Welcome after after hours with Dr. Sigoloff. This is a place where Dr. Sigoloff can share some of his thoughts and ideas with you. Dr. Sigoloff is a board certified Family Physician and he has been practicing medicine for almost a decade. Dr. Sigoloff is a Doctor of Osteopathy and therefor he has a slightly different approach to medicine. He likes to get to discuss the heart of the issue so that you can be better informed.
AfterHours@1791.com
89. Former LTC Brad Miller
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Former LTC Brad Miller: [00:00:00] You know, as a French thinker and philosopher Voltaire off repeated quote, and it basically says, if they can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. And I, I think that's extremely applicable to what we've seen the last couple of years. So I mean, you know, this, they. They made so many people believe absolute absurdities, the masks work that we need to lock down, you know, and, and destroy the economy.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And that remember the original forecast astronomically high numbers of people that supposedly were, we were gonna lose to Covid. Oh, ESI work. Or, Hey, you're gonna kill grandma, or, Hey, you can't be with your grandparents when they're sick at death's door. You can't be with them in their final moments, you know?
Nurse Kelly: Welcome to after Hours with Dr. Sigoloff, where he can share ideas and thoughts with you. He gets to the heart of the issue so that you can find the truth. The views and opinions expressed are his and do not represent the US Army, d o d, nor the US government. Dr. [00:01:00] Sigoloff was either off duty or on approved leave and Dr.
Nurse Kelly: Sigoloff was not in uniform at the time of recording now to Dr. Sigoloff .
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: All right. Well thank you for joining me again. I first wanna thank my Patreon supporters. We've got Shell pace at the $50 level. We've got an anonymous donor at the 20 $20 self-made, 2020 level. We've got the Plano Pandemic Reprimand at $17 and 76 cents. With Ty Charles Tinfoil Stanley Anna. Who is a previous guest on this?
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Dr. Anna? Frank. Brian. We've got a self-made level at $10 with Kevin. We've got the refined, not burned, $5 a month. Linda, Emmy, Joe Patten, Bev, pj, Rebecca, Marcus, Elizabeth, Dawn. Jennifer Ken. We've got a dollar 50 a month with Frank and we have the courage is contagious with $1 a month with Amanda, Jay SPTs, nasty Dorell, Susan Bebe King, a previous guest.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And Rick I take the time to mention those every day because I appreciate [00:02:00] every dollar that is given in support. I'm still Suing the Secretary of Defense we're about a hundred thousand dollars into that lawsuit. And so it, it is putting some financial stress on the family. I did have just this past week on the day of recording, I did have the meeting with the Texas Medical Board.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: I am not able to, to give any details on how that meeting went. I'll find out officially in August what the decision is, but just pray that everything went well. Today I have a very special guest, Brad Miller. He's been on with us before. Just a quick refresher. Brad was a battalion commander, rank of Lieutenant Colonel who resigned his commission at about 19 years and three months, and something very interesting happened yesterday, May 31st.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: This is the day we're recording is is June 1st. This'll air a few days after that, or maybe a week or two after that. But what, what's so special about May 31st, Brad, and, and thanks for coming.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah, of course. So first of all, thanks for having me. You know, happy to be here, happy to speak with you again, Sam.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And very appreciative of [00:03:00] you and your audience and everything that you're doing. You know, you're one of the foremost names, one of the individuals, just absolutely at the, the tip of the spear in this fight. So, so happy to be with you and of course with your With your audience. So May 31st. Yesterday I put out a piece on my ck and for anybody who wants to find me at CK it's it's real easy.
Former LTC Brad Miller: It's just my name, Brad Miller, one zero.ck.com. But I put out a piece yesterday that I just called a 20 year view because yesterday, May 31st, 2023. Was exactly 20 years from when I graduated West Point, and therefore exactly 20 years from when I entered the Army. Which means if I were still in the army as of right now, yesterday would've made exactly 20 years.
Former LTC Brad Miller: It means that, that as of yesterday, I would've kind of secured my, my retirement pension for lack of a better way to put it. Right,
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: right. And so what. [00:04:00] Remind us again how it was, it was like 19 years and was it three months? Is that, is that correct? When you resigned your commission?
