available to them, or that became severely restrictive. Due to this extensive censorship of information that was not “sanctioned” by the media sources, this information could not be traditionally exchanged through medical journals; many times, merely posting a case study on social media was banned.
Instead, much of the medical information was shared online in untraditional formats such as SubStacks, and podcasts, then, later, on social media when Twitter began to allow medical speech again in late 2022. We also had independent news sources such as the Epoch Times and Video channel sites such as Rumble and more. Unfortunately, for most, YouTube censored and removed videos on these medical cases and their information.
But the proof of the shift of this idea of “all hands on deck” or “Rosie the Riveters” style cooperation can be seen when the physicians needed to share this information and get it to these alternative and independent news sources.
As advocates, researchers, writers, or volunteers, we shared this information similarly to how historians and anthropologists describe news spreading through tribes of the past. Each member of the “tribe” passed on information from small group to small group. In our case, during the pandemic, each group also reached out to the media connections that we had.
The advocates and volunteers also set up or facilitated zoom calls and later Twitter spaces and other independent rooms and media where doctors and those who sought to learn about Covid-19 symptoms or vaccine injury could learn and share information. In addition, several alternative methods were used to share this vital information, groundbreaking treatments, research, and more with the medical community. These efforts created an independent, humanitarian, volunteer life-saving crew that I call Rosie the Riveters 2.0.
With the amount of information being shared on the few “alternative” news and media sources that aired stories on Covid-19 treatments or vaccine injuries, it was obvious that there was a global effort bigger than could be seen online. Our little media sources were not as established as the legacy media; still, they saw mass viewership on these platforms. The vital medical data that brought the news of treatments and the efforts to combat the Covid-19 virus were posted in numerous places throughout the alternative media- verse instead of being found on a few centralized, large media outlets.
What this grassroots movement lacked in centralized distribution, it made up for in its ability to find its target audience far and wide with an impressive impact. The medical data from organizations like the WCH, the FLCCC, or Steve Kirsch’s Vaccine Safety Research Foundation each shared studies or statistics with the input and expertise of world-renowned physicians, researchers, laboratories, and more. Each brought information to the medical world for review and consideration. Their efforts were vital for sharing this information that mainstream and mass media had censored.
They developed a “delegate” group that coordinates the countless advocates on the same goal, to save lives. Brilliant.
Pre-pandemic, doctors relied on their medical journals and freedom of communication with their peers for medical knowledge. They could also speak freely with the press as needed in vital matters, as they had with the H1N1 virus and other health outbreaks in the past. But in this Covid-19 pandemic, many of those resources were tainted or missing; many had been bought and sold by back door deals, as later evidenced by major pharmaceutical company sponsorships revealed by investigative journalism.
Large groups, such as the FLCCC, and similar organizations like the BIRD organization and the WCH in the UK and the CCCA in Canada, were physician-led or were founded or co-founded by physicians; these humanitarian groups emerged to provide advocacy, information, and referrals (at first) for Covid-19 patients or pandemic issues. Unfortunately, many of these legacy media platforms referred to the efforts of these doctor-led organizations as “fringe” and “right-wing,” attempting to claim they were politically extreme. On the contrary, all are non-partisan.
Real Not Rare and React-19 were then formed to provide invaluable information and referrals for vaccine injured. Most of the Covid-19 groups also began helping the vaccine injured as well. These groups tell the stories of the vaccine-injured patients to teach others, and they refer these patients to doctors who will treat them. React-19 is now working with research teams and other sources to study and find answers for Covid-19 vaccine injury. What is remarkable is that behind each of these organizations are countless, vital smaller volunteer organizations that formed throughout the pandemic as well, and they all work together to help the ill and the injured.
Some of these organizations came about as it is understood that the public health agencies did not provide treatment recommendations or advocacy for Covid-19 patients when they first fell ill. Additionally, there has been no recognition by our government agencies or large health institutions for Covid-19 “vaccine” injured to date. As a result, these patients have been exclusively served by independent doctors and the volunteers that stepped up to help them when they first fell ill and no one else would.
