“Rare Courage”- Interview With Whistleblower Nurse Jodi O’Malley

Feb 23, 2023 | Hospital Murder Podcast Episodes, Podcasts

Jodi O’Malley fulfilled her lifelong dream and aspirations to help heal the sick and wounded by becoming a Masters prepared critical care nurse; she had a lot of faith and trust in the healthcare system while working as a nurse for the Department of Health and Human Services Federal Hospital for Native Americans; that all came crashing down in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. As Jodi described it “I feel like I’m in the Twilight Zone” Her two year experience ended abruptly when she courageously shared her inside undercover video, which went viral and received 5 million views in just a few days and got the attention of James O’Keefe at project Veritas in order to expose the corruption at the highest levels of care for the treatment of COVID-19. Listen to this episode at Medical Truth Podcast

Meet The Host

James Egidio brings more than 24 years of experience as a medical practice owner, manager, entrepreneur, and author to the Medical Truth Podcast by interviewing experts in the medical industry such as Doctors, Nurses, Researchers, Scientist, Business Executives as well as former patient’s.

Episode Transcript

James Egidio: 

Hi, I am James Egidio, your host of the Medical Truth Podcast. The podcast that tells the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about the US healthcare system. My guest fulfilled her life long dream and aspirations to help the heal the sick and wounded by becoming a master’s prepared critical care nurse. She had a lot of faith and trust in the healthcare system while working as a nurse, for the Department of Health and Human Services, federal Hospital, for native Americans, that all came crashing down in 2020 during the Covid 19 pandemic, as she described it, I felt like I’m living in the Twilight Zone. Her two year experience ended abruptly when she courageously shared her inside undercover video, which went viral and received over 5 million views in just a few days and got the attention of James O’Keefe at Project Veritas in order to expose the corruption at the highest levels of care for the treatment of Covid 19 patients. Jodi became a whistleblower today. She continues to be a strong advocate, her patient rights, and for healthcare professionals to honor their oaths and ethical principles. Recently in January 30th, 2023, released her book, It is my pleasure an honor and a blessing to have as a guest on the Medical Truth Podcast, Ms. Jodi O’Malley. Thank you, Jodi. Appreciate it. Thank you.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Thank you for having me.

James Egidio: 

Thanks. Absolutely. Jodi let’s just share with the listeners and viewers. Of the Medical Truth Podcast, a little bit about your story and what prompted you to blow the whistle knowing that you could jeopardize your nursing career for life.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah, so in the beginning, I started posting on Facebook and from the very beginning, questioning what was happening. Questioning, if. Right thing to do to isolate and quarantine the healthy with the sick. Remember the two weeks to slow the spread, the lack of informed consent, the encouraging of people to stay home and not move about then no one. Talk about opening up your window and creating circulation, ventilation. Of talking about eating healthy. We just went to Uber Eats, right? We made them a lot of money. I know, certainly I did It just, it was really hard as a nurse that a master’s prepared nurse that followed evidence based practice, which is the best available science and and with a man named Dr. Fauci, who I had never heard of before. Just getting on and talking head and just driving home the whole fear narrative which increases a stress response in our body. And if we did come in contact with something that our body needs to fight, having a body that’s stressed out is not going to fight it efficiently. And so it was, and then the. and the PCR testing. Just all of it, no, no treatment. Like never have I been involved of somebody having a deadly disease, a possible deadly disease, but we’re not going to do anything for you unless you come back when you’re having trouble breathing. So essentially, actively dying, right? Body gasping for air then we’re going to treat you with another experimental medication remdesivir And so from the very beginning, and this is how I detail out my book I show people how what my thought process was and I use my Facebook post to guide the story. So you can see how I made a conscious decision from the beginning that I am going to choose faith over fear and that is going to allow me the ability to critically think. And so that’s what I did. And then it, it all, then the vaccines came down and we weren’t even asking the question if they had the vaccine, and when they had the vaccine, we were supposed to be the ones, in my opinion, gathering this data on this mass infection campaign and nobody was even asking the questions even when the patients were presenting with extremely abnormal condition for someone, that had their history and then I started, noticing, nobody was reporting the because we were supposed to report safety signal. We’re not supposed to say that vaccine’s causing it, but we’re as nurses and doctors we’re mandatory reporter.