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah. So 19, so 19 years three months in 15 days.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So my last day of service with the Army was September 15th, 2022. So obviously, you know, I didn't, I didn't quite make it and just in case there are audience members who are not familiar with my story, I'll just kind of give the the, the very abridged version. But my story was, as you alluded to, so I was a Lieutenant colonel in the Army.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I was a battalion commander at Fort Campbell, Kentucky in the hundred first Airborne Division. I took command of the battalion. It was called the Rock Solid Battalion. And this was in third brigade of the hundred and first Airborne Division. But I took command in June of 2021. And then as many of your audience members will know in August of 2021, that's when the, the FDA supposedly approved, you know, one of the Pfizer shots.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And then the [00:05:00] very next day, d o D. Implemented their mandate. I refused to go along with the mandate. I refused the shot. And then on October 28th, 2021, I was relieved of command. And so I was I was one of only two battalion commanders across the active duty army to be. Relieved of command a couple of months later.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So in early 2022, once the Army had published subsequent directives and they had made it abundantly clear that they were going to separate all individuals that were un vaxxed, I decided at that point that you know, I just no longer wanted to be part of the organization. Felt like that I could not in good conscious continue to serve.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And so I and so I resigned, and then my last day was September 15th, 2022. So, yeah. So a total of 19 years, three months and 15 days.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Thank you for taking that hard stand. I can't imagine putting that much time into it and being that so, so close to the finish, but, but you did the right thing because the more important thing is your soul not [00:06:00] losing, your soul, not giving up on those oaths that you've taken.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah. I mean that's kind of the way that, that I had to look at it and I, and I tell you, and every now and again, someone will ask me this and I've. I've never regretted the stance that I've, that I've taken never. And in fact, even though it's been, you know, not, not quite a year since since I got out, when we just look at the insanity that continues to come from d o d, I mean, I just, I know that I made the right decision.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I feel entirely vindicated. Everything that people like you, people like me and plenty of others have said. I, I mean, it continues to play out. So I might have some, some micro regrets about kind of the way in which I resigned. I mean, there's some, there's some conversations that I kind of wish I had had with my, my brigade commander or or the division commander, you know, the, the, the general.
Former LTC Brad Miller: That I did not quite get to have. So there are some small micro regrets, but in terms of the decision itself to A, [00:07:00] refuse the shot and b to to go ahead and resign, no, I don't, I don't, I don't regret that at all.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And let's talk a little bit more about that article you recently put out and there was another article I'd like to get into that too.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: We tried talking about it, but we had some recording issues. And so here we are again re-recording, but let's, let's talk about that whichever one you wanna talk about first.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah. Okay. So let's start with the one yesterday. So again, I put out a piece just simply called a 20 year view. So what this was was me just introspectively looking at myself, where I'm at now, where I was 20 years ago, and then just kind of trying to assimilate the last 20 years.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Right? And so my basic message is I graduated at West Point. And I embarked on this this career in the army. I did not necessarily know how long I was gonna serve in the Army for. I didn't necessarily know that I was gonna try and make a full career out of it. [00:08:00] And in fact, as a, as a, as a junior captain, I actually very strongly considered getting out of the army.
Former LTC Brad Miller: But regardless, you know, I I stuck in and then somewhere along the way, kind of as a mid grade major. Maybe, maybe, maybe junior to kind of early, mid grade major. I started to realize that, you know what maybe, maybe I'm competitive enough to be a battalion commander. And, and before that I'd kind of assumed that that was a goal that I just, you know, wasn't gonna necessarily achieve and maybe should not even necessarily worry about.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So but I began to think that, you know what Yeah, this might be possible. So I might stick in. I, I didn't go into this yesterday in the in the, in the piece that I wrote, but I'm just kind of giving you some additional context now. So I stayed in and then of course I ended up taking command of the battalion.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I was only in command for about four months before I got relieved. And so it's just interesting to look back at this. This this cadet that's graduating from West Point probably has a very, if I can, you know, look back at myself 20 years ago, right? This very [00:09:00] idealistic notion of the academy, the military you know, the country, the, the government, et cetera, right?
