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A heartfelt, well-articulated interview.

For anyone unclear about what "informed consent" really means, this is a legal requirement (look up: Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014: Regulation 11) The Care Quality Commission (CQC) who regulates the Health & Social Care sector explains this regulation by saying " ....information about the proposed care and treatment must be provided in a way that they (the patient) can understand. This should include information about the risks, complications and any alternatives. A person with the necessary knowledge and understanding of the care and treatment should provide this information so that they can answer any questions about it to help the person consent to it". The CQC also states "Consent procedures must make sure that people are not pressured into giving consent and, where possible, plans must be made well in advance to allow time to respond to people's questions and provide adequate information"

In the UK, we also have something called the Yellow Card system which is supposedly designed to make medical products (medicines, vaccines, devices and the like) safer through the reporting of adverse effects. Yet despite the number of reports received (which likely represent only a tiny fraction of the whole), we are told time and time again that "correlation does not mean causation". So how long exactly do we have to wait until the "correlation examiners" reach a conclusion, one way or other? Because as yet, no one is actually denying causation.

For anyone who thinks that the Yellow Card system is a rapidly responsive safety system, I'd ask you to consider Vioxx, a commonly prescribed pain medication which was first marketed in 1999. It was on the market for five years before it was withdrawn for causing a huge number of heart attacks and deaths. And if this is not sufficient to convince you otherwise, there is the case of sodium valproate, a medication for epilepsy which has been in use since the 1960s. This drug is associated with a significant increase in the risk of birth defects and neurodevelopmental disabilities and there have also been concerns about impairment of male fertility. Yet, it is only very recently that recommendations have been made to try to further limit its use in people under the age of 55.

In answer to my previous question about how long we may need to wait for the "correlation examiners" to draw their conclusions on the Covid vaccine safety signals, if these examples are anything to go by I suspect that we could be waiting for a long time yet!

So Ahmad's concerns about the safety of these vaccines and the lack of informed consent have always been perfectly valid. Yet, along with the minority of other healthcare professionals who have been willing to share these concerns on the harshest of battlegrounds (aka social media), he has been "rewarded" by the destruction of his career and livelihood.

Most of us will have to rely upon a doctor at some point in our lives. So if like me, you believe that we need doctors with integrity who are prepared to stand up and voice their concerns in the interests of patient safety, then I would urge you to support people like Ahmad Malik if you are able.

But make no mistake, financially ruined though he may be for now, Ahmad is wealthy in all the things that matter: in the love and support of his beautiful family, in his honesty and compassion for humankind and in his zest and enthusiasm for life.

Thanks Debbi for hosting this interview.

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if everyone had stood up like you did, this would not have happened, not the disaster of you being out of a job, and not the millions dead and harmed of the jabs. I lived on 450 bucks a month for 3 years before I could retire. You are a brave person and things will get better. Your children will be able to look up at you as an honest person.

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Yeah, this was the second time I saw you, after the chat with Ivor Cummins - which was too free form to be called an interview. Bravo for displaying such authenticity and humanity. I know we are winning when fresh heroes keep emerging and restoring my faith that change i a process that happens by painful degrees.

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This was an amazing interview and I shared it with as many people as I could including on FB to my normie friends. We love and support UK Column too and I met all of them on the London marches. Although, I can only watch it in small doses because it can be quite depressing. Debbi Evans is wonderful 💕💕

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I am a new subscriber. I thoroughly enjoyed this interview. It is too bad doctors and other medical professionals didn’t band together and walk off the job at the beginning of the Covid madness. It would have ended the tyranny overnight.

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Love a bit of Debs; she's so knowledgeable, articulate and empathetic.

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You paint a very grim dystopian image of modern medicine and Hospital care but that said, I believe it all, 100% of it. Trust no one and question everything but remarkably very few people do.

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Have just stayed listening to this and am already tearful - I've been listening to such stories for 3 years, but suddenly feel utterly grief-stricken. I am one who will not go near the NHS and any healthcare and medical professionals silent to the convid horrors, regardless of the consequences. On the whole, I feel people need to take responsibility for their own health, and that as we move into personal sovereignty, our need for healthcare will become a lot rarer and thus the whole system a great deal slimmer. It is only doctors, who have stood for medical ethics and bodily autonomy, such as Ahmad and Dave Cartland that should still be standing at this point. And I feel that regardless of the efforts of the GMC and its culpable compatriots, these will be the doctors who work with us. It just feels so tragic that all standing in light, have to suffer so. Enormous gratitude to each and everyone across society, standing unwaveringly in truth.

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Ahmad, this is one of the best interviews I’ve seen. You were brilliant. Articulate, passionate and honest. I think it’s an interview that the normies could watch. It would be brilliant if you could go back and do a part2. I absolutely love your podcasts, but it was so lovely to hear you and your voice/opinions for a change. Loved it 💕

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