A Tale of Three Roberts, part 3: Robert Malone
by John Massaro
DR. ROBERT MALONE WAS one of several obscure denizens of the Deep State — which I define as the vast quantity of useless people who make a lot of money while entrenched in major public and private institutions — to burst on the scene as a Covid celebrity. According to biographydaily.com, Malone’s net worth as of a year ago was $20 to $25 million. Another new face and Covid jab influencer, who suddenly saw the light and came out of nowhere, and who has become a linchpin of sorts in this movement, is Silicon Valley entrepeneur Steve Kirsch, worth well over $200 million. Kirsch, who thinks he’s smart, is clueless and unprincipled in some ways, but he’s done some solid grunt work and stuck his neck out in exposing this whole thing for the monstrosity that it is. But he still foolishly believes in vaccines, heading up something called the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation. He has become good friends with Kennedy and Malone. It’s worth mentioning that, by his own admission, Kirsch gave $20 million to the Democratic Party, though he no longer supports them, while Malone admits to voting for Biden, though he has since morphed into a Republican conservative type. The Kennedys have always been incurable Democrats, of course.
It was his three-hour interview on the Joe Rogan Experience on December 30, 2021 that lifted Malone out of Deep State obscurity and launched his career as a self-styled crusader against government malfeasance regarding the Covid-19 jab campaign. I’d never heard of Malone nor Rogan until shortly after this interview, the entire transcript of which I’ve read. Elsewhere on this blog, I’ve written what I think about Joe Rogan, who hosts the world’s most listened-to podcast. The kindest thing I can say about him is that he’s an irrelevant twerp. He’s supposed to be controversial or something. He is to the Internet what Oprah Winfrey was to television and what Rush Limbaugh was to radio — an absurdly overpaid nonentity. He has become quite chummy with Malone, who has referred to him as a “beloved media icon.” Malone doesn’t understand that any media personality who earns $100 million a year is a distraction who serves the hidden wirepullers.
Shortly after I discovered these two chumps, I came across a hit piece on the net entitled “Robert Malone — Dark Vaccine Wizard.” It was written by an Omar Jordan, also unknown to me. It went for Malone’s jugular, portraying him as a crafty liar with the most evil ulterior motives. O.J. began his composition by stating that he was mixing facts available in the public domain with his personal opinions based on the evidence, and inviting the reader to follow the many links he provided. I don’t feel as strongly about Malone as O.J. does, and he wrote a few things that don’t make sense to me, but I found myself in general agreement with him. Jordan’s composition is 26 pages long, and you can read it in pdf form on the Internet, so I’ll just touch on a few points here.
One thing that immediately caught my eye was a screen shot of a “tweet” Malone made on his Twitter account, dated August 5, 2021. It reads: “OK folks — looking forward, what do we need if we have accepted protocols for early outpatient treatment? 1) CDC has to get its act together. 2) We need very active surveillance, tracing, testing. 3) We need the ability to test (ideally self-test) for SARS-CoV-2 infection.” In my eyes, recommendation #2 by itself reveals the mindset of a man with totalitarian leanings whom I would never trust, and whose pretensions as a champion of freedom, in spite of any noble-sounding future assertions, should be rejected out of hand.
Whoever O.J. is — I could find only one Omar Jordan on the net, a real estate lender in Iowa — never discount anyone just because he has no credentials. He’s spot-on in describing the game being played: “By employing Malone as a soft ‘whistleblower,’ the powers that be are using him to set an artificial limit as to what is an acceptable level of dissent or opposition to their obvious mainstream lies and deception. [This applies equally to Joe Rogan – JM.] When they censor him, then all of the truthers go running into his arms for comfort. They do this because they conclude that if he’s being censored, then he must be telling the truth…. But he doesn’t represent the true opposition (us) — he’s an insane demon who thinks vaccines save lives and has spent his entire life creating these elixirs of death and destruction…. There is not a single person in the entire so-called “resistance” or “anti-vaccine” movement that actually represents the view that all vaccines are dangerous.” In my opinion, O.J. went a step too far in calling Malone an “insane demon,” and as noted, there are a handful of totally anti-vax voices in the movement, but he’s essentially correct here and throughout his essay. The above quotation was a response to an exchange between Malone and Steve Bannon, former investment banker and Trump advisor, current member in good standing of Conservatism Incorporated, and yet another multi-millionaire, pro-vaccine “soft whistleblower” type. In his powder-puff interview, Bannon asked Malone, “Your entire life is in support of trying to get vaccines that help mankind, correct?” to which Malone replied, “I’m the opposite of an anti-vaxxer. I’m a true believer. But I’m also committed to safety and good science.”