Former LTC Brad Miller: And then very much entering the army, assuming that That I'm doing so for, for God and country, you know, like, like many of us. And then so fast forward nearly two decades and then paradoxically, I'm actually leaving the army for God and country, you know, because I believe that that is what I have to do in order to align myself with the truth, you know?
Former LTC Brad Miller: And first and foremost with God. But then even. Even with the country, and I know you'll understand this, Sam, and a lot of your listeners will too, right? I, I, I felt like I was in this paradoxical situation where I'd been backed into a corner and I, and I felt like, okay, in order for me to actually maintain my oath, then I'm actually gonna have to leave this organization that purports to abide by the Constitution while [00:10:00] actually, you know, completely desecrating it.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: It's such a paradox, isn't it, that to, to serve the country, you must leave the service of the country.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah. Right? Yeah, exactly. That, that you, that you're in this organization that prides itself on, you know, serving the country and yeah. You, you might actually have to, in order to actually serve the country, you may have to separate yourself from that from that organization.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And so things like integrity, The oath to the Constitution. Those things are extremely important to me. But number one of course is just, you know, my relationship with God. I mean, I don't take that lightly. And, and, and, and I, I, I just, I would not feel comfortable if I were still, I would not feel comfortable if I had compromised what I knew to be true.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Just to save my career. And so the way I put it there are, when you look at kind of my career and the way it ended, there are three things that I gave up, right? So one was my command position, cuz first and foremost, before [00:11:00] I ever ended up out of the army, you know, I was relieved of command. So first and foremost, you know, was the, I lost my command.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I lost whatever the remainder of my career, you know, might've looked like, you know, would I've gone to the war college, would I have been promoted to colonel? I mean, there's just no way to know, right? So whatever the remainder of my career was, and then of course my retirement pension because I didn't make it to 20 years.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So my command, my career, and my retirement. But I, what I feel like I retained was, you know, my loyalty to God and my just sense of personal integrity and of course my oath to the Constitution. And so one of the things just going back to you know, 20 years ago when I was a cadet, so in that that post that I wrote yesterday, I included my, my senior photo from my, my senior or my first class year at West Point.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And There's a little, you know, you could put some sort of, some sort of caption beneath the photo. And so I chose a scriptural passage, and it's [00:12:00] from the New Testament, it's from one of the the epistles that Paul wrote. This one specifically is to Timothy. I mean, it's a, it's a very, very well known verse.
Former LTC Brad Miller: It's second Timothy four, seven. But it just, you know, and, and people, even if they don't, even if like that scripture doesn't necessarily ring a bell, they've probably heard the scripture and it says I have fought the good fight. I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. So it's, it's a, it's a pretty well known scripture.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And so I kind of included that as a, as a caption beneath my photo. So one of the things that I said in my post yesterday was I mean, I'm, I'm kind of, yeah, I was kind of, I'm kind of unimpressed with myself that, that that's what I chose to put beneath my photo 20 years ago because You know, no, no offense to, you know.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Right, right, right, right, right. And no offense to St. Paul, but on my, on my part, it's kind of unoriginal cuz I mean, it's a very well-known scripture. I mean, it's just, it's not, not very creative. But, you know, more importantly than that, you know, I'm kind of taking, you know, taking his words and [00:13:00] kind of, you know, using them with with my situation.
Former LTC Brad Miller: But then also, yeah, you're right. It's just, it's shortsighted. So of course I meant it. To refer to my time at the academy. Right. Because, you know like, I mean the academy, I mean, it was a hard experience. It's a, it's a, it's a challenging time to go there and, and be there for four years. And so I was proud that I was graduating.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Right. But when you look, when you look back at it now, you know, 20 years ago, right, you're right. My army career was was, was just starting. And so in any case, it's interesting though that I chose that scriptural passage though, because regardless of whether it was wise or you know, whatever, pretentious to, to have used it then, or even to use it now, regardless, the language is far more applicable now as we look at like the end of my career than it, than it ever was.
