Covid-19
Dr. Ardis details departure from Mormonism, Links information Control to “Political Cults” and pharmaceutical industry
But I come from a long line of Mormons, multigenerational Mormons, who actually helped settle some of the areas of Utah. So this is how far back my ancestry goes in the Mormon church. So it’s just generation after generation. All this started, I was actually raised in the Mormon church. I was, they have this terminology in the Mormon church:
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5 months agoon

In this jaw-dropping interview, Dr. Bryan Ardis rips the veil off the medical industry’s deceptive practices, drawing chilling parallels to his escape from the Mormon Church after uncovering its hidden truths. From a faith-shattering visit to a Mormon historical site in Illinois, to exposing Big Pharma’s cult-like control tactics—media manipulation, isolation, and even mandated clothing like masks—Dr. Ardis reveals how narratives are weaponized to enforce compliance.
He dives into the shocking reality of vaccine “ingredients” like animal DNA, aborted fetal tissue, and toxins like polysorbate 80, designed to breach the blood-brain barrier and wreak havoc on God’s perfect design.
Dr. Ardis drops bombshell after bombshell, exposing drugs like Ozempic as venom-based poisons directly linked to cancer and blindness, and unmasking the pharmaceutical industry’s agenda to undermine natural immunity and deceive the nations.
With unwavering faith in God’s pharmacy—nature itself—he empowers viewers to break free from Big Pharma’s lies, detox from harmful substances, and reclaim their health and spiritual freedom.
This episode is a must-watch wake-up call for anyone ready to challenge deception and embrace the truth!
In a recent interview, Dr. Bryan Ardis a figure noted for his extensive knowledge in health, publicly shared his personal testimony regarding his departure from the Mormon Church, drawing extensive parallels between what he views as its historical practices and tactics he identifies within “political cults” and the pharmaceutical industry.
Addressing the nature of control, Dr. Bryan Ardis stated, “defines a political cult as this: In order for a political cult to be successful they have to do two things. They have to control the media and they have to stop gatherings of people. Do you remember what they did in the beginning of CO? If they can’t control them through the media and through isolation, they often will take a tactic from very successful religious cults. The political cult will engage all of their followers and require them to wear a specific article of clothing. Every time you do that, you further ingrain the belief of the narration coming from the cult leaders, which is big pharma.”
The discussion then pivoted to Dr. Bryan Ardis’s personal narrative. “Guys, I’m with Dr. Bryan Ardis, and he has, he’s just such a wealth of knowledge when it comes to health, and you’re just being used in so many ways to help so many people. But apart from all of that, you have a testimony, and I want to talk about it. So can you tell us about you used to be Mormon?” the interviewer probed.
Dr. Bryan Ardis responded, “I did actually. This is a topic that’s only been hinted at a few times at different conferences where I’ve been speaking. And you go off the side to do different media interviews. And as I’ve been redpilling it, as they call it, a lot of things taught to us healthcare-wise that we believe are absolute facts or truths, they are not. Most of the time, what is being projected by the media and by the pharmaceutical industry. As I’ve been redpilling people on stuff about health, lots of people want to know, well, what else have you been redpilled on in your life? Like, when were you ever awakened to something that maybe you accepted as truth before, realized it wasn’t?”
Dr. Bryan Ardis recounted his upbringing, stating, “But I come from a long line of Mormons, multigenerational Mormons, who actually helped settle some of the areas of Utah. So this is how far back my ancestry goes in the Mormon church. So it’s just generation after generation. All this started, I was actually raised in the Mormon church. I was, they have this terminology in the Mormon church: You have Molly Mormons, or the girls that are perfect and follow all the rules. And then there’s this term called Peter priesthoods. I I’ve actually heard that. I would have been one of those Peter priesthoods. He did everything like he was supposed to. I did it all that I was told to do, following my dad’s example, grandparents’ example, all of it. And I have to say, I loved the community growing up in the Mormon church. I grew up actually in multiple states. I did not just grow up in Utah. I was born in Utah, I was only there a few weeks, and then my family was living in New Orleans, Georgia, South Carolina, all over the country. So it’s not just Mormons are not just in Utah, they’re everywhere. And I had a great collection of friends and families I adore and created a great childhood and teenage life for me growing up. The whole Mormon culture was awesome. I loved them all. I have no regrets about being raised in that church, actually in the community.”
