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Jessica Malaty Rivera says on CNN that Malone is spreading misinformation, but she won't debate any of us
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Jessica Malaty Rivera says on CNN that Malone is spreading misinformation, but she won't debate any of us

Jessica went on CNN saying Spotify should remove the Malone interview. I reached out to her asking if she wanted to debate Malone and the rest of us. She blocked me.

Steve Kirsch
Jan 14
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Jessica Malaty Rivera says on CNN that Malone is spreading misinformation, but she won't debate any of us
stevekirsch.substack.com

Check this out. First watch this video clip of infectious disease expert Jessica Malaty Rivera on CNN claiming that Malone is spreading COVID misinformation:

I then tweeted this in response to her tweet about the podcast:

Jessica responded within minutes with her reply to my generous offer:

Malone’s Rogan interview reached over 50 million people

The Malone podcast reached over 50 million people. It is the most listened to podcast in Rogan history. None of the “experts” calling for censorship of Malone’s podcast are willing to step up to the plate and challenge him on the science. Zero. They simply want to censor him with no debate. Do you know why? Here’s why:

That is not the American way.

Please share this. Widely.

And please let Jessica know as well, since I can’t anymore. Thanks!

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Jessica Malaty Rivera says on CNN that Malone is spreading misinformation, but she won't debate any of us
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Ryan
Jan 17

Buy ORGANIC

Study finds many cooking spices in stores are laden with heavy metals!

Consumer Reports, a nonprofit organization dedicated to independent product testing and consumer advocacy, released a study testing the levels of heavy metals in 15 types of dried herbs and spices — 126 products in all — from national brands such as Walmart’s Great Value, McCormick, Morton & Bassett and Trader Joe’s.

Roughly one-third of the tested products, 40 in total, had high enough levels of arsenic, lead and cadmium to pose a health concern for children when regularly consumed in typical serving sizes. Many had high enough levels to raise concern for adult consumers as well.

Frequent exposure to even small amounts of lead, arsenic, cadmium and other heavy metals is dangerous because it is difficult for the human body to break them down or excrete them. Over time, exposure to heavy metals has been linked to increased risk of behavioral problems and lower IQ in children, as well as issues with the central nervous system, reproductive system, kidneys and immune system in adults.

“I think heavy metals are getting more attention in the media since some baby foods were found to be high in heavy metals, and some foods and spices are not really regulated or regularly tested for heavy metals,” said Beth Calder, food science specialist and associate professor at the University of Maine Cooperative Extension.

Heavy metals can enter herbs and spices if the water or soil where food is grown contains them naturally or is contaminated because of pesticides or industrial uses. They may also get into packaged spices from processing equipment or packaging.

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Dennis D. Duffy
Writes Courage, Bravery & Parrhesia Jan 17·edited Jan 17

Done. FYI. Her blocking you tells one a lot!

https://twitter.com/DennisDDuffy/status/1483102257096888322?s=20

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