Former LTC Brad Miller: 20 years ago, just looking at my tenure as an academy cadet.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Well, one thing I think is interesting about that is it's almost like a message to yourself from the past [00:14:00] that you're sending this message to your yourself in the future, saying, look buddy, I wanna be able to make this true. Do what you gotta do to make this true.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And it seems like you've lived your life in that sense.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah, it is kind of weird. I, I thought that too, like, you know, it is kind of interesting that that that passage would become far more significant, you know, two decades in the future. And so for anybody listening, and I, and I try to make this point extremely clear in in the post that I write, so when I.
Former LTC Brad Miller: When I, when I look at the, the, that passage, particularly the final clause, you know, it says I have kept the faith. So when I try and attribute that to my own situation, I mean, I'm, I, I do that extremely cautiously, and I, and I'm saying, Hey, listen, when I take that, That part of the passage from Paul and apply that to myself.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I'm doing so in an extremely narrow capacity. I am not making some sort of sweeping, grandiose claim that [00:15:00] I am, you know, the, the best person ever or the best military officer, or that my military career was perfect or that it was grand. I mean, I'm not making, I'm not making that, I'm not making that that claim at all.
Former LTC Brad Miller: What I'm claiming is, That I had a generally good military career, that I had a successful military career, that I did obtain some successes that You know, our, our above average, right? And it's a career that I'm proud of, and that when, you know, push came to shove, you know, I mean, I threw my cards down on the table like that, that I am comfortable saying I'm not, I'm not making some sweeping claim.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I'm not trying to attribute that passage to me in some, you know, some all-encompassing way. I'm saying, no, no, no. In this, in this one decision. Where I was at a fork in the road and I could either choose to go along with something that I knew was extremely sinister because I always knew that this entire Covid op and the whole thing was an op and is an op.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I could either go along with it [00:16:00] or I could refuse to go along with it at at great cost to myself. Now, are there people who have paid more? You know, did, did Paul pay more than me? Yeah, of course, of course. Of course. I'm, I'm not, I'm only making a comparison with myself. That's one of the things that I also try to make very clear in in what I wrote yesterday was this is a comparison between the choice that I made and the choice that I could have made.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So again, I could either go along with it. Or I could refuse. I chose to refuse. And, and of course, you know, we know, we know what it cost me, but we know what I also retained, and I'm, you know, I'm happy. I still believe that I came out a winner.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: So you're always so careful not to overstate what you've done.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: But then we have to look at Peter and, you know, the night that Jesus was, was under trial. Someone asked Peter, oh, aren't you one of those, those guys following Jesus around? He's like, no, no, I'm not. And then they asked him two more times, and then the rooster crows and, and you have to look at [00:17:00] what you did.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: You were facing almost as big as. You know, consequences, right? Because losing all of your career, losing your retirement, losing all these things for basically being required to deny Jesus and you did not deny Jesus.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Okay? So here's what I will, will say for sure, right? So Sam, you and I have spoken about this.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I don't remember exactly what we said in our previous interview, but you and I have spoken on the phone multiple times and I know that you believe, as I believe, and and many of your viewers as well, that this is a spiritual war. Does it? Does it You know, does it show itself physically or in other regards as well?
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yes, of course. But fundamentally this is a spiritual war and and I believe that by making the decision that I made, first and foremost, I believe that, you know, I was being loyal to God. Like above all, that was the most important. Now, in doing so, I also thought that I was maintaining my own personal integrity.