As far as credentials go, Malone has enough to fill a boxcar and he’s not shy about showing them off. Beginning in the second minute of the Rogan interview, he rattles off his life story, including his numerous connections with vaccine companies, the Department of Defense, the CDC, the intelligence community, and other movers and shakers. I can’t say I was awestruck. On his Web site, below an introduction that includes accolades from Rogan, Kennedy, Bannon, and others, we read: “I am an internationally recognized scientist/physician and the original inventor of mRNA vaccination as a technology, DNA vaccination, and multiple non-viral DNA and mRNA platform delivery technologies. I hold numerous fundamental domestic and foreign patents in the fields of gene delivery, delivery formulations, and vaccines including for fundamental DNA and RNA/mRNA vaccine technologies. This is important because of my history, my expertise, my words carry weight.” It doesn’t end there; he goes on and on. The man clearly has an inflated opinion about himself.
I spend a lot of time reading the comment boards of various Web sites, because I like to know what the more intelligent members of society are thinking, including people overseas. I’ve read three or four hundred comments about Robert Malone. While he does have his admirers, even people who worship him, about 70% of what I’ve read is negative. Of these, only a few go to extreme lengths, calling him truly terrible names. Most use terms like Big Pharma shill, a wolf in sheep’s clothing, or something like “I’ve always had my suspicions about Malone,” “Something about this guy isn’t quite right,” and so forth. He has been slammed on both sides, by the pro-vaccine mainstream media, who have denounced him as a spreader of misinformation (how they love that word), and by forthright anti-vaxxers, who have questioned his many inconsistencies. He confronted the latter in an article posted on americanfreedomnews.com on September 14, 2022 entitled “J’Accuse!,” which begins with an account of the terror unleashed by the bloodthirsty Jacobins during the French Revolution, which he likens to his own critics. Robert may have gotten his history mixed up because the famous cry “J’Accuse!” (I accuse) was a front-page newspaper headline above an open letter that appeared during the Dreyfus Affair in France, a century later. In any case, while I’ve come across many calls for the execution of Anthony Fauci and Bill Gates, I haven’t read of a single death wish among Malone’s many detractors, because his crimes are not as egregious, so to compare them to the Jacobins is absurd. On the other hand, he comes out squarely against certain allegations that may be untrue, in a few instances even displaying accusatory screen shots. But I don’t like his stuffy, jazzy style, with a long quote from Macbeth thrown in to show us how cultured he is. In addition to becoming a phony health freedom leader, Malone sees himself as Doctor Deepthink, a farsighted visionary on social issues. But his sappy ideas remind me of college dorm bull sessions.
Malone is like Donald Trump without the bluster. He’s an actor who comes across as a sincere and soft-spoken teddy bear. And I do believe that there’s some sincerity in him. But like Trump, he’s a bulls___ artist who boasts of accomplishments that exist only in his imagination. He has come under fire for claiming mRNA technology as his invention, while others say that this distinction — and I use that word paradoxically — belongs to two doctors named Drew Weissman and Katalin Kariko. Another war of words erupted over his friendship with a Belgian psychoanalyst named Mattias Desmet and the concept of “mass formation,” to which Malone slyly added the word psychosis, and which he alludes to in “J’Accuse.” and elsewhere. There’s nothing new about mass formation; basically, it’s the phenomenon that human beings, being social animals, will think and act in conformity with those around them. Many observers of human behavior have written about it. It’s what Nietzsche called the herd instinct, what William Pierce called the lemming factor, and it was the subject of The Crowd, a famous book written and published in 1895 by French psychologist Gustave Le Bon. But Malone twisted it to argue that masses of ignorant people had been gripped by the hallucination that the Covid narrative had been spun by an elitist cabal, when in fact this was not a hallucination at all but the reality, and Malone, loyal to this cabal, was deflecting the conspiracy by blaming the victims. That, at any rate, was the charge leveled by his critics, and I think they’re right, despite Malone’s denials.