James Egidio: 

So let’s go back, let’s back up from the very beginning. So cuz I still had the practice that I had owned at that time as well, but You were working in a hospital, big hospital. I was in a small, very small clinical setting. So let’s back up to January of 2020. So you, we get the announcement from the media. They put it out there a little bit. I remember when they put it out there and still being on social media, on Facebook with my personal Facebook page that a lot of people were even making a joke about it. They were alluding to Corona with, relating to Corona beer and all kinds of stuff, and we weren’t, they weren’t, people weren’t really taking it very serious. They were they heard about it. It got leaked by the media. but in a hospital setting, what was the mood like early on during the Coronavirus outbreak?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

We, same, the same with you. Like we, we were all joking about it saying we just got sick. I had, came down with a horrible flu. I had just came back from Seattle. on February 19th. I had no idea that Corona was even going on, and so I came down and I was super sick for the first time ever, full shortness of breath. But I got through it and after I was fever free for 24 hours I went to work. And so the whole vibe in the hospital, if you will, we had seen a huge increase in illnesses and viral illness that have the same symptoms of this covid. And so many of us thought we, we already have it. We already have been infected by it. We were diagnosing people, viral illness, viral pneumonia, They were all tested negative for the flu.

James Egidio: 

Yeah, so you had patients, I guess what you’re saying in the hospital that were also getting this real nasty flu, and did they link it to Covid at that time?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

They didn’t. No. Remember at that time we didn’t have tests either.

James Egidio: 

Okay. All right. So that was late January, early February. going into middle of February and even into the end of February. So then what happens once it, it’s leaked out. Now you’ve got these patients in the hospital that are really sick with the flu, and they determine it’s covid. Then what happens after that?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

People still were intestine positive for the flu, flu. So we can’t call it a flu, I’ll call it flu-like illness. Because none of us were testing, and most medical providers, if we’re sick, we don’t go rush to get a test. We, and people know, body aches, pain feels like, flu symptoms, so we just treated accordingly. But, then the test came out and only certain people were able to qualify for the test, and they took five to seven days to get back in the beginning. So the whole testing aspect of it all, I did so much research on that, on the PCR test that was never intended to diagnose an illness at all. But we allowed that to drive this pandemic. Everybody wanted a test. I never took a test. I never, none of my family members ever took a test if we were sick. I didn’t agree with them.

James Egidio: 

Yeah, it’s interesting you say that too, because I remember in 2003 and four when I had the medical house call practice and we had what was called SARS, Sudden Acute Respiratory Syndrome. I’m not sure if you were, you probably weren’t. You were too young back then. I got you by a couple years thank you. I’m holding but doesn’t Sudden Acute Respiratory Syndrome. I’ll never forget that flu season. And it was bad when I say it was bad. I remember the Health Department putting out a memo that particular year, and it wiped out a lot of the elderly population. A lot of elderly people literally lost their lives over it. And a lot of young pediatric patients lost their lives over SARS. And low and behold, that was a Covid virus, right? Never publicized like this particular virus, the covid. 19. Now, of course it’s coming out now that it was all through gain of function and it was created in a lab, in Wuhan and all that. But I remember getting the flu that particular year because I was out with the doctors doing the house calls and getting really sick, real bad. And how do you describe getting sick with the Covid 19 virus like you did?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Oh I was I remember I had came back from Seattle and then my daughter and grandbaby came over on a Monday and I was feeling I just thought it was because I was hanging out on fun. And they felt about the same. And then Wednesday they came over again and they left down and then, Boom. Just praying. Yeah. I just, it, it was horrible. I was laying in the bed I was having, all I could do was sleep. I didn’t have any cough or anything. No. Upper respiratory or lower respiratory. But it was extreme body aches but no cough or anything and I just slept I just slept. And then my oldest son came over and I had been laying there days he had come over and he gotta get up and I remember being short of breath and I have no cough. I don’t even feel like it’s bronchitis, where I can take an antibiotic for it. Then he said, I’m gonna run you a bath and then I remember, think. if I can get up and walk to the bathroom by, unassisted and take this bath, I don’t need to go to the hospital. And then and then I did, and then I slept another 12 hours. And then I woke up on a Saturday morning. I need an antibiotic. If I didn’t have pneumonia I have it now from Just lying around. So I called the Teledoc. and they, they gave me an antibiotic and inhaler and I took that and within like hours, like 12 hours, I felt alive enough to like, I actually went back to work on Sunday evening

James Egidio: 

So this all happened in February of 2020, right?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah.

