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David Icke

Killed By The Pfizer Shot - Parents Of Eighteen Year Old Trista Martin Speak Out

This week on Gareth Icke Tonight.

Allen And Taylor Martin's 18-year-old daughter, Trista, was killed by the Pfizer BioNTech Covid Injection on November 9th, 2022. The Martins will be joining us to tell us about their campaign for justice.

Best selling author, and investigative filmmaker Mikki Willis, talks to us about his latest film Plandemic - The Musical, as well as a documentary called ‘Bad Medicine’, that explores how under Covid protocols, hospitals because anything but places for healthcare.

Tony Arterburn, a former U.S. Army Paratrooper and World Champion Powerlifter, is the founder and CEO of Wise Wolf Gold & Silver Exchange. He’s here to talk about the importance of precious metals in a time of economic instability.

And modern day mystic, Mikael Ananda is on the line from Sweden to talk about his book The Awakened Warrior, which he says contains the keys to navigating the Matrix and pursuing a spiritual life.

That’s Gareth Icke Tonight, Thursday 7pm UK on https://www.ickonic.com

Duration:
27m
Broadcast on:
11 Jul 2024
Audio Format:
aac

This week on Gareth Icke Tonight.

Allen And Taylor Martin's 18-year-old daughter, Trista, was killed by the Pfizer BioNTech Covid Injection on November 9th, 2022.
The Martins will be joining us to tell us about their campaign for justice.

Best selling author, and investigative filmmaker Mikki Willis, talks to us about his latest film Plandemic - The Musical, as well as a documentary called ‘Bad Medicine’, that explores how under Covid protocols, hospitals because anything but places for healthcare.

Tony Arterburn, a former U.S. Army Paratrooper and World Champion Powerlifter, is the founder and CEO of Wise Wolf Gold & Silver Exchange. He’s here to talk about the importance of precious metals in a time of economic instability.

And modern day mystic, Mikael Ananda is on the line from Sweden to talk about his book The Awakened Warrior, which he says contains the keys to navigating the Matrix and pursuing a spiritual life.