His path to disillusionment began with a significant event. “And then something happened. I go off on my Mormon mission. I get married in the temple, actually here in Dallas, Texas, in .
So this was me, I was in Bishop Ricks in the Mormon church. It’s just my whole world was Mormonism. And I have nothing against anybody in the Mormon church, except some of the leaders actually at this point. And I’m talking at the very top. And that is only because they are withholding truth from the rest of the Mormon church, from its history that they don’t want you to know.”
The pivotal moment for Dr. Bryan Ardis occurred in 2008. “For me, everything changed though in when I actually went to a historical Mormon site that the church now owns right on the Mississippi River in Illinois. And this city is called Nauvoo, Illinois. So if you know the history of the Mormon church, there’s this guy named Joseph Smith, who discovered a gold Bible.
You’ll learn about that he translated. Supposedly, this Bible, or this book made of gold plates, was written in like an Egyptian style language that he was able to translate in the s, supposedly inspired by God to be able to read this language and convert into English. And that transcription became a book known worldwide now as the Book of Mormon.
In Mormon, the Book of Mormon is named after one of the prophets written about in the Book of Mormon, who had a son named Moroni, who supposedly buried the gold plates that Joseph Smith millennia later was told to dig up and found in a hill called the Hill Camora in New York.”
He continued, detailing the historical migration: “From there, the Mormon church and Joseph Smith out of his followings, and ended up in Nauvoo, Illinois, which was a swamp land and very cheap to buy. They purchased it, drained all the swamp, and built the city called Nauvoo. They built a temple there. And this temple’s been reconstructed by the Mormon church in the the earlys.
And so they bought up some of the homes that Brigham Young used to have, other people in the Mormon church that were there as leaders of the Mormon church way back when in the s and s. They reconstructed a lot of these buildings. In this city is where Joseph Smith and his wife Emma Smith were living when he was killed in a jail. Joseph Smith from Nauvoo, Illinois, is where Brigham Young took all the Saints west and went to Utah. And you hear about that pioneering efforts traveling west and settling cities from the border of Canada all the way to the Rio Grand River, now known as Idaho, Utah, and Arizona. I mean, they literally settled cities as Brigham Young and all the Mormons did out there.”
Describing his Nauvoo visit, Dr. Bryan Ardis stated, “So in , I go to Navville, Illinois. Now that’s been purchased by the Mormon church. They’ve rebuilt the temple that was burned down after Joseph Smith was killed and Brigham Young left. And I decided I want to have a spiritual experience for me. I wanted a personal spiritual experience. And I would like to liken this to what many many modern-day Christians find when they go to Israel and they want to go to Jerusalem and they want to go see the hill of Goltha. They want to go see the tomb. They they go there expecting when they walk on the same land that Jesus walked on, that they’re going to have a spiritual connection with their savior. I was raised with a similar belief and look at Joseph Smith as this modern-day Moses, as he is called in the Mormon church and in their doctrines, as someone who was the final person on earth to bring the fullness of Jesus Christ’s gospel to the earth through the Book of Mormon.”
He then articulated his initial discomfort: “You know how they say you probably shouldn’t meet your heroes or your celebrities? You know that pedestal might just come down when you realize they’re just human. This was kind of the moment for me when I got to Nauvoo unfortunately. And in Nauvoo, they have senior missionaries, which are usually couples who have retired, and they’ll go out there and lead carriage rides and tours of the different houses, and they’ve built kind of the scene of what it would look like in the s. You got your blacksmith shops, you’ve got brick factories or shops. And so you’re just touring around all this. And we’re being toured around. And we’re there for several days. But on the second day, I’ve now listened to several tours we’ve taken with all my little kids and in-laws, and we’re going around these carriage rides. And these seniors keep pointing to Joseph Smith and Emma’s cabin over there on the shore of the Mississippi River. I mean, you can see it. It’s only like half a block away. There it is over there. And then there’s the mansion house right across the caddy corner to the little cabin home that they built later after being there, which was built like a hotel to bring in new converts that were moving to Nauvoo and wanted to build homes. They had a place to stay until then. And I want to go take a tour of those two places. Could you imagine going to Israel as a Christian and not being allowed to go see Goltha or the tomb once you got there? Okay, that would be weird, right? You traveled all that way and you wanted this one moment. Oh no, you’re not allowed to see it.”
