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4 Women In Mandurah

Cafe Locked Out Interviews, Cafe Locked Out

Apr 7, 2024 [filmed in Mandurah, West Australia, April 23, 2022]

https://cafelockeddown.substack.com/p/4-women-in-mandurah

TRANSCRIPT

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: This is the third video down on the page. The interview takes place in a park by a body of water.

0:05

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Hi, I'm Bronwyn McAllister.

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: Now we're going to, I'll jump straight into it. You've lost your partner.

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yeah.

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: Let's tell us the story of how you've lost your partner.

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: OK. Yeah. So in October he had a pain in his belly, went to the doctor, doctor—

SMALL DAUGHTER: Mom [inaudible] we can go to choochoo train.

BRONWYN MCALLISTER [to daughter]: OK, we'll go on the train in a minute. [To Michael Gray Griffith] For appendicitis removal. They said, you don't have appendicitis. They couldn't work out what was wrong. He had every test. They couldn't diagnose at that time. On the 9th of November he had the AstraZeneca jab and on the 3rd of December he woke up not being able to breathe. They immediately diagnosed him with blood clots on his lungs. And then they, then they attempted to investigate and find out what was wrong. They then took another scan of his bowel and [inaudible] they took a scan of his bowel and he was absolutely full of disease at this point. So they compared October to 3rd of December, full of disease, it metastasized, it was, and within 2 weeks we were at [inaudible] and it was incurable. They couldn't do a damned thing. They tried chemo but they said—

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: You say disease, what do you mean disease?

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: So the, like, tumor was, was huge, which he didn't have in October and it had metastasized to his belly, so—

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: So the tumor that he didn't have in October—

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yep.

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: -how did it spread?

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: From October. I'm not even saying the colonoscopy, I'm saying, because that's usually how you diagnose, there's a scan with nothing and a scan full of, full of, you know, incurable. And yeah, he, within 10 weeks of having that, I'm not going to call it a vaccination, that poison, poison shot, he was dead. So, died 14th of February. And I've got 3 small children and I'm raising them on my own now. And I knew, I knew that this was a mass genocide and I would not partake in it, but we were building a house and he just wanted to look after his family and keep his job. So—

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: What was his job?

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Ah, feeder machinist. Yeah. That's pretty much, that's what's happened. His parents come over from New South Wales, it was very difficult for them to get, to get, yeah, even with his grim diagnosis on, he was given all different, you know, three weeks, three years, like, they really didn't know. And, and when they saw the cancer in the fat cells, they were like, we haven't seen this before. And then she kind of, like, did this [makes a funny expression] and was like, she probably shouldn't of said that, you know? But yeah. I was, I was just, I knew, knew straight away that he had something happening, but you know, cancer usually, you know, you get a few years, or can do things, bowel cancer's one of the easiest treatable cancers, so—

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: How did he, how did he handle his death? Like, you know, did he, did he come at peace at the end, or was he angry, or?

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: It was really interesting. He, it wasn't a religious, like, he was an atheist, full on atheist. I believe in God, that source is, you know, I'm really spiritual, he one day just said to me, I need to give my heart to God, and it blew my mind because he, yeah. But he, he knew, he knew it, it was going to take him. He was very weak. And because he couldn't eat food, there is, there's vitamin B17 could have treated it, cured it, but the TGA[1] won't allow it into the country, the injectable form, so, and the powder, yeah, it came too late, he had passed away by the time it come in the mail. So. Yeah. He, he, he was at peace sort of, but you know, he was angry, really angry.

SMALL DAUGHTER: Mom. Mom. [inaudible]

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: And he did one round of palliative chemo which he regrets as well. I mean, everything that, that they try— I mean, yeah, I just knew that anything, you know, western medicine was going to kill him. And they have. So.

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: How are you coping?

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: I'm doing OK. I'm doing OK. I'm, you know, I'm crying every day. The kids are keeping me strong, I guess.

SMALL DAUGHTER: Mom.

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yes. [To Michael Gray Griffith:] But you know, this is my middle one. I've got a baby and a 10 year old as well. So.

MICHAEL GRAY GRIFFITH: A baby?

BRONWYN MCALLISTER: Yes. Yeah, he, his goals were, seeing her walk, seeing Lilly go to kindergarten. And seeing my 10 year old [holding daughter on lap; laughs] turn 10. So yeah. He got to see those things. But he, it just, it just destroyed him, this thing. Just destroyed him. The smell, like, that morning on the 3rd of December went into his room, the smell, it was just like chemicals, like you were in a chemical factory. Like, it wasn't like body odor, it was just like, like, I don't know, like the smell of someone who'd been poisoned. That's all, all I can describe. It's coming out of his pores, whatever it was, the spike protein or whatever. And yeah, definitely cause of blood clots. He had the elevated d-dimers,[2] they, we know that, so we've got all the paperwork there for that. Yeah.

5:59

# # #

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES

[1] TGA is the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration https://www.tga.gov.au/

From the website's homepage: "We are Australia's government authority responsible for evaluating, assessing and monitoring products that are defined as therapeutic goods. We regulate medicines, medical devices and biologicals to help Australians stay healthy and safe."

[2] "A D-dimer test is a simple blood test that can help your healthcare provider determine if you may have a blood clotting condition. If you have a high level of D-dimer in your blood, your provider may have you undergo further blood tests and/or imaging procedures to determine a diagnosis."

— Source: https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diagnostics/22045-d-dimer-test

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