That’s Gareth Icke Tonight, Thursday 7pm UK on https://www.ickonic.com

[music] Hello and welcome to Garethite tonight. Do you remember when a few folks started suggesting that maybe, just maybe, someone was tampering with the weather? Of course, they were laughed at, they were mocked, marginalised, fact-checked by the mainstream media. Now, that same mainstream media later, very quietly, admitted that, yeah, all right, they do do that after major flooding killed 20 people in Dubai. But geoengineering didn't cause this one, honest. Well, geoengineering was a conspiracy theory 20 minutes ago, so forgive me if I don't believe you. And do you remember when people started suggesting that maybe Joe Biden wasn't quite the full meal ticket cognitively, and perhaps his lad Hunter is a bit of a wronger. They had their social media accounts deleted, they had their post-suppressed. US media jab pusher darling Jimmy Kimmel labeled the idea of Joe Biden's clear mental decline as a crazy conspiracy theory. The story of Hunter Biden's laptop, drug use and gun crimes had the New York Post Twitter account suspended, and Mark Zuckerberg openly admitted blocking the story on Facebook. But Biden's mental frailties now, common knowledge, is discussed, and Hunter Biden has been convicted in a federal court. And remember the days following the October 7 attack in Israel where people, some Israeli border guards themselves, started questioning the border security and the ignored warnings, the lack of response by the military. They questioned whether maybe there's more to know about what happened on that day. They got called conspiracy theories, anti-Semites, Hamas apologists, and yet now, nine months later, the Jerusalem Post has published documents proving the IDF was warned of the attack. Not only by Egypt and the US, but by their own military intelligence, almost three weeks before. And instead of bolstering the presence at the border, they moved units away, leaving the border virtually unguarded. Now some people went further, brave people, because we all know calling out Israel is a bad career move. They suggested that given the scorched remains of the vehicles and the buildings in the Israeli villages nearest to Gaza, that perhaps the IDF had implemented something called the Hannibal Directive on October 7th. The Hannibal Directive is essentially an order to kill your own, rather than allow them to be captured and taken as hostages. Now you can imagine the reaction to anyone that suggested Israel killed their own people on October 7th. It wasn't pretty. All the usual name calling ensued. And yet here we are again in July 2024 and Haaretz, a mainstream media outlet in Israel, have revealed that their investigation has shown that the Hannibal Directive was indeed used that day. And remember, in 2020 and 2021, when the dangerous, granny-killing COVID idiots took to the streets to protest against COVID tyranny, against the lockdowns that destroyed so much and so many, they shouted from the rooftops about the dangers of the COVID vaccines. They were called anti-vaxxers and extremists they were sacked from their jobs for refusing to take a shot that could kill them. And again, here we are in 2024, with countless dead and injured as a result of those safe and effective injections. It's now common knowledge that the experts were wrong after all. Mainstream media bubble heads like Piers Morgan quickly backtracked. They claimed, of course, that the science had changed. Science didn't change, mate. And the experts weren't wrong, actually. They lied. And that's not the same. Being wrong and lying are not the same thing. One requires an apology, the other requires a prison cell until they breathe their last breath. Now, these few examples are just a handful from the last few years. Dangerous conspiracy theories that were, well, anything but. So what about the few years before that? What else from our history was a lie? What other narratives do you power up? Because everyone knows that. We learned it in school. Did you? Did you learn it? Or you simply told it by someone else that was told it, by someone else that was told it, by someone they probably can't even remember. And that's why it's so important to question everything and everyone, because these events from the last few years that I've example, they don't stop here. There'll be more of them. And now we have an authoritarian in government in the UK. It's even more important to not only question the official story, but to shout those questions from the rooftops to anyone that will listen. Because some may think that Labour can't be any worse than the Tories, but aside from the fact their leader is in the pocket of the trilateral commission, the Israel lobby, and his chief advisor founded a censorship organization. Starmer himself is not without his own fissistic receipts. Throughout Covid, as livelihoods were being destroyed, suicides were going through the roof, children were being mentally destroyed. He wanted to lock down even harder and even faster. He said he would work with a then prime minister to push through legislation to silence people that were exposing vaccine dangers and vaccine harms, dangers and harms that are very real. And learning of them before the appointment at the vaccine clinic would have saved people's lives. And it's worth harking back to October 2019 and event 201. If you remember that, a simulation of a coronavirus pandemic that came out of China. They spoke about the need for censorship of conspiracy theories and mass vaccinations. And as if by magic, six weeks later, we were given the story of a wet market in Wuhan. The reason it's worth harking back to that is because in October this year, there's an avian flu summit in Washington, D.C. So it might be time to dust off your tin foil hat, folks. Coming up on the show, best-selling author and investigative filmmaker, Mickey Willis talks to us about his latest film, "Plandemic, The Musical," as