His narrative continued, detailing the resistance he faced: “So I’m there and these seniors, they’re taking us around all these other houses. Brigham Young’s house. You’ve heard of the hunting company and gun company, Browning. He was a Mormon. His home’s there. They give you a tour of that. And I kept asking them, ‘When are you going to take us over to Joe Smith’s house? I want to go see the cabin and I want to go see the mansion house where they lived.’ And they told me on that second day, ‘I’m sorry, but that’s not a part of the tour.’ And I said, ‘Why is it not a part of the tour?’ And they said, ‘Uh, because the Mormon church doesn’t own them.’ And I said, ‘So, well, how do you go get a tour of them?’ Because it looks like they’re available to go visit. Nobody’s living in them, you can tell.
And he said, ‘The church that does own those two properties, they do tours.’ They turned around and looked at me and said, ‘But the Mormon church does not allow you to go over there, and they tell us to tell you not to go over there.’ And I’m like, ‘That’s so weird.’ What I looked at them, looked at my whole family at the time, I said, ‘Uh, there is no way I came to Nauvoo and I’m not going over there. It’s like steps away from me, sometimes these two houses. I was like, there’s no way I’m not walking over there. And they’re buried right in front of the cabin on the Mississippi River’s bank. Why would I not go look at their grave site?'”
Defying the advice, Dr. Bryan Ardis sought the alternative tour. “No, I said, ‘Well, what does it take to go do that to go do that tour?’ And they said, ‘It’s $ that you have to give to that other church at the time to take this tour.’ And I said, ‘For $, I go have this moment for me that I thought was going to be this amazing spiritual experience.’ Couldn’t believe it that they told me no, that the church would tell us no. And everybody that goes there is told no, you can’t go there. You can’t go over there because you’re going to give $ to that church. They say this: you’re not supposed to give money to another church. You’re supposed to give all of your tithes and offerings to the Mormon church. They do say this, by the way. In fact, you’re asked every year in order to keep your temple recommended, go to the church, ‘Do you affiliate with or support any organizations that are not the Mormon church?’ Oh, and you have to say yes or no in order to get that card. So $ is challenging my entire belief in Mormonism, being raised in this thing and my commitment and going on a mission and converting people and baptism into this church. You’re going to tell me I can’t go over there for $?
Well, I looked at my whole family and said, ‘Are you guys going to listen to them or are you going to go over there?’ And they all said, ‘We’re going to listen to the church and the leaders of the church.’ So they didn’t go. Soon as we get back, I put my kids down for a nap, and I went right out the door and started walking over there, and went over there and did the tour.”
The tour, according to Dr. Bryan Ardis, proved to be a turning point. “And there is a definite reason the church would never want you to go do that tour. Because when I went on this tour, unknowing to me what I was about to learn literally shook the foundation of my entire testimony of the Mormon church. And for the next five years, I read every book about Joseph Smith Jr. and his wife Emma Smith and her life after he died. I read every single diary journal written by people who personally knew Joseph Smith back in , s, s, before he died in . I wanted to know everything about that guy as a result of one experience in Joseph Smith’s home in Nauvoo, Illinois. All it took was one thing said to me, and I was like, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa, is that true? I’ve never heard that.’ And that’s where it all started to crumble.”
He drew parallels to other instances of shattered beliefs: “And for all of us, there’s usually a moment like, for example, I talk about health all the time.
Well, how many millions of people around the world were convinced vaccines are safe and effective for you, and then you went and got a vaccine for you or your loved one, and then your child died within hours of SIDS, dead in their crib when % of those kids that die of SIDS you find out through research papers occurs within hours of a vaccine?
