Most Days I Cry

Professor Ian Brighthope was on the stage in front of thousands of people (live) and hundreds of thousands watching online, last night at The Great Debate on DNA Contamination in products administered to most of the Australian public at least once. He had to hold back his tears.

Lawyer Julian Gillespie was on the same stage last night and he too was unable to hide his despair.

This was The Great Debate on DNA Contamination in Perth, Western Australia, on the evening of 29 November 2024. Authorities everywhere, from judiciaries to local councils to federal level elected and non-elected representatives, refuse to listen to the concerns of eminent scientists and a growing number of citizens.

We are told that our sadness is due to mental illness or acopia. Listen to what Julian Gillespie has to say, and then determine if it’s mentally ill to be horrified, angry and sad at what we see happening and the aggression and silencing we have faced trying to alert the very people silencing and denigrating us.

Find Part 1 and Part 2 of The Great Debate, featuring eminent Australian leaders using every fibre of their being, to fight these crimes against humanity in multiple and creative ways. Many of them are becoming impoverished along the way, as their livelihoods have been stripped from them.

First they came for the doctors
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a doctor
Then they came for the scientists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a scientist
Then they came for the journalists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a journalist
Then they came for the injured and disabled
And I did not speak out
Because I was not injured or disabled
Then they came for me
And there was no one left
To speak out for me


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