well as a documentary called "Bad Medicine" that explores how under COVID protocols hospitals became anything but places for healthcare. Tony Arterburn, a former U.S. Army paratrooper and world champion power lifter, is the founder and CEO of Wise, Wolf Gold and Silver Exchange. He's here to talk about the importance of precious metals in a time of economic instability. And modern-day mystic Makayol and Nanda is on the line from Sweden to talk about his book, "The Awakened Warrior," which he says contains the keys to navigating the matrix and pursuing a spiritual life. But our first guest this evening joins us from the United States. Alan and Taylor Martin's 18-year-old daughter Trista was killed by the Pfizer biotech COVID injection on the 9th of November 2022. The Martins have now become fierce activists against big pharma and its fraud and lies. They now work to save other families from going through the horror they've experienced while also trying to find justice for their murdered daughter. Alan Taylor, thank you so much for joining us. Alan, if you don't mind, can you tell us a bit about your daughter Trista and what she was like? She was amazingly funny. She was the best of me, the best of us, without any of the bad. I know a lot of parents think that about their kid, but she really was. After she passed, we found a bucket list that she had made when she was 16, about two years before she passed. She'd been keeping up with it. Most of the stuff on the list is things for other people. She wanted to turn 18 so that she could donate blood. She wanted to adopt a teenager because she felt like they get overlooked. She wanted to be a child psychologist or a health care advocate for children. So much stuff was about everybody else. They robbed the world of light and it's a much darker place without her here with us. I went on to your website, obviously just in the lead up to this, and I saw that. You've got that there, having you the different things from the bucket list. I was looking through that and found that really, really interesting to come from a 16-year-old because they seem quite grown up wanting to be a mother in things like that, and I was thinking 16-year-olds don't normally think like that, do they? Trista passed away in November 2022, just 18. Taylor, can you tell us what happened on that day? Yeah, it started out just like any other day, and Trista had stayed the night with her sister and one of their friends, and just had a girl's night, and everything was great. They had a lot of fun, and she woke up the next morning and said that her entire body was hurting, and she was having trouble breathing, and she said she was going to go lay down and try and feel better, just because she was a tough girl, and she didn't like to, really didn't like to burden anyone with anything, and her sister wanted to check on her about 10 minutes later, and she couldn't get her to wake up, and they called me, and thankfully I was right down the street, and braced over there, and by the time I got there, she was no longer breathing, and I had to start CPR, and we called the ambulance, and it was unreal. I mean, she was perfectly fine the day before. I mean, it seemed like she was just Trista the day before, not complaining about anything, and then this happened, and the ambulance people finally got her heart beating again, and got her loaded up, and we've raced to the hospital, and that's about the time that Alan, I got ahold of Alan, so he was getting ready for work, and I had been calling and with no answer, he'd been in the shower, and I like got out, and I rushed to the hospital as soon as I picked up the phone, and one of them, I remember thinking, you know, because all that Taylor had told me on the phone was that Alan, it's Trista, it's, they're putting in her in ambulance now, it's serious, get to the hospital now, and yeah, and so I'm like, okay, I'm on it, and so I throw some clothes on, I get in the truck, and I start driving, and the hospital complex is a very large hospital complex in Tulsa, Oklahoma, I think it's the biggest one, and when I got there, this was in 2022, it was the height of COVID, and they didn't make me put on a mask, they didn't make me sign in, they didn't even ask my name, they just looked at me, the lady standing there, just looked at me and pointed at me and said, are you dad, and I kind of stunned, and I said, yeah, yeah, I guess I am, they called me that, so she said follow me, and so she took me back to see my daughter, and she was on the bed, probably 30 plus doctor medical professionals around are working on her, and all that light, everything that was Trista was gone, she was, she was gray, her eyes were kind of half open, I remember thinking it didn't look like her, I mean, it looked like her, but it didn't, it didn't look like her. Yeah, no, I understand that, you were unaware that she'd had a COVID jab at this point, is that right? That's correct. Yeah, we didn't know actually until that day, and not even at the beginning of that day, I mean, as we were on our way from the emergency room up to the ICU unit, one of her friends said, I think I should tell you that she had the COVID shot, and she told us not to tell you guys. And the only reason why I didn't want to disappoint us, because when the COVID shots first came out, back in the early in the pandemic, you know, we were just surprised by how fast all of this was going, and you know, other than me being a little overweight, you know, otherwise we're a healthy family, and no comorbidities, no preexisting conditions, really. And so we just kind of discussed it as a family, and we thought, you know what, these shots really, we don't think they're for us, we're gonna, we're gonna watch, and we're gonna see everybody else's response. This wasn't enough testing done, you know, it was just a new thing, and we don't really... We just thought we're kind of on the scene, we thought we were all on the