Then it shakes your reality.
Or how about an FDA approved drug, and you take it and it causes you to have a seizure? How do you look at the FDA approval process now?
Do you just trust all drugs now being approved or with a certificate that says the FDA approved it to be safe and effective for adults and humans?
No. There’s always something in life that shakes you, and my I was shooken.”
Inside the mansion house, a specific revelation reportedly unfolded. “What do they tell you? I walked into the mansion house after going to the cabin first. I went to the cabin. It’s just a one room little cabin in the s. They’re tiny. There’s not multiple rooms. There’s a little cabin that was not really that impressive, but it was great to stand in this little building. And it was really cool to look down and see that this is possibly where Joseph Smith and Em Smith are buried right in the front steps. To me that was cool to see, but I didn’t really have a spiritual moment.
And I I didn’t know what I was going to expect. It just didn’t happen yet. But I was excited to then go over to the mansion house where they spent most of their life in Nauvoo. So we walk across the street and go into the mansion house, and there’s this dual there’s this double staircase that goes up to a landing. And I love going into homes that have these dual staircases. I just love them. I love them. I love it. I can say that outside of a plantation home or inside of a home or hotel and I just think it’s amazing. Dual staircases going up to a balcony.
Amazing. And that’s exactly how the mansion house is built. We walk in the front door, and there’s this young little -year-old something tour guide who says to the group of like seven of us, and I’m the only member of the Mormon church based in Utah who was in this group. I was the only one. And I’m standing there, and this tour guide goes like to welcome you into the mansion house, ‘This is the infamous stairwell that you all know about.’ And I looked at the group, and everybody’s like, ‘Oh yeah. Oh, this is where it happened.’ Oh. And I’m like, ‘What are y’all talking about? What do you mean infamous? You mean famous?’ This is exactly what I said. And this young little tour guide looks at me and goes, ‘Oh no. Not not famous. Infamous.’ And I said, ‘Oh, what makes it infamous?'”
The tour guide’s response further fueled Dr. Bryan Ardis’s inquiry. “And this girl looks at me and says, ‘Oh, uh, you must not be Mormon.’ Not a joke. ‘Oh, you must not be Mormon.’ And I said, ‘Wait, what do you mean not Mormon? I I am as Mormon as they come, I think.’ And she goes, ‘Oh sorry. What church do you belong to?’ And I said, ‘The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- Day Saints, the Mormon Church.’ And she goes, ‘Oh okay. So you aren’t a real Mormon?’ And I went like this: ‘What do you mean I’m not a real Mormon? Wait, what church are you a part of?’ And at the time, it was called the reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. And they also called themselves Mormons. Okay. But they considered the Salt Lake Mormons not their true Mormons. That’s okay. That has nothing to do with the story. All I’m doing is listening to these people. They’re challenging me on whether or not I’m a Mormon or they’re Mormon. The other six people in this little tour group were members of that other church, and they also call themselves Mormons. I’m learning all kinds of stuff here, right? So I said, ‘Okay, well, uh, if I’m not a real Mormon, tell me what the real Mormon church in Salt Lake City that I consider the real Mormon church, what have they not told me?’ Because the young tour guide looks at me and goes, ‘Oh, well, if you’re from the Salt Lake City Mormon church, they have flat out lied to you your whole life. So you wouldn’t know about this stairwell.’ And I was like, ‘What?’ So the girl looks at the group of six adults all older than me and goes, ‘Would any of you like to tell him what makes the stairwell famous?’ I mean, they all know this story. And I was like, ‘I don’t know.’ And of course, people can make up stories. I got that. I just listened. I said, ‘So what makes a Stville famous?’ And they said, ‘Uh,’ then they informed me of a story I’ve never heard in my whole life, and I have studied Mormon history. This senior lady looks at me and goes, ‘Oh honey, the Mormon church would never tell you the truth about this house.'”
He then detailed the alleged untold story of the infamous stairwell: “So up on the second story, first floor, first door, second door on the right, right above Emma and Joseph Smith’s bedroom, which is downstairs. Emma’s home one day all by herself. Joseph is gone somewhere. And there’s a young lady living upstairs who is vomiting profusely.