James Egidio: 

Okay. So now I’m trying to put together a timeline here now, 2020. you get sick, you come back from Seattle things start to break in the media and then what happens as far as what’s leading up to what you start to discover in the hospital.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah. So then I remember being, I worked night shift and I worked float pool primarily ICU, ER and hospital and this evening and girl was telling me about what was going on with this, or at this time we had posters of Covid, is a Covid 19 kind of thing and I’m sick and I had just come back from Seattle and you were in Seattle. That’s the hotspot, right? And I said, oh really? And I have it. I guess I got over it. And so for the most part, like I said, for a couple months, not the hospital was dead, right? Once we shut down and we told people not to come in, we did not see our diabetics anymore. We didn’t see our alcohol withdrawals. We didn’t see our psych patients, I mean our abscesses that we would normally get, All of the things in the hospital, like it was dead. They scared the living daylights out of people.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. And yeah.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

And I felt oh my gosh, we were shutting this down off of a respiratory virus that we cannot control and we are going to kill people by doing this. And I’m looking around, looking at my colleagues saying, do you agree with this? And then everybody would parrot novel. It’s novel, Jodi, we don’t know. And I said what we do know is our evidence-based practice that we don’t quarantine the healthy with is sick and So forth. I said, that’s what we do know. So let’s stick to what we do know. And and try to help people like how come we’re not telling people to, to boost their immune system? How come we’re not giving out vitamin D, C, Zinc, how come we’re not encouraging people to do that? It was all for their gain.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. Yeah. So that was the tip off then, is what you’re saying then for you as a provider with what was going on. Because the news, I remember the news reporting it as saying the hospitals are just so packed right now. And I remember even in Vegas, cuz we were neighbors at that time, living in Vegas and the gyms were closed. So me and my wife were just riding our bikes around in Vegas, for exercise and I lived by a hospital. I and I didn’t see any cars in front of the hospital. There were no cars at all and they were reporting all of the emergency rooms are packed and there’s like this panic storm and they wouldn’t even allow people in the hospital. So what there is so much contradictory information going on. So this was your tip off. Okay. So now they don’t allow people in the hospital people are parroting that it’s a novel virus and then what happens as time progresses?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Then, the government starts changing ICD-10 codes which is saying that somebody doesn’t have to have tested positive. for the PCR test that the doctor can presume them positive if they have a couple of symptoms. And it’s like how many people can say, I can say every day, like I have a congestion. But yeah, maybe I had some loose stool this morning. You know what I’m saying?

James Egidio: 