same page, and you know, we had talked about it a few times, and we just thought we weren't gonna get it. And Trista had asked me because she was getting ready to go to college, and she said, "Dad, what if my college requires it? Should I get it?" I said, "No, no, you shouldn't get it." I'm like, "Just go to a different college." And she says, "Well, what about traveling stuff?" I said, "Babe, in a, you know, any year or two, it's gonna all be... This is all gonna pass over, you don't need to worry about it." Okay, so I thought. And then when she decided to get it, I think that like she was worried that we were gonna be disappointed. But when her, when her friend told us that in the hospital, I mean, that's still where we were, mentally, you know, the place that we were at, because I remember thinking, "Well, okay, so she got the shot." Well, that's unfortunate, but that can't be what this is. I mean, this is, this has got to be something else. This is, you know, and I think she was in the same spot. It was just, I mean, you didn't hear anything about anything bad happening from it. Yeah, we were just like everybody else. We lived in this bubble, you know, the safe and effective stuff they were spouting. Oh, yeah, the world over. So, so, when you started to realize then, actually, maybe this, this COVID shot had something to do with it, you know, you went, you did your own research, you started talking to people. At that point, where it was like, "Okay, this is what it is." Did you alert the authorities to that? And if you did, what was their reaction? Yeah, actually, Alan, immediately, as soon as we finally figured it out, that that was it, because we just kept researching and everything kept coming back to it. Everything that was wrong with her, all of the symptoms that they said she had in the hospital, because they had no idea what was wrong with her in the hospital, zero idea. And I called the doctor that she had gone to. I called the doctor and informed the doctor first. I said, you know, hey, my daughter was a patient there. And the shot that you gave her, we believe it, it killed her. And it was a receptionist I was talking to. It's not the actual doctor, but it was just one of the receptionists in the office. And she said, "Oh, okay. Thanks." And hung up on me. Yeah, that was it. We then went through, we went through a long or deal, and still really are, of trying to get the medical records. They tried to deny that she was even a patient there at first. We had to prove it with insurance billing records. Yeah, they denied that Trista was ever even seen there. The doctor that she went and saw never reported any of the shots that she got to the authorities that she was supposed to report them to. There's one here in Oklahoma. It's OS, IIS. So the hospital had no record of a given shot. She had had that. I mean, if it, I mean, yeah, it would have made any difference at all, but they had no idea that she'd even had it. And the fact that they, the fact that they deny that she was there when you've got evidence that she was, that's already a red flag, isn't it? So Trista's story was, it was featured in the shot dead documentary. Did you meet other people in this, in this same horrific position as yourselves whilst you were kind of involved in that documentary? And did you find that maybe that helped in some way in terms of, you know, trying to process what happened? Because I'm just thinking, you know, both of you, you're, you know, you're both at work, you get a phone call, all of a sudden, this happened so quick. It must be really difficult to process it. It, it is. And the sad thing is, is that we didn't just meet a couple people. We, we've met a lot, hundreds of people that are in similar situations or the exact same situation. I mean, there's been, there's tons of injured people that are actually dealing with that personally themselves. I mean, just thousands of injured. Yeah. But actually one of my, one of my now close friends, his name is Dan Hartman. And his son Sean, he actually is Canadian. And we talk on the phone frequently and communicate, you know, nearly every day. His son Sean was 17 and had to get the shot to continue to play hockey. Because his kid loved to play hockey. And his son was killed by the Pfizer injection as well. And we've met, actually, Stephanie DeGare, her daughter, Matty, was 12. And she had put her daughter into the early trials from, for 12 to 15 year olds in Ohio. And she called us, her daughter, fortunately, is still alive. But her daughter's in a wheelchair, she has to eat to a tube. It destroyed her. And Pfizer just dropped her from the trial. Yes, she was in the trial. They said she had an upset stomach. So they didn't have to report what happened to her. Yeah, they committed fraud. And so Stephanie calls us and says, you know, hi, tells us who she is, introduces herself. And just in tears, she tells us, had they not lied about what they did to my daughter, your daughter might still be alive. And, you know, and it's she's such a sweet person, such a good person, that she has this like weird thing where she's like blaming herself. But again, I mean, that must be tough in terms of guilt. I think that's a double whammy for her, isn't it? Yeah, you're both seeking justice for Tristan. What would justice look like to you, do you think? Or have you not thought about that? It's just something that maybe, you know, you'll feel that justice has been served. Should it arrive at some point in the future? That's a difficult one. But honestly, I think the ideal outcome would be that they would never be able to do this ever again. That's the best outcome. That's something we put some kind of protections in place to where this kind of stuff can never happen again. Yeah. Yeah, they can never, you know, lie to the people like this and force this upon people to make them think that they have to do this, have to do something that will harm them. Exactly. And that's why