She can hear her puking up there. So Emma, being the kind host of her home, having this convert from Canada in this house who’s like or years old, she goes up there to check on this girl who’s puking and throwing up, and asks her, says to her, ‘I didn’t know you were sick.’ She goes, ‘Oh, I’m not sick, I’m pregnant.’ And Emma says, ‘You can’t be pregnant. You’re not married. You came here single. How how can you be pregnant? You don’t have a husband.’ In the Mormon church, it’s very much a very powerful thing: You do not have sex before marriage. This has been laid out forever. So she’s like, ‘There’s no way that you’re pregnant.’ And she goes, ‘I am pregnant.’ ‘Well, who’s the father?’ Emma Smith asks. And this girl says, ‘It’s your husband, Joseph. I’m one of his spiritual wives.’ And Emma had not heard that term. And she then tells him, ‘Oh, I’m not his only spiritual wife. There’s multivas here in Nauvoo, who have been told by Joseph Smith, your husband, that we have been chosen by God to be a spiritual wife of his.’ And he tells them this in secret either through a handwritten note and says to them both teenage girls and pre-teen girls with a note that you are to be one of my spiritual wives. ‘And God has told me that if you will consummate that relationship with me through a sexual act, all of your family, parents, siblings, children, all of them will be guaranteed exaltation with God in the celestial kingdom.’
The Mormon church lays out that there’s three degrees of heaven: Celestial, terrestrial, tstal. And the top one is the only place God lives. So Joseph Smith was telling all these young people and married women in secret that if you don’t tell your husband and don’t tell my wife, ‘you just need to know, not everybody understands the ways of God.
God’s told me you’re to be one of my spiritual wives. You just have to consummate. We have to get married in secret. We’ll have to have sexual relations in secret to consummate it. If you do that and don’t tell anybody, God will promise your entire family exaltation.’ So I’m listening to the story. Emma Smith learning about this scenario now that Joseph Smith has this secret conspiracy of women and girls out there that he’s having sexual relations with, covering it up and calling it spiritual wifery or wiffery.
Anyway, Emma Smith was so angry that she threw that lady down the stairs. And they pointed, threw her down these stairs right here. Emma Smith had from the top threw her down the stairs in anger, and the trauma of this girl landing on the landing caused her to lose her baby and miscarried. I looked at the group, and I was like, ‘Really? That’s interesting.’ Oh yeah, you were also lied to why he was jailed and why he was murdered right after this. And I was like, ‘Oh okay.’ So I looked at them and I said, ‘Okay, well if this is a true story, did Emma Smith ever write any autobiographies about her life married to Joseph Smith after he died?’ Because the story of this church that also called themselves Mormons, Emma Smith and her one of her sons of Joseph Smith, after he died and after he got up to an age of, they started a different Mormon church based on the Book of Mormon principles still, because Emma Smith really believed he was a prophet of God, but discovering all of these affairs or adulterous acts, actually believed he was a fallen prophet. But didn’t fall until after the Book of Mormon. So she still held to the belief of the Book of Mormon and created what was called the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. And when Brigham Young took all the Mormons from Nauvoo West, Emma Smith did not go with them. And she told Brigham and all the leaders of the Mormon church, all the other apostles of Joseph Smith, told them, ‘As long as you continue to have this polygamy affairs with multiple womens and this spiritual celestial marriage as you call it to all these other women, if you practice this, I will never be a part of that church.’ So they went west. But for years and decades, Brigham Young would send people to Missouri and Illinois to get Emma Smith to come join them back in Utah. And she’s like, ‘No.’ Because she totally believed he was a fallen prophet because of his adulterous acts that she learned about. And I’m really sorry. She’s got a book called Mormon Enigma. You should all read it. That’s her book. And she tells you her life story about Joseph Smith. It’s not that she didn’t trust Joseph Smith her whole life. It was she believed that the ego of becoming a leader of hundreds of thousands of people following him in this religion, that that had gotten to him in this power trip of ‘I can have any woman I want.’ And just so y’all know, I know it’s weird, he actually had current affairs at this point. Emma Smith found out, and the fallout of this knowledge and her demand of a divorce is why Joseph Smith ended up in jail. And why is he ended up murdered. And you’re all told it was a mob that killed Joseph Smith. Oh no. There was a bunch of uncles, husbands, grandfathers who were pissed when they found out about the truth. Yeah. And the truth was published in a newspaper called the Nauvoo Expositor, which actually means Nauvoo Exposed. And it was just one paper printed once. And this guy that printed it put it on every front porch of every home in Nauvoo in one morning. And Joseph Smith, because he founded the city and his apostles, his followers of the leaders of the Mormon church were all his city council. And he was the mayor of the city. He got a city council together meeting and said, ‘We’re going to declare martial law on that printing press.’ Yeah, I remember this. And he burned it down. And then the guy who built it went to Springfield and was able to file treason charges for him destroying his right to free speech to publish all of his heinous adulterous acts and pedophilic acts with young girls.”