We were getting into the spring too. If I remember we were going from, cuz I still had the practice up until December of 2020. The office based practice so we were going into spring, so people were complaining of seasonal allergies at that time because that didn’t go away, that just didn’t suddenly disappear. Of course, we know cancer didn’t disappear. Diabetes didn’t disappear, but it just seemed to me like everybody was getting coronavirus.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah, so then I’m seeing it as hospital supervisor. I don’t know if many people understand the role of supervisor, but when the hospital supervisor, you are in control of higher hospital for your shift. And so if there’s any issues, any of the departments, whether it’s housekeeping, lab, CT, physicians, nurses, that all, if the, if their immediate supervisor cannot handle it, it all goes to the hospital supervisor. This is a powerful role. And what also happens is now explain to people cuz they don’t understand the admissions. So we have a patient coming into the ER doctor says, I think this patient should be admitted he calls or she calls the hospital. The hospitalist that’s on the hospitalist listens to the report, and then most of the times will come down and see the patient and make a decision face-to-face. So then that hospitalist comes down, sees the patient, and then once they decide if they’re going to admit them, then they call the hospital supervisor. And then we have a discussion, and then we determine what unit? Med Surg, Tele, ICU kind of thing. And so I was seeing a lot of doctors not assess the patient. They were not going down into the room and they were listening to what the ER doc said, maybe looking and then calling me up. And I would hear this time and time. All right, Jodi. I have a 26 year old female, no medical history, covid pneumonia, two liters, full admitter to med-surg for observation. And I’m like, okay, so I’ll go into the room, I’ll look at the patient and I’m looking at their monitor and they’re nine, adding 99% on room air. and I’m like, do they even need oxygen? So I would tell ’em, take the oxygen off and sit there and watch them. And then I would call the doctor and say, they don’t need to be admitted. They’re at 95% on room air. What are we gonna do for them here? We’re gonna put them in a isolation room, and you wanna give them Remdesivir because the protocols for Remdesivir are saying that they need to. less than 92% on room air to qualify for this experimental medication that grants them an automatic five day hospital, with daily labs. So I saw all the time of how we were driving these numbers up that didn’t need to be there, right? These patients or these patients that came in with a broken leg. And we’re testing them for Covid and then, so now we’re testing this broken leg for covid. And if the test comes back positive, which we know how faulty this test is now, that broken leg patient is in an isolation room, which also means less nursing care, that you’re going to get less doctors coming in and assessing, less physical therapy coming in and helping you heal. Overwhelmed. Nobody was doing that. And so it was a huge struggle for me because also too, at the end of the shift, I had to report my numbers to the emergency management resource database, which goes to our health health and human services department, which then goes to the media, and so I was having a hard time with all of this for quite some time. Just, and I would tell people like, listen, our hospitals are dead, or we don’t have I had to report 10 covid patients, but really there’s only two that’s symptomatic. So it, there was a, just a massive waste fraud, and abuse and danger to public health and safety.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. And yeah. What was the the hospital you worked in were they on board with the ventilators? Did they go overboard with using ventilators and just putting people? No. Oh good. Thank goodness.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

We did not, and I’ll tell you why we didn’t. Yeah. Tell me because we do have an ICU department, but it’s federally ran. which I’ve come to find out how much waste to, in a federal hospital, because Oh yeah, we’re saying that these patients are critical and that their ICU status, but in many other hospitals, they’re not ICU status. Okay. They would just be on, on a regular floor. But in our hospital, we call them ICU. and when we intubate somebody in the ICU, they quickly get them to be transferred out to another hospital because their reasoning is saying, don’t have a staff pulmonologist on board, or we don’t have a staff cardiologist on board where we could always consult one No, we didn’t do that. We took the taxpayer dollars and we sent them to private hospital. So no, we, they did not make a point to intubate because nobody really wanted to care for that intubated patient. And we were using great oxygen delivery,

James Egidio: 

So what tipped you off? I know you were getting some pushback. I did watch the video. The that was the video footage with that doctor, I believe it was Dr. Gonzalez, and she was at her wit’s end with the whole way that things were going in the hospital. But I guess my question is what was the initial response that you received from other colleagues when the topic of, let’s say, off-label use of medications like hydroxychloroquine and vitamin D and zinc and even nebulized steroids and antibiotics were to be used, what was what kind of response did you get from that?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

That I was a Trump supporter.

James Egidio: 

really. Wow. Yeah.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Nurses stations across the country. It became a polarizing topic. It became, medicine became politicized.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. And yeah

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

and people lost their ability to think, they were brainwashed by the media, essentially. Even the smartest people that I absolutely loved working with and loved their critical thinking skills. And they were brilliant providers, brilliant! But they lost their mind. they literally fell victim to propaganda messaging.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. Yeah. I know. That was one of the most frustrating things that I noticed too, was that it was like you got these these people from the media that were just parroting all this stuff from non-medical people, and they’re the ones that ran with the narrative, and of course they made Fauci. The answer to everything at that time. And then there was so much contradictory information. And I was just having a conversation just yesterday. I had a, an episode I did with Dr. Paul Thomas, he’s a pediatrician has to do with vaccinations. And we were talking about that. We were just, we talked about how this whole thing is so politicized, especially on the vaccination side of things now, the other thing I noticed too was when Trump was promoting the vaccinations, like you said, people on the other side were like, oh no that’s, it’s Trump. It’s Trump, don’t get the vaccination. Then all of a sudden there’s the changing of the guard in Washington, D.C. With Joe Biden, I And all of a sudden it’s okay now. The vaccines are good. So it was like a political football and then people were being pushed to take the vaccine through billions of dollars that were being pumped into marketing and advertising through Pfizer and Johnson Johnson and Moderna. through sports and through entertainment and through the news and everything. I could see why people ran and got the shot, they were sold on it, plus you had all the hype with the media. Like you said, that was, they just ran with the narrative and. it became a political football is what it became, unfortunately. so what leads to the video that you make?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

