Mike Yeadon

Mike Yeadon

In this wide-ranging interview, former pharmaceutical executive Dr Mike Yeadon revisits and expands upon his warnings about vaccines, viruses, and what he describes as a coordinated global control system. Speaking with James Delingpole, Yeadon traces his journey from establishment scientist to vocal critic, offering startling claims about medical science, historical events, and the mechanisms of population control.

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From Normie to Dissident

Yeadon describes his transformation beginning in February 2020, when he recognised that "you don't shut down the world economy over a cold." Despite three decades in respiratory drug research at companies including Pfizer and Wellcome, he admits he previously accepted vaccine orthodoxy without scrutiny. He now characterises his former position as "embarrassing nonsense," noting his own children received vaccinations he would now oppose.

A pivotal revelation came through researcher Sasha Latypova's work on childhood vaccines. Yeadon explains that most paediatric vaccines contain trace proteins from major food groups—chicken egg albumin, beef whey protein, and others—typically at 0.01% concentrations. Following the two-dose schedule for multiple vaccines, children become "permanently violently allergic" to these proteins through a mechanism first described by Nobel Prize winner Charles Richet in 1904. This, Yeadon argues, explains rising rates of asthma, eczema, and food allergies that he previously attributed to the "hygiene hypothesis."

The Three Interconnected Frauds

Yeadon presents his central thesis as a mathematical equation: virus lie + contagion lie = vaccine lie.

  1. Viruses do not exist. He claims no scientific evidence supports the existence of viruses as "submicroscopic infectious particles." Examining isolation papers, he finds not weak evidence but "fraud"—researchers omit uninfected controls, starve cell cultures, and add antibiotics to produce cell death they attribute to viral infection.
  2. Contagion does not occur. Yeadon cites "several dozen published papers from 1918 to 2024" from the Common Cold Unit in Salisbury, all concluding that researchers "on no occasion were able to infect a healthy person with someone who had a cold." He attributes apparent contagion to shared environmental stressors among close contacts.
  3. Vaccines are therefore unjustified. The combination of fabricated viral threats and false contagion narratives enables what he calls "diabolical magic"—the injection as the sole medical procedure that bypasses all natural defences: skin, respiratory mucus, stomach acid, and digestive enzymes.

The Injection as Control Mechanism

Yeadon emphasises the uniqueness of vaccination in professional regulation. While doctors may criticise blood pressure medications or prostate cancer screening without consequence, vaccine criticism triggers immediate professional sanctions across all fields—medicine, law, architecture, even chartered surveying. He describes this as evidence of "an arrangement" between professional bodies and vaccine manufacturers, terming it "the only thing you routinely do now where you get a hollow metal needle and you jab it into a human being."

Historical and Contemporary Deceptions

The interview ranges across multiple contested historical events:

  • Moon landings: Yeadon recounts being persuaded by photographic analysis showing multiple light sources and illuminated astronauts in shadow. He notes "two light sources" in lunar photographs and astronauts "brightly illuminated" while supposedly in shadow.
  • Space Shuttle Challenger: He references claims that the seven astronauts survived, with "six or seven" traced to subsequent academic and public sector positions, possessing "the same name and profession" and resembling "an older version of the people lost 40 years ago."
  • Current spaceflight: Both speakers dismiss the recent Orion mission as "an AI video," with Yeadon observing that "those brave cosmonauts" are presented through obviously synthetic footage.

Systemic Observations

Yeadon offers several practical demonstrations of system failures:

  • Biometric passport gates: He and his wife tested facial recognition at UK border controls by presenting each other's passports and making "gargoyle-like" faces—eyes closed, tongue out. Both were admitted. He concludes: "It's not possible... they are using biometric facial recognition."
  • Vaccine passports: A Heathrow check-in agent described accepting hand-drawn QR codes created in Microsoft Paint, confirming "there wasn't a database" for verification.
  • Magnetic train tickets: Despite 40 years of use, these fail approximately every other journey for Yeadon, requiring manual override by staff.

These examples support his argument that control systems rely on "Potemkin" appearances rather than functional infrastructure—"they just need you to think it's working."

Cash, Digital ID, and Resistance

Yeadon advocates cash usage as "more important than you know," not merely for anonymity but to introduce unpredictability into economic modelling. He cites wartime rationing statistics suggesting one-third of British food arrived through black markets by 1945, demonstrating popular capacity for circumvention.

Regarding potential fuel and food shortages, he predicts "genuine shortages which are with them" but argues these will be psychologically managed rather than absolute. His assessment of control systems suggests deliberate incompetence: "they're cheapskates as well and they hate it"—preferring "one that would fool children" over sophisticated alternatives.

Sources and Citations

  • Sasha Latypova: Childhood vaccine protein analysis
  • Charles Richet: 1904 Nobel Prize for anaphylaxis research
  • Common Cold Unit, Salisbury: 1918–2024 transmission studies
  • Augustine Carstens (BