...where he said...
"I've interviewed doctors, scientists, journalists, ordinary people about COVID. And, because of that, my YouTube channel — with over 550 films and videos — was permanently deleted. And I've been blocked on Facebook for upwards of a month on several occasions."
How did Tremblay react to being deleted from the world's largest video platform and banned from the world's most popular time waster? Did he back off from speaking the truth? No, he moved his show to Rumble and BitChute.
As Tremblay told me in an email: "There is a price to pay for 'stepping out:' loss of friends, maligned, etc. Moving to Russia caused more isolation, condemnation and ridicule."
Regis Tremblay is the creator of three historical documentaries (which I have yet to review) with rather captivating titles worthy of bestselling thriller novels: The Ghosts of Jeju, Thirty Seconds to Midnight, and Who Are These Russians And Why Do We Hate Them. You can find them on his Rumble and BitChute channels.
I was particularly impressed with his interview with Riley Waggaman (AKA Edward Slavsquat). Waggaman is a former RT journalist living in Russia exposing how the push by Putin's government to have Russians jabbed is just as nefarious as in Western countries. Possibly more so, when you hear that there is zero reporting of adverse reactions in Russia, while Sputnik V seems to be more dangerous than AstraZeneca's. That interview is available on Global Conversations' Rumble and BitChute channel.
Just in case you thought Putin was the hero on the global stage, I recommend checking out that conversation.
The real heroes are independent journalists like Regis Tremblay.
Stay sane, stay real,
John C. A. Manley
PS And, if you haven't heard enough about my novel, you can catch that interview with me on Global Conversations' Rumble and BitChute channels. Dr. Gary Magder of Goldtent TA Paradise, watched it and emailed: "Absolutely brilliant, John. Wow! The interview is first class... and your responses are powerful stuff." (Special thanks to reader and susbscriber Davit Aram for arranging the interview.)
PPS Gary Magder may be a bit biased — he was one of the patrons who helped cover the enormous costs in creating and publishing Much Ado About Corona. In recognition, you'll notice that the novel's protagonist, Vincent McKnight, lives on 211 Magder Road. The first person to guess the significance of the number 211 gets a free, signed copy of Much Ado About Corona mailed to their door (unless you live in Russia, where you can't receive international mail — in which case I'll email you a PDF).