Dr. Ardis concluded this historical segment by stating, “But this is the guy that all the people in the Mormon church sing a hymn to in the Mormon himnels. You actually know what the definition of word hymn is? It’s a song of worship and praise to like a heavenly being. There is a hymn in the Mormon church called ‘Praise to the Man,’ and it’s all about Joseph Smith. And my last day sitting in the Mormon church was years later when I heard all the men in the men’s group singing this hymn. And it just wrecked me. I had to walk out into the parking lot, wait for my kids to get out of their little kids classes and Sunday school classes, and I never went back. And so just so you know, I read for five years. If you want to know the rest of the story for five years, I read books non-stop.”
He then returned to his broader theme of information control: “As you learned during COVID, Dayar was incredible at making sure that you knew that whatever the information was being published in the media is that the same as what’s being seen by the medical professionals and scientists around the world as they’re treating patients? And man, did y’all learn that it was not the same story, not the same narrative as in the media as what was truth and published in science? So same thing here. The term during co that most people introduced to was, it’s those who like vaccines and the antiaxers. I just want you to know the anti-phrase in any context is an old cult tactic, and all cultic religions use it, and Mormonism is no different. If you’re going to go read a book that the Mormon church doesn’t want you to, they call it anti-Mormonism. Are you reading anti-Mormon literature? Are you reading anything anti-Mormon? Anything not coming from the church, published by the church, approved by the church is considered anti-Mormon. However, there are millions of Mormons that have left the Mormon church since the internet was introduced in .
Thank God, because the truths were now allowed to be spread throughout the world about the history of the Mormon church. And I really want all of you to let go your guilt and shame you haven’t been able to let go of because you believe there’s something still possible that is true about that church that maybe you should go back and give another shot. No, you can let it go. Yeah, yeah.
I spent years reading everything that the church has published from its history of the Mormon church from its own bookstores, and that entire narrative destroys it all by itself.
You can go read the Mormon literature and it will tell you that Joseph Smith stood up in Kirkland, Ohio, in front of all of his followers and said, ‘Not even Jesus Christ could create a church and a following like I have.’ Okay, does this guy actually believe Christ is a savior? Yeah, or does he believe he’s above him? Because he said it and it’s in print. And it used to be in every Mormon church. Now they took those books out of their libraries. You can still get them. They just took them out of print.
They didn’t want you to read them because the internet made sure you could see them all without buying and going check out the books. So I just want you to know he’s not who you were told he was. He was an adulterer, a whoremonger, a thief, and that’s really all he was. Joseph Smith was. Yeah. No different than like Jim Jones and the rest of them. They just manipulate the minds and steal from them and lie to them, and then want you to convince that only God talks through them for you. And that’s that’s not true. It’s all about power, greed, and control. And control. Yeah.”