So what led to the video? I had talked about just struggling from the beginning. Talking about the math, which was just so useless. trying to help people, to do things that actually made sense this entire time. Early treatment, I was following I got ivermectin hydroxychloroquine in my cabinet in October of 2020 I knew enough about the drug. All we had to do was research it, throw it up on micro medics and see what are the contraindication, what’s the safety profile? Oh, safer than Tylenol. Okay. I may wanna have it in my cabinet. That’s how I felt. Yeah. And and so anyway, like with what I saw in the hospital we had three waves of covid. So June, July, 2020 December, January 21, and then again in July. Okay, so we rolled the injections out in December of 20 and then we, I saw a lot of people coming in, sick or that even had it before, and now they’re shots not working because a lot of these people are taking it and now a couple days later they’re getting it. And then everybody was saying they should, they’re not considered fully vaccinated. And I’m like, oh, Lord, have mercy. Okay. All right. So we’ll go with that right then in June one of my colleagues had just come back, or in July, she had just come back from being on leave and and I was on the nursing that night working ICU pharmacist came around and was like, okay guys, I have I have three doses left before I have to throw this away in the morning. Anybody want one. and I’m thinking to myself, we’re freaking auctioning off an experimental injection, right? Like it’s been out since December, right? People knew that they could take it anytime they wanted, they could take it and these three people had chosen not to take it. But then now the other nurses are chiming in no, you didn’t get it. Go get it. Go get protected So I see these three people walk off their unit and get injected. And two weeks later, one of them came into the hospital admitted into the ICU again, the, on that floor. But she came in and feeling very sick. feeling very awful. But her vital signs were normal. her oxygen level was normal. All of it was normal. and she asked me, she’s feel good. What do you think? And I was like, girl, if it was me, like I, if it was me or my family members, I’d have them leave and get started on ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine and but prior to that, she had asked me, she goes, what were those drugs that you’ve been talking about this entire time? And I said, oh, FLCCC printed off for me. And then I printed it off for her. I’m on this and this, but not on this and this. That’s what you need. And she said, and asked me my. I wouldn’t stay here. I may go, you know what they’re gonna do? They’re gonna give you remdesivir, and we know that’s not working. And she’s I already got a dose. And I was like, how did you get a dose? You’re, you don’t even qualify for it. You’re on room air. she says I don’t know. They gave it to me. So a couple days later now she’s like really getting sick and she said she wanted to try it. So I advocated for her as hospital supervisor. I advocated. I went to her nurse. I said, she wants to try this. You wanna talk to the doc? And she called the doc and she called me back and she said no they’re saying it’s controversial. And I was like, oh, come to my office. So I had the doctor come to my office and the nurse and respectfully said to the doctor, I said, listen, being controversial is not a reason not to practice medicine I’m here as the patient advocate. The patient wants to try this, there’s no contraindication. And she said, yeah. And then they left and then the nurse calls me and she’s gonna order it. And I’m like, yes. And then she calls me back and she goes, pharmacy blocked it. I go, what? And so then when I had the pharmacist come in to the office that’s when I. I need to record this. I need to record this. This is I’m done. I’m done.

James Egidio: 

And what month was this, Jodi, that you started? August of what? 2020.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

21.

James Egidio: 

Oh, 21. Oh, okay. So is that the colleague that you worked with that passed. August of 21, you started to record. So you record this on what, one occasion? Two occasions. How many occasions?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

I record the pharmacist on the one occasion. And then and then from that point on very short amount of time, the rest of the videos that you see there’s plenty more that were not shown.

James Egidio: 

Oh, really?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah. They will be used for my for my whistleblower case against the Government.