Stepping Outside of the Box:
As many were gaining an education on Covid-19, sars-COV-2, Covid-19 “vaccines,” mRNA, and spike protein, I focused my research and investigations on the LNPs and the PEGylated lipids. I learned of life-threatening toxins in the vaccine’s LNP shell and took this information to Dr. B. We knew we needed a way to get this information out to a broad audience. We were among the countless groups that needed to bring their findings to others. Little did we know that the faith we had; would soon reveal the larger movement of volunteers that support doctors like Dr. B and similar work to what we were doing.
This work would lead us to learn of the larger, humble movement taking place in telephone calls and Zoom meetings in the living rooms of some of the most dynamic people in this movement. In 2022, I connected with women who volunteered in Canada, working with Covid-19 and vaccine injury patients and in the larger Canadian groups as behind-the-scenes support. The way they work is similar to how Dr. B and I work. In this case, in Canada, two doctors work with a writer and an advocate, and they work to document the stories of ill and injured pandemic patients (and the stories of the professionals who treat them). In Canada, for the vaccine injured, they also informed the patients of the larger and well-known advocacy group there and connected them. The doctors also made referrals to physicians that could help them in their area or made sure they had appointments to be seen, etc.
The LNP research work that I had been doing with Dr. B was unique. It gained the attention of their medical group for three reasons, one, not many people were presenting the dangers of the LNP lipids in the ‘vaccines”, and two, my work was born from the determination of a mother whose son was severely vaccine injured by these lipids, and this meant that parents could recognize that they had power in fighting back and educating themselves and others about these dangers. The third reason is that my son’s case was diagnosed as a vaccine injury. His physician (Dr. B) could see in the blood testing via the antibodies that his body had a significant reaction to the LNP lipids in the Covid-19 vaccine shell. This novel information needed to be heard to save lives, and the advocacy groups knew it.
In this same week, through this work and our story of the mother, son, and doctor who were compelled to save lives, I made a heartfelt connection with the world-renowned Dr. Tess Lawrie. This connection and her efforts will forever change lives, and that was the point of our meeting and her taking the time to learn about our efforts and our story.
At that time, a few doctors began talking more openly about Covid-19 vaccine injuries. Shortly after, Dr. Lawrie graciously published my research with our shared goal of saving lives.
Then doctors began to write me, learn about my work and our work, and Dr. B’s diagnosis and treatment of my son’s vaccine injury. Finally, doctors began to learn from this work and Dr. B’s work to help the vaccine injured as more vaccine-injured patients found him and sought help. And now, this life-saving information and story can be heard by countless others, making its way around the world.
Media outlets started to contact us, and Dr. B and I began speaking publicly on vaccine injury, the LNP and lipid shell, and PEGylated lipids. This took place because of the bravery of a world-renowned doctor who had the same goal that we did, to save lives. I don’t know if Dr. Lawrie would want to be considered a pandemic “Rosie the Riveter,” but she absolutely filled a gap that kept this vital information from being seen by those who could save even more lives.
Soon, many more physicians began to be heard on the LNP lipid dangers and issues seen in the Covid-19 injections “vaccines.” This opened up a conversation that has brought more and more doctors to look into these issues and learn from each other. Currently, the LNP lipids’ unknown dangers in reproduction are being studied and researched by many professionals. It wasn’t that no one was talking about the potential dangers in the lipids before our information came out; it was that specific information we knew had not yet come out. Because of the human element involved, many could relate to what was being said. Most importantly, by physicians bravely bringing this vaccine injury and lipid toxin conversation forward, it opened the door a little wider for other doctors and vaccine injured to follow suit.
Meeting The ”Riveters:”
Due to this course of events, in late 2022, more volunteers who worked behind the scenes in these humanitarian pandemic efforts reached out to me. When Dr. Lawrie published my work, they quickly befriended me and introduced Dr. B and me to their world of nonpartisan, humanitarian advocacy that most would hope exists in this pandemic era.
Meeting this large group of unbelievable advocates who work tirelessly, effectively, and quietly for humanity has been a joy and honor. We did not know that there was such an extensive, coordinated effort, we had faith that it was out there, but we hadn’t met them until this point in our collective stories.
Most of these women whom we met at the end of 2022 worked within larger organized groups, but what they formed is almost like a “UN” or delegate group that helped connect all of the larger groups, the independents, the smaller groups, the media, journalists, physicians, and more. They developed this “delegate” group that coordinates the countless advocates working on the same goal: saving lives. Brilliant.
These fantastic humans help Covid-19 patients, Remdesivir injured, vaccine injured, help the bereaved, and more. They all coordinate and help each other as needed, doing this work together. To help share this information and medical data, some work with the media, create media, organize Zoom meetings, prepare the injured and ill for interviews, and connect them with media outlets so that the injured and the physicians have a voice. Their goal is to save lives by bringing this information to the public.
P.S. The National WWII Rosie the Riveter is Celebrated on March 21st.
Some work with the media, create videos, organize Zoom meetings, prepare the injured and ill for interviews, and find media outlets for the injured and/or physicians to have a voice where they would not be censored. Their goal is to save lives by having this information seen and brought to the public eye.
This particular Team Humanity “group” welcomed me and Dr. B with open arms and began helping further to bring Dr. B’s work, my research, and our story to the public. They networked to have us featured on media outlets like Steve Kirsch’s VSRF channel and Mike Dakkak’s podcast (whom we had not yet encountered after meeting some media outlets and making connections through Dr. Lawrie).
Numerous vaccine-injured individuals have been able to speak their stories to media and journalists due to the work of this group and the larger and smaller groups they are connected with. Likewise, numerous doctors and patients have been connected. They are no longer alone and are no longer voiceless and censored.
With the ability to bring the truth forward, we have also been able to speak about the insidious nature of the gaslighting of ivermectin and the insidious hospital deaths, which Dr. B witnessed early in the pandemic in his work. We have been able to show that with love for others in our hearts, we can expose these issues and reclaim our medical communities through these informational and advocacy efforts.
One of my dearest friends, Kim Witczak (global drug safety advocate), is in this “Rosie the Riveters” group. She is a powerhouse in this movement of truth. She has spent nineteen years exposing the pharmaceutical industry’s failures (which has helped to bring the research forward about the toxins and dangers in mRNA injection (vaccine) LNP shells as we speak on it together).
Dr. B is also able to speak directly with more physicians who speak the truth on these pandemic matters. Being able to talk about the truth about these medical and pandemic issues is a subject that each physician who works with these advocacy groups cares about deeply.
The (pandemic era) Rosie the Riveters is one of the most influential organizations that you may not ever have heard of.
Many of these volunteers quit their jobs or chose not to return to work. They spend their days doing advocacy and referral work. Some are medical researchers and writers. Some are volunteers in the larger advocacy groups, and some work with attorneys or media outlets, etc. Many also hold full-time jobs and do this work in their “free time.”
They are effective, and all are tirelessly determined. Some are medical or clinical researchers, some are what I refer to as medical detectives, and some are “tech geniuses” that help us navigate the online world. Many have organizational and people skills that rival Fortune 500 CEOs. I see them as better-suited leaders than CEOs, as they have exceptional hearts.
A Warm Welcome:
I was pleasantly overwhelmed by their huge response to us at first. We laugh about it now, but I might have wondered what the catch was. There is none. The extraordinary, quiet, behind-the-scenes volunteer efforts that we have learned of in history in past global crises are alive and well in this group and many more groups we have now come to know.
Before this time, Dr. B and I mainly had been giving information to others. He was also called upon to help many of the ill and injured by a couple of the larger doctor-led advocate groups. Still, we didn’t have a group we belonged to with a developed network of resources and connections with media. This connected us with others to quickly share information with many groups and physicians simultaneously.
With the efforts of all the humanitarian organizations, physicians, and many ill, injured, and bereaved families have now been able to testify in hearings (and more) to bring the truth to light. Many are also included in documentaries due to the efforts of the volunteers. Some of these astounding volunteers even worked with a Los Angeles film producer to help promote and support the full-length vaccine injury movie called “Anectdotals.”
One of the most important messages of the humanitarian and volunteer groups is also a shared theme in this movie. They both speak to say, “These medical issues are not political issues; these are humanitarian issues.” Red and Blue politics are not a part of this world of advocacy. Protecting free medical speech and helping others is. Everyone does the work, knowing this is what we are supposed to be doing. Helping the pandemic ill, injured, or wronged to regain their health, lives, and dignity are the goals of this amazing group of volunteers that I affectionately call “Riveters.”
Much like the WWII Rosie the Riveters (like my grandmother) who left their roles to join the war effort, these souls have done the same; an area of humanitarian need arose in the pandemic, and they stepped up to do the work. It is as simple as that.
Now that this group welcomes Dr. B and me, one of the “Riveters” I speak with often jokes, “Isn’t it better to work with a team now”?
Yes, my dear friend, it is.
It is an honor that we aim to uphold and that we can look to and assure the world that for each of those that brought chaos into the pandemic, there are more good people working to bring reason and love into this era in order to heal our world that was broken by greed and ego.
There are no words I can write that convey the gratitude and admiration that Dr. B and I have for these pandemic-era volunteers and the doctors and professionals they work with who give their time and love to save lives. This work inspires humanity and breaks the chains of division; we are fortunate to witness this unconditional love in action.
The writer is not a doctor, and even though guest writers may be medical professionals, the information in this document and this publication is not a substitution for personal or individual medical care, treatment, medical advice, or diagnosis. Always contact your own medical care provider for individual care and consultation. This document does not diagnose medical conditions, treat illnesses, or prescribe medicine or drugs. Any information contained in this document, related links, or attachments is not a substitute for seeking adequate medical care, diagnosis, and/or treatment from your own medical doctor. Nurses, & "Papa Bears,"... your story is coming soon!
Please consider supporting my writing work/care for my vaccine-injured son as he seeks his college education.
Planet Lock Down video series on Rumble, starting at around January 19, 2021. I stumbled on it I cant even remember how, but fall of 2020 is when I started coming across several of these people in the videos that spoke to my instincts that something wasn't right. I couldnt wait for the next video to be released by an ignored expert, it really is a chronological learning oppurtunity of the Pandemic. I remember feeling a heavy heart of "fear" not my own but society and even remember remarking critically on the fear being pushed (read of listent to Jay W Richards on fear)...once Mattias Desmet - Psychology of Mass Formation came out to give context to what happened was also a turning point of understanding the real war we were in. With all this it was never hard to follow the FLCCC or CHD for advice. I have read or watched videos since early fall of 2020 at roughly 2-4 hours a day on all topics...if that isn't a critical thinking education I do not know what is. My subscriptions on Rumble and Substack are as follows: The Highwire, VaccineSafetyResearchFoundation/Steve Kirsch, Matt Ehret (for the global government history perceptive) A Midwestern Doctor, Robert Malone, neweest addition is Dr Naomi Wolf...this keeps me very busy....I have insider understanding what happened at the college athlete levels with two division 1 athletes...one graduating 2021 and one this spring 2023 (both unvaxxed, and what they endured) they were my reason for all of it, they were the reason for my deep dive....my youngest when he said to me "mom your not a dr!! I replied "but I never let you die on my watch, I have 18 years of credit, I am the only one in this world that is 100% on your side" trust me it was a FIGHT, he still suffers from knowing all of his friends succumb to the pressure of the vaccines, its a topic we still cant talk about only agree to agree not to get vaccinated... your story touched me because of the mother/son fight for their survival.
@amothersanthem you are a true warrior! We are so proud to call you a friend, and a fellow advocate. Thank you for taking our call, trusting us to help tell your story, and helping us tell our stories.