Former LTC Brad Miller: That's also very important, but first and foremost is God. I also believe that I was maintaining my oath to the Constitution. [00:18:00] This goes back to the paradox that we spoke about before. I believe that I was also doing that, but first and foremost was You know, loyalty to God. You know, if you, if you, you put God first, then you know, whatever comes next is a, is a distant second at at best.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Right. And so in that regard, yeah, I, I, I feel like I can, at least in that very narrow way, I can claim to have to have kept the faith, just understanding, you know, in that, in that small way. And I still feel like that, I mean, I don't. I don't regret my decision at all. I've, I've never regretted it. And you know, as well as I do that when you do the right thing, we all would like to believe that it, it makes your life better or it makes your life easier.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And in some ways it does, but in some very real ways. It can make your life very, very hard. I mean, that's why it's it's not always easy to do the right thing. You know? It can make your, I mean, you're going through some hardships. I've, I've been, I've been impacted as well. I mean, there have been been very significant financial impacts for the decision that I [00:19:00] made, especially being so close to.
Former LTC Brad Miller: You know, retirement and, and I've had to kind of figure out, all right, what are my next goals? What am I gonna do next? And then now I gotta take into account the fact that I don't have that pension that I was basically on the cusp of receiving. But I mean, that's what it means to, to do the right thing and to just, you know, put your faith in God first and just move forward and do the right thing and just, you know, let the rest of it just figure itself out.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah, absolutely. It's, you know, that just, you said in that article, it's, you know, the, the courage to do the, the hard right over the easy rung, and this is definitely the, the hard right over the easy wrong.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah. So that's a that's a dictum that is, is constantly repeated. To all cadets at West Point.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Now it actually comes from a line that's from what's called the the Cadet Prayer, but that is like almost, almost beaten within you or beaten into you [00:20:00] as a cadet when you're at West Point. Right. And I think that's good. I mean, you were supposed to be imbued with these ideals. I mean, you were supposed to understand.
Former LTC Brad Miller: The honor code, for example, and integrity and putting others before yourself and being a team player, and you sacrifice for the good of the team and you worry about others before yourself. All of these things that we prize in a military officer, you know, those are practically like, you know, beaten into you through repetition and trauma as a, as a cadet over four years.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And so you know, one of the, one of the quips that I put in the, in the post. You know, kind of semi comically yesterday was that you know, it turns out that I, that I did learn some things at West Point, regardless of my, my rather unremarkable academic record there, you know? And I, and I have to, I, I have to question, you know, where is everybody else?
Former LTC Brad Miller: And you asked me before what about a previous piece that I wrote? So there's a previous, so, so yesterday's piece was all [00:21:00] about a 20 year view. It's about me. Yeah. I'm, again, not that this is the Brad Miller show, but this was a, an admittedly introspective piece on me. You know, my decision balanced against a decision that I could have made, right?
Former LTC Brad Miller: That's what yesterday's piece was all about. And then kind of taking that 20 year view of my entire career summed up in how it ended. But there's a previous post that I put out a couple of weeks ago that you also kind of alluded to in the very beginning, and that one was called an appeal to those who went along.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So that one is oriented towards towards others because I am I am admittedly and I am unabashedly critical of those who made the wrong decision. I don't feel bad about that. I don't apologize for that. I'm not saying that I've never done anything wrong. I'm not saying that What I am saying is I have a real problem with people who spend their entire career in the [00:22:00] military where we place a premium on courage to include moral courage.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And they they have learned their entire careers to, you know, be patriots. To be selfless, to do the right thing, to to be loyal to the oath. And then they just seem to abandon all of that. And, and I, I, I got a real problem with that. And so in that piece again titled and, and appeal to those who went along, and again, that's on my sub.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I was basically saying, Hey, listen, show some courage. You, you have failed to do so up to this point, it's not yet too late. We, we want to embrace you, but you're gonna have to show the courage that you have failed to show up to this point.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah, I think that's great because, and that article, there are some harsh words, but, but they're not unfounded, right? I, if you've done things wrong in the past, then maybe it's a good friend who comes up and [00:23:00] says those harsh words to you out of love. To get you on the right path. And, and that's how I kind of read a lot of that is that, yeah, these are harsh words, but, but you're not saying this out of malice.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: You're saying this out of compassion to, to help get you on the, the person that's done the wrong thing, to get them on the right path. Tell them yes, you, you can still find forgiveness. You can still get redemption. You can still do the right thing right now rather than going to the end of your career and still never do the right thing.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah, so you're exactly right. I mean, we've all been there. We've, we've all done the wrong thing and, and I would even venture to say that all of us at some point or points in our lives have even demonstrated cowardice again, whether in a great degree or a small degree, but I mean, everyone shies away sometimes from doing things that they kind of know they should do.