James Egidio: 

Oh, okay. So we’ll talk about that here in a minute too, if you’d like. So you take a series of these videos. I did see the one where you lost your colleague. That was pretty freightfull. It was just horrible.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

It was horrible and,

James Egidio: 

yeah. Horrible.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

I was like I, you know what I even sat there praying with her. At that time, like the buck stops here. This is it have been speaking out as loudly as I possibly could be. Nobody’s listening. So I’m gonna show them, I’m gonna show them what’s happening and that’s what I did. And I called them Project Veritas, told them about my videos and them, and started working with them.

James Egidio: 

You know what? I can’t understand, Jodi, and I’ve been in the, around the medical field all my life. When they announced this and they were talking about that if you were to catch Covid 19, that you had a 98.5% chance of surviving. And I thought to myself, and this was early on, by the way, this was like what? February, March, April, when they were starting to parrot, through the news. And I was thinking to myself, I take more of a chance, of jumping in my car and going to the gym to work out and getting into a fatal auto accident and getting killed than I do of catching covid and dying. And I’m thinking to myself, if I was a gambling man, I was living in Vegas at the time and I had a 98.5% chance of survival or winning at a blackjack table. And I don’t gamble at all. I never did. I take everything I had and go gamble it. Hi. Yeah. Then the other thing is I started to do a little research myself. Early on. I bought Dr. Judy Micovits’ book on mask. Came out in April of 2020. She started talking about masks. She was ahead of the curve on all this because it, there was a meeting that took place in October, I think it was August, September, or October of 19. The Department of Defense in Davos was setting up a mock outbreak. And in fact, this was actually laid out in Miki Willis’s documentary called Plandemic, where he talks about that and he talks about how this mock. Pandemic that would come out because this was all about the vaccines. Let’s face it. This was about step one, get the virus out there through gain of function. Obviously we saw that already. That’s already come out. Ran Paul brought that out. A lot of people brought that out. And now recently, project Veritas just exposed the kid that worked for Pfizer. So you manufacture this virus, you manufacture the cure of this illness, but it’s not really a cure. And then you know, gates talks about depopulating the world. And I think to myself, how much more information do we need? And this is where we’re blessed when it comes to information. Imagine if we didn’t have this information at our fingertips, literally through our, through social media, through computers, through the internet that we wouldn’t know of what’s going on and we do. So all this is being exposed a little by little. So go ahead. You, August, 2021, you start to get some video footage and then what happens?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Then I like I said, called Project Veritas and asked them if they would release these videos and then, and so September 20th day that I released it to the, to James O’Keefe. Yeah. Hey. until it was like, shut down, censored, find it on YouTube now. It’s still around 5 million views and I just, that’s not accurate. So many people have seen it and tw they were banned on Twitter then, so after there, yeah. But just like ivermectin in early treatment, you can’t stop Word. And when people know something’s up or something, has worked for them, they’re gonna tell their friends and they’re gonna tell their family. And that’s how so many people were treated early treatment. Cuz you have brave doctors like McCullough and FLCCC and the late Dr. Zev Zalenko. And my free doctor,

James Egidio: 

Dr. Peter Breggin, Dr. Yeah, I just interviewed him on Saturday.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

He’s on America out loud with I have a show on there as well.

James Egidio: 

He’s a great guy. He’s a great guy. He’s a wizard when it comes to medicine.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

He is, yeah. Yeah. released I was gonna say, then it was released to the world and then I received a bunch of complaints against my license. I had to go in front of the Arizona State Board of Nurse, had to undergo an investigation and when a formal ethics evaluation, and I did. And and I came back with flying colors, so my license, and I wish that message really went forth into the nursing committee for them to be empowered that if they uphold their ethical principles and follow evidence-based practice that they.

James Egidio: 

What grounds did they wanna pull your license on?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Oh, people were saying I was creating vaccine hesitancy, you know that I was talking about horse dewormer.