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Despite his profound disillusionment with the institutional aspects, Dr. Ardis emphasized the enduring nature of his personal faith. “How did you find Jesus amongst, after kind of this, you know, kind of everything you knew kind of crashing down? How how were you able to find him in the midst of all that?” the interviewer asked. Dr. Ardis replied, “Yeah, I’ve never ever let go of the fact that God exists. Jesus Christ is our savior. I’ve never let that go. That’s always been a truth for me, and very very sound belief in me there. But how did you not trash it when you were like, well, this is all, how did you not, like, what happened? What convinced you? Yeah, so my perspect, I think, common sense rules the day in my brain / unfortunately, and most of us are manipulated through media and through people to create some other reality of truth. So for me, common sense always ruled the day. So so for me, I cannot close my eyes and come up with any other way that this earth was an accident of chaos or some big bang. There’s no way this wasn’t organized. Yeah. Watch embryology in the development of a sperm and an egg developing and mutating and changing into a being with multiple organs and an immune system. It can breathe. It can interact with the universe and the earth. It’s incredible. There’s no way that this was all happenstance or coincidence. Yeah. No. And I have greater hope that after this life, there’s a greater thing waiting for me, and Jesus Christ atonement can help me get rid of all the shame and guilt and free me of the bonds of sin and the mortal, you know, obstacles that we confront here. I’ve never let that go. It’s always been there.”
He then elaborated on his reconciliation of faith with institutional failures. “I believe that there are certain men on this planet who have taken opportunities to twist in their favor the knowledge and awareness of God and his principles that literally govern all of life, and manipulate them for their power, greed, and control for their own benefit. And this is something I just had to reconcile. Number one, I mean, you have the Bible. The Bible, the Mormon church, they tell you it’s it’s been translated so many times by man, it’s lost its original meaning. So you can’t trust it. That is the overlooming theme of the Mormon church.”
Dr. Ardis also made specific claims about the Book of Mormon’s textual integrity. “And the Book of Mormon, oh, we have to touch this. You ready? Okay. I’m sorry Mormons, you’ve all been told that the Book of Mormon, as it was written by Joseph Smith in whenever he finished it, is when he dug it up supposedly. So when he translated this thing, it is written, it is stated that the Book of Mormon is the only perfect book on earth, and the only one that God translated, and it will never ever be changed. Go get your books, Mormon, from the s, s, s, even s. Then I want you to go get a Book of Mormon they’ve given you recently anytime in the s, and I want you to explain to me why it is the title page was changed. That’s just the first page. And I need you to tell me what they deleted. And then I need you to explain to me why they changed it. Because there’s something very specific they deleted. And they never told anybody in the Mormon church they did it. They didn’t hold a conference. They didn’t put it in print in their magazines called the Enzyme of the New Era. They didn’t tell any of you that they changed the writing of the Book of Mormon.”
Concluding with a potent comparison, Dr. Bryan Ardis stated, “And I’m really sorry. The CO narrative, the reason why it was so successful is the, it’s really a medical mafia, but the pharmaceutical industry in the medical industry operates like a cult. Every successful cult-like tactic used by fanatical cult leaders is what they use. I just told you, you want to control the narrative, tell the Mormons they can’t read anything outside the Mormon church that we say you can read. That is called anti-Mormonism. Wow. What do they call anything against vaccines?
Oh, you’re an antivaxxer. Okay, this is cult tactics to make sure you don’t go look. I just want y’all to know when I say to you that vaccines are being used to create chronic illness and disease in children, and there’s poisons in every one of those vaccines published by the CDC, and I can show you their documents and show you every ingredient inside of there.
Like, for example, did you know one of the flu vaccines, the first ingredient listed by the CDC is Medine Derby K canine kidney cells? You’re going to hear your medical doctor tell you and your loved ones tell you you have to get a flu shot every year.
Yeah. From the time you’re months old. And this is going to help your immune system against the flu virus. Okay.
Do you know that one of the nine flu vaccines, the first ingredient is Medine Derby K canine kidney cells?
Do you know what canine is? Dog. It’s a dog.
So this is a dog’s kidney cells. Do you know what a Medin Darby canine is?
That breed is called a cocker spaniel. Go look it up.
When I say you probably shouldn’t be injecting these shots inside of you that have foreign DNA from other animals and have thyosol mercury, a known neurotoxin published on the CDC’s document.
Did you know there’s one of them, one of the nine that has berium in it? Do you know that’s evil.
Compiled by – Abiodun Ifeoluwa

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