Former LTC Brad Miller: E e everybody has, we've all, we've all been there. So at the very beginning of that piece going back to what you just said, [00:24:00] I kind of explain the spirit in which I'm writing it and I say, Hey, listen, I mean this to be interpreted in the spirit that I'm writing it in the spirit that I'm writing. It is kind of equal parts sharp rebuke, but also willingness to embrace.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So, I don't feel bad, I will not apologize for sharply rebuking those who have contributed to this massive situation that we're all in. Which, and, and I believe that our country's absolutely on the precipice, right? So not, not gonna apologize for, for hurting feelings it great. But I also want people to know, Hey, listen, we will willingly embl embrace you, but you gotta, you gotta do what you haven't done so far, which is you have to stand up for truth.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And you, you gotta show some, some honor because, and Sam, you've talked about this. I, I, I mean, you've talked about this a ton over the last 18, 20, 21 months. So again, and I say this all the time, I [00:25:00] am willing to view people as charitably as possible. I am willing to to, to say to people, I know that you may not have known what was going on in August of 2021 when the FDA and d o d were clearly in collusion with this whole bait and switch and, and you know, misrepresenting an unlicensed product as a fully licensed product.
Former LTC Brad Miller: You've spoken about this, you know, a ton. But I, I, I realized there were people who did not necessarily know what was going on. Did I? I, I got all that, but right now, Right now in June of 2023, I mean, we are getting really close to to two years since that mandate went into effect. Since that initial collusion predicated entirely upon fraud was wrought.
Former LTC Brad Miller: On the entire nation, you know, I mean, it's almost been two years. You cannot continue to claim ignorance at this point. If you're claiming ignorance, it's because you'll, you're, you are, you are willfully ignorant because you're afraid of what you might uncover if you look into it, which means you are a [00:26:00] coward.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So that's kind of where I'm at and how I feel you know, these, I mean, you know how it is, Sam, I mean, leaders in the, in the, in the military, they are not, they're, they're, they're not dumb people, you know? So, If they don't know what's going on, it's because they are, they are willfully hiding from the information that is now readily apparent.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And unfortunately, what we've seen is the military, like the kind of the senior leadership, right, has not just turned itself on the rank and file, you know, the service members, but also on the you know, on the entire country. And now we just see this, this extremely pervasive infiltration across the board of just so many of our institutions.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Well, I mean, it's interesting that you, you're talking about the military leaders, cuz I've recently spoken to two physicians, one military, one knot, and you know, one of 'em is like, oh, well, you know, talking to me, asking me, do you even think the, the pandemic was real? And it's like, come on man. You know, of course [00:27:00] millions of people died from something.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And then he, he goes into, well, if this really was gene therapy, then we'd be seeing, you know, lots of people getting cancer. It's like, dude, What reality are you living in? We are seeing lots of people getting what is now colloquially known as turbo cancer. Like that's the only words to describe it, and it describes it well.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: It's a supercharged cancer that that happens exceedingly fast. What reality are you living in? Because you're not seeing that. I spoke to some other physician recently and he was saying, oh yeah, well, mRNAs been around since the sixties. Okay, well, when has it been used in humans? Oh, Ebola. Okay. Well, when else has it been used in humans?
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Oh, never. And I explained how, you know, they did some covid type. Vaccines and treated sheep, I'm sorry cats and ferrets, and it killed all the cats and ferrets through antibody dependent enhancement. And this doctor was like, oh, well I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about humans. Yeah, dude, they all died.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: And so they never went to human studies because they all died. [00:28:00] What reality are you living in? And that seems to be the problem, is these people live in this alternative, alternative reality where they have different facts.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah. So I, I, I view that as what we, what we see now is the, the vast majority of the population, and again, we're talking about, you know, reasonably intelligent people, right?