James Egidio: 

It’s unbelievable. At the expense of people’s health, they’re gonna politicize something like this. They ought to be ashamed of themselves. These people, they ought to be ashamed. They really ought to be ashamed of themselves. It’s a disgrace is what it is. When I came to one conclusion about all this, you’re a woman of faith. It comes down to good verses evil. That’s what this is. That’s all it is. It’s good verses evil. and they know it, and they wanna say it in the worst ways. Although that little runt that runs around with Klaus Schwab, Harari talks about doing away with God and this and that. I hope he’s listening to this because Harari you’re gonna lose. You go against God, you’re gonna lose my. You’re gonna lose You’re not gonna win

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Nope. We know how it ends.

James Egidio: 

We know how it ends. You’re gonna lose my friend I don’t care how much technology, how much money you have, none of that means anything you’re gonna lose. I’ll tell you now. I hope you tune into this. They think they are. God, that’s oh, they do. I know and you got Gates. He’s another one. He’s, I saw some video footage of him talking about Depopulating the World and he’s talking with his wife At that time it was his wife I don’t know how anybody would marry this guy. But anyway he’s with talking with Glee about injecting kids with the vaccines when he was using it experimentally in Africa. And he is talking about, oh, we just take it, we just shoot it in their shoulder and with glee, and he is talking evil. Evil. That’s all that is. You could see it for what it is. It is just pure evil.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah. But I’m fully vaccinated, I, all of my kids, they got all their shots. Really? Now, if you were to ask me, they never got the covid or anything, but now you would ask me. I wouldn’t, I am not injecting anything else into. Anything. No. And that, that stopped a couple years ago. Good. I don’t trust it. The more I know about the vaccines now, because, as a doctor, as a nurse our education on vaccines are like an hour. That, that just says they’re good and everybody needs to get ’em, and here’s the childhood schedule and that’s it. That’s all the education we get on it.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. Yeah. were you forced to get the vaccine because of you having to work in a hospital or is that, was they gave you the choice? The ultimatum? Is that what it was?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Oh first I don’t think anybody was forced. The people saying that they were forced, no, they, you were coerced, but not forced.

James Egidio: 

Yeah, I guess coerced, I should say. Yeah it’s a good word. It’s a nice, it’s nice for, it’s a nice word. Saying Forced coerced, forced it’s word salad.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah, I get it. I get it. It’s like words do matter. And when people tell me like, oh, I was forced to take it. I had to take it so I’d lose my job. And I

James Egidio: 

That’s true.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

I’m like, I gave home my, I put my whole world on the line to do this. You did. And so I’m a single mom. I didn’t wanna lose. my Kush government six figure bedside nursing job. So that’s, but I do have a lot of empathy for people Yeah. That don’t have the courage because, I have walked in my life, I’ve chosen the hard road, so I know what I made of. Yeah. You know what I’m saying? I do. And I don’t think a lot of people. And so I do have a lot of empathy and compassion. I’m not saying for those that whose eyes are open now or who just found the strength to come forward. Man I’ll wrap you in my arms and hold you so tight.

James Egidio: 

Absolutely. Absolutely.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Don’t want me to come off sorry. Yeah. Hard like that. But none of us were forced, none of us were forced and tied down to.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. No, I agree. And I, the people that have gotten the shot, like I said, they were coerced by the media, by entertainment, by, all these, yeah. They got pressured. I lost personally, I know three people personally that were close to me, that passed away from the injection. A 30 year old who his brother found him. He dropped dead in his bathroom. Him and his brother were roommates. Another friend of mine, she was 50 and another friend of mine was 65 and they were all healthy. So I don’t know anyone that died from Covid. 19. My sister got covid you got it. She got it real bad. Went before she moved here to Florida. Cause I live in Florida now. my wife got it, my stepson got it they got sick, but they lived through it, but three people I know who got the shot passed away. The other thing too, which was interesting, talking about being coerced, this was the first time in history Where they were offering things like donuts, money, lottery tickets, weed and strip clubs. they were offering all kinds of incentives for people to get the injection. And I never heard of anything like that in all my years in the medical industry. So when that started to happen, I said something’s wrong here. And then they coerced people into getting like you said, coerce people into getting. you’ll lose your job if you don’t get it. And that was pilots, nurses, physicians. I know a few physician friends of mine that actually quit after 20, 25, 30 years in practice. They just folded up.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yep. Yeah. I asked a question. I didn’t I didn’t take Ed and I don’t think my job was ever in jeopardy. Did put out a religious exemption for the year. So I was just hopeful that they would, honor that or, they knew my faith. I was always that nurse that was talking about Lord Crane with