On October 30, 2022, Malone filed a defamation lawsuit against Peter and Ginger Breggin, and Jane Ruby, and their respective sponsors, America Out Loud and Red Voice Media. I’d never heard of these people before 2021, but have since become acquainted with them through the Internet. The Breggins are an elderly Jewish couple from Long Island. Their yankee doodle kosher patriotism turns me off, but on the whole they appear to be good people who for decades have battled the evils in the psychiatric profession, and won some important victories, especially with regard to the abuse of pumping up children with psychotropic drugs. Ruby, who appears to be a Gentile, has posted many hard-hitting videos on the horrors of the Covid-19 shot, about a dozen of which I’ve watched. She can be bitchy at times, but I think she’s a decent woman who has done a lot of good work.
Malone is suing the defendants for $25 million in damages, which, I believe, would bankrupt them. It shows not only malice on his part, but poor judgment. To my knowledge, none of his many friends and admirers have supported him on this, at least not publicly; silence has been their response. A voice of reconciliation, Dr. Paul Alexander, pleaded with Malone to knock it off and try to work things out with the Breggins. Yet another person I’d never heard of before Covid, Diane West, who earlier had written some unflattering lines about Malone on her blog, lit into him, calling the lawsuit “a stink bomb of a disgrace, an anti-personnel weapon of free speech destruction, a heat-seeking lawfare missile targeting financial ruin.”
I read the complaint in its entirety. For the most part, I found it to be whiney and frivolous. Most of it is directed at the Breggins, who are quoted in a series of fourteen bullet points. Some of their accusations are pretty serious, and if untrue would constitute genuine defamation, but putting myself in Malone’s shoes, if they really are lies and I wanted to clear my name, I would demand that they let me explain my side of the story on their site, or in Ruby’s case to be interviewed on camera in order to set the record straight. I think they would have accorded him that. If not, and if in fact they are lying, then a defamation lawsuit would be justified. One can follow links in the complaint leading to the allegedly defamatory assertions. I did this for a few hours, watching video clips and reading articles, and this material leads to still more links. It seems that everywhere you turn there’s something fishy about this guy, something that raises a red flag. Eventually, I decided to stop wasting my time chasing down all these rabbit holes, and not bothering to discuss the remaining points I had jotted down. Robert Malone simply cannot be trusted. I even began to suspect that OJ was right all along, that Malone is pure, unmitigated evil, but I don’t think that’s the case and at this point I’m not making any final judgment.
Even though Malone is not politically aligned with Donald Trump, as I said, they have many similarities. Both have massive egos. Both have a knack for appealing to ordinary people. Both occasionally say things and endorse policies that make sense, while others lead to disaster. Of particular note here is Trump’s endless bragging that he was “The Father of the Vaccine,” a title he still is apparently proud of, though in his probable bid for the 2024 presidential nomination, he has learned to keep his mouth shut about Operation Warp Speed. Likewise, Malone never tires of calling himself the inventor of mRNA technology. That sounds so scientific and it impresses a lot of people, but where’s the beef? Assuming he’s telling the truth, that this was his baby and not that of Weissman and Kariko, as others maintain, does it mean that he invented the Frankenstein technology that has enabled a gang of monsters to easily cull a substantial portion of humanity? Shouldn’t he be begging for the world’s forgiveness, or hiding in a cave somewhere to escape the world’s wrath, rather than basking in cheap fame?
Finis
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