Former LTC Brad Miller: And their worldview is entirely incomplete and just predicated on a ton of false premises. I mean, that's just exactly what it is. And part of that is due be, and In large part too, the fact that there's a lot of worldview warfare that goes on. I mean, we are constantly bombarded with shifting narratives incomplete information competing stories about this or that.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Or whatever. So we largely live in a world in which we're all propagandized heavily. And it's almost, it almost creates a, and I don't want people to, to, to misinterpret what I'm saying, but it almost creates this like, alternate reality. You [00:29:00] know? I mean, we're still here living in the real world, but so much of what we believe is like engineered, it's almost, it's almost fabricated.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And, and I don't want people to take that, that that. Description too far with what I'm saying. But what I mean by that is, hey, there are so many things that people may believe that are just, they're just not true. You know? And so eventually people have gotta realize, you know what I gotta start connecting these dots that are right here in front of me, and I gotta start recognizing these patterns that I see.
Former LTC Brad Miller: That I have refused to see for a long time. You know, they've been there and I've refused to connect the dots and I've, I, I have refused to identify the patterns and now I'm just going to, You know, stop refusing and I'm just gonna have to do what I have to do. And I'm gonna realize that reality is much different than than what I told myself or what I believed it was for a long time.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Until people are willing to do that, they're never gonna accept some of these things that are staring them in the [00:30:00] face. And so what I think is happening is when I talk about people's worldview being incomplete, what I mean is like, They, they constantly have to do these mental gymnastics in their head because what they see on the ground in front of them, right, in reality is much different than kind of what they believe.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So there's a disconnect there. And they have a, they have a a difficult time accounting for that disconnect. And, and again, it goes back to, yeah, because your, your worldview is incomplete. Because whether you admit it or not, your worldview has largely been given to you by people who are. Shaping it to serve their interests, not yours.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Right. And I think that's, that's a good test perhaps, is if you have to do mental gymnastics to, to have two ideas in your head, then you're probably not looking at the entire facts of the case.
Former LTC Brad Miller: So you know, one of the things that I I've mentioned before, right? So there's a you know, there's a [00:31:00] French thinker and philosopher Voltaire, and he's got this off repeated quote. And I, I found myself using it too recently, right? And and it basically says if they can make you believe absurdities, they can make you believe they can make you commit atrocities and.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I, I think that's extremely applicable to what we've seen the last couple of years. So I mean, you know, this, they, they made so many people believe absolute absurdities that, you know, the masks work that we need to lock down, you know, and, and destroy the economy. And that remember the original forecast of just these astronomically high numbers of people that supposedly were, we were gonna lose to Covid.
Former LTC Brad Miller: I mean, just these absolute absurdities. Oh, ESI works. That's another one. Right? Or or, Hey, you're gonna kill grandma. Or, Hey, you can't be with your grandparents when they're sick. And potentially, you know, at death's door. You can't be with them in their final moments, you know? And then well, what did that lead to?
Former LTC Brad Miller: Well, I mean, it absolutely led to atrocities. I mean, we. [00:32:00] Treated people with Remes, remes, avir, and put them on vents. And we allowed grandparents to die alone without their family members present and we destroyed the economy. You know, we destroyed people's livelihoods.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: The Remin Vir point that I want to just make it as clear as I possibly can for the listener, it was so.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Deadly and bad when they were studying it for Ebola, that it killed more people than if they didn't use it. Ebola, it killed more than Ebola.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Just, just to throw that out there. Yeah, you're exactly right. So, so again, that is a clear example of. You know them through worldview warfare, right? And just implanting this, this narrative on the public of getting people to believe absurdities that then led to atrocities.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And we're still kind of in, in the midst of this, you know, atrocity, atrocities, don't have to be committed with with [00:33:00] tanks, guns, bombs, et cetera. There are there are other more sophisticated ways in which to also commit atrocities, and we just. We have to we have to realize that that's what's going on and we have to call it what it is.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Right? Precisely. Yeah. So one of the, the last things that I would just kind of say here is again, I am, if, if, if I have to be honest, right? I'm, I'm very proud of myself and I don't mean that to toot my own horn but I know what you mean, Sam, because you, you can look in the mirror and know that you.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Kept the faith. Right? And I congratulate you for that. You've been through extreme difficulty. You know, you and your family have endured hardship because of the stance that you took. So I congratulate you. When you look in the mirror, you can say, Hey, you know what? I did the right thing. And when I look in the mirror, I feel like that too.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And that doesn't mean I'm perfect, doesn't mean I even had, you know, a a a I was always perfect in my military career. It means [00:34:00] that on this issue, I feel like I did the right thing. And in that, Narrow regard. I can say that, you know, I I kept the faith and I don't have any regrets. And I know that there are good people out there.