it's so important, you know, that you're both speaking out and other people are speaking out. We won't shut up about it here. And I do have people say off a good and sake, you're still talking about that, it's over. Well, one, it's not for an awful lot of people. And two, what does it take to pull this again? There's another health emergency that you can pluck out a thin air and we can start this whole thing again. That's why it's so important. Where can people go to support your campaign? Well, we've got, of course, our website, which is justice for Trista.com. We do have a Gibson Go set up, which is similar to GoFundMe or something like that, but they're not as horrible. It's a giftsandgo.com/justice. And then that one's the number four, Trista, I believe. Now we're still trying to pay off her her memorial at the cemetery. It is quite the undertaking that you just don't plan for. You just don't, I mean, she's still 18 year old daughter isn't supposed to. Yeah, she's still sitting before you on her on her dresser. We're in her bedroom right now, and this is where we do these. Exactly, so she left it so we can't. So I can't imagine, honestly. It must be so, so, so tough. What keeps you going with it? Is it, you know, like, there's a, there's a, like, I'm trying to think how I would deal with it. And I can't imagine, so, you know, it's impossible to. I've got two young daughters, two and six, and I'm just the idea of anything like that is, is I can feel rage and sadness at the same time, even just thinking about it. Is that what keeps you going? Is this kind of, you know, this, like, burning inside of you, like, no, this, we are not letting this go? One of, one of the things that, I guess, the little nuggets of wisdom that you, you hear through, through this journey and stuff, one of the things that kind of struck me the, the hardest was the response that I heard to that exact thing, you know, a lot of people to say that, oh, I can't even imagine, I've got kids, and I can't imagine what you're going through. And it's, it's difficult to, to find the right words to reply to that. But the, the best response that I've heard so far is I don't, I don't want you to imagine, I don't want you to even imagine what we're going through, which is why we must continue to do what we're doing, right? I don't know that you don't even have to, right? Not to, not actually go through it, but I mean, ultimately, I don't even want you to have to imagine going through this. So, and Trista, you know, I mean, just from her bucket list and stuff, the things she loved children, loved children, she wanted to help children in any way that she possibly could. And if we allowed this to happen to other kids without trying to stop it, I think she would be serious. I mean, yeah, the CDC just announced last week that they, they're still recommending for six months, everybody six months and older get the new booster for the new variant for the fall. And it is so disgusting. It's so horrible. Even with all of the evidence that's coming out now, all the truth that's been exposed, all the lies that they've tried to cover up and hide for 75 plus years. And, and they're still pushing this poison and saying that it's safe and effective on babies and children. Trista would never forgive me if I, if I quit, if I quit fighting. So I have to keep going. Absolutely. I have to keep fighting. The idea they're still pushing it, honestly, I don't think there's a pit and hell deep enough for these people because it's, they don't believe it's safe and effective. They know it's not. So, so, you know, you hear people say, Oh, you know, they were wrong. They made a mistake. No, they didn't. They lied. And it's not the same thing. It's not the same thing. Thank you so much for joining us, both of you. I really hope, you know, whatever justice looks like that actually, you know, you, you get something to, to, you get to a point where you can actually sit and go, do you know what? We did that. You know, we, we, we created that, that backlash against the CDC or against fires or against any of these people that pushed it, including the doctor that administered it. Because I don't know about you, but for me, I think it goes all the way down to them. I don't think it should even just be these people at the top of these pharmaceutical companies, the people that are actually doing it should be held accountable as well. Well, and I think that what we were talked about earlier with them refusing to even acknowledge that she was a patient. I think one of the, one of the reasons why they did that is because they, they dropped the ball so many times. There's no informed consent forms or, or anything that's been signed or at least given to us and we requested the records numerous times. And so, you know, they know, they know they screwed up. They know they, they know they screwed up. And, and instead of my, I'm ultimately my, my, the best case scenario for me would be for that doctor to have humanity and to say, you know what, um, you know, you're right. What can we do to save lives, which I believe is what a doctor is supposed to do. And that's not at all what this doctor did. No, I agree with you 100%. It used to be what, what, what they were meant to do. They were meant to, you know, do no harm. And the last four years have shown that that's anything but the case. But, you know, I know you won't stop fighting and other people won't stop fighting. And, and it feels like a snowball effect as well that it will just get bigger and bigger and bigger. And if they try this again, then then, you know, oh, I just hope with all my heart that actually people say no from the beginning, no, and they put a wall up at the beginning. But, but thank you again for, for, for talking to us. It, it can't be easy for you to talk about this kind of stuff, you know, so it's, it's, yeah, but it's so important that you are. So thank you for that. Thank you for having me. Thank you.