James Egidio: 

good, that’s the main thing.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah. But I blew the whistle before, I guess they had to, but they were giving out exemptions at our hospital.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. So what is in store now for you? I know you have the book and I’ll actually the title is Rear Courage Standing for A Right When You’re Surrounded By Wrong. That came out in January of 30th of this year, 2023. So it just came out. I see. It has five star reviews so far, which is beautiful.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah. And Dr. McCullough wrote the foreword. Dr. Merrick wrote a quote. Yeah. I’m very thankful. I hope that this book in my call to action on this, no. I, it wasn’t anything that I ever thought I would do. I waited months before I even started writing it. But I did write it because for two reasons. One that I think, they, it’s so easy was days to just, so having it in paper format important. Then another reason was, because I didn’t realize how rare courage really was. I, like I said in the beginning I was hopeful that the nurses would see my story, especially after my ethics evaluation came out and stand with me. But we’re in a war of good and evil. Yeah. And and I wanted people to see on how my faith guided me. I submitted to God and I asked him to use me. Yeah. And. I want people, if you were wronged by your family or friends, if people told you were crazy or you were a conspiracy theorist and they don’t talk to you anymore, send them this book. It’s a very easy read by reading it settings and it guides And you see my thought process, from my Facebook post that guide the whole story, right? And. I just hope that it encourages people. I hope it brings families back together. And I’m also, because we lost a lot of people to these deadly hospital protocols. Oh yeah. It’s an organization that I’m working with, www.1000Widows.org that’s 1000Widows.org, and they started off with just a couple of widows. We’re talking about their experience and it’s just quickly grow. They realized that they had 27 commonalities. People, if they lost somebody in that hospital, they said it was Covid chances are. It wasn’t Covid chances it wasn’t covid, it was the hospital protocols right back to that patient. And I just really wanna elevate their voice as, as far as me professionally, I need to take some time. to figure out exactly where I’m going to be. I need to spend some time with my family.

James Egidio: 

Yeah. Yep. And yeah. I think that the important thing for the people that are listening and watching this is that just open up your heart and your mind to what’s going on around us. just be very prudent about making decisions before you could just jump into things. Because you know the news and it’s not just any one side of the news or any, even one side of a political party. I think they’re all at fault. And, we know faith is the most important thing. And having a foundation is in, in God is important and. we’re at a time now, like we said, it’s, this is this is good versus evil, and it’s just, it’s really sad that people are swayed by the world and the outside and allow that to guide them in their life. And faith and family is the most important.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

It is. It’s, and I tell people it’s it’s not about a religion. Talking to, talking about a relation, a personal relation with our father who has us here on Earth and this day and age. Find out what your purpose is. Ask him to lead you. Ask him to show you, wake up in the morning and say Good morning. Talk to him throughout the day and be like, thank you for that. That’s what I’m talking about. That’s the kind of prayer that I do. Sure. I don’t sit and have a formal like prayer life I have a relationship with Him. Or I do. The stronger we walk together and the more Yeah.

James Egidio: 

Yeah people have to realize, there’s Dark Forces out there, Ephesians 6 talks about that, and he’s out to deceive, divide, and destroy. And you can see it. There’s division. There was division with this whole Covid thing, the masked versus Unmasked, vaccinated versus unvaccinated. And everybody just needs to take a couple steps back, take a deep breath, and just reevaluate things based, like I said, again, on family and faith those are that’s where the strong foundation is. Again, your book is called Rear Courage, standing for Right When You’re Surrounded By Wrong. And then your website is www.JodiOMalleyRn.com, right?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Correct. Correct. Yeah.

James Egidio: 

And then you mentioned that widows website. Do you want to mention that again?

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

Yeah. 1000Widows.org It www.1000Widows.org

James Egidio: 

Thank you so much for joining me for this episode of The Medical Truth Podcast, Jodi. I really appreciate it and keep us updated on what’s going on. Keep me updated.

Jodi O’Malley, RN: 

I will, thank you.

James Egidio: 

Thanks.