Former LTC Brad Miller: There are peers of yours, peers of mine who are still friends of ours to this day, who are internally conflicted and they're internally conflicted about what they've been a part of because deep down, they are good people. They're good people that have found themselves on the wrong side of this issue.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And to those people, I just, you know, plead to, hey. Stop being an agent of your own enslavement, because that's what this is all about. It's about power. It's about them taking power away from us and consolidating power amongst themselves at the expense of of all of us. And so stop being an agent of your own enslavement and and first and foremost, you know for those of us who, you know, men, right?
Former LTC Brad Miller: I mean, I believe in this concept of being a, what I call a Christian man of action. And so again, I would look at, you know, [00:35:00] the men out there since you and I are both dudes. Hey. Be a Christian man of action. Cause I, I do believe we have a Christian duty to stand up and resist evil and protect, not ourselves, first and foremost, but protect society at large.
Former LTC Brad Miller: That is a, that is a duty that falls, that is a Christian duty that falls to, to men. And it's not that just men are in this fight, but that's something specifically that I would say to, to the fellas out there. But to everybody. You know, put God first, first and and just, you know, let everything else just work itself out.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Yeah. And kinda to your point, that example of, you know, and I don't know if he's Christian or not but I, I interviewed him in the past Dr. Kirk Moore. Maybe a week or two before we have this conversation. He was arrested and I believe he's in jail, and I don't know for how long it, if at worst, it's a white collar crime that he committed, allegedly, you know, by giving saline [00:36:00] allegedly giving saline instead of the the covid shots to kids, to children.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Which, you know, if that's proven in a court of law that that's what happened, then he actually saved lives and, and that's a much. Tougher decision than I think you or I did, cuz he's facing nine years in prison and hundreds and hundreds of thousand dollars, almost a million dollars in, in fines and all sorts of things.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: But it's, we need men and women like this to stand up everywhere. And, and you're right that I think men have a certain mantle that's put on us that's not easy to carry. And it's that when, when there's weak men, society collapses and bad things happen. And when there's good strong Christian men then, and this is not a sexist thing, this is, we are given this mantle of.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Of hardship to be that stalwart against evil. And when we're not there, then hopefully there's women that can stand up and take that place. But, but men are charged with that. That is a, again, a, a mantle that we're, we have to carry. That's heavy. It's a heavy cross to burden to carry.[00:37:00]
Former LTC Brad Miller: I completely agree.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Well, Brad, where can we find you? Tell us again cuz I know I, I like your articles and, and they're very well written. Where can we find more of 'em?
Former LTC Brad Miller: Yeah, so the easiest place is just on my sub, which again is just my name, Brad Miller. 10. So Brad Miller, one zero. Dot com so you can go there and and subscribe.
Former LTC Brad Miller: And I would, I would certainly appreciate it. I appreciate, you know, any support there.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Well, thank you so much. We'll be praying for you and keep up the good, the good fight. Keep running the race as if to win.
Former LTC Brad Miller: Hey, thanks Sam, I appreciate it. Love everything you're doing.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: Thank you. Love what you're doing too.
Former LTC Brad Miller: God bless.
Dr. Sam Sigoloff: [00:38:00] Just a reminder for everyone out there in duty, uniform of the day, the full armor of God. Let's all make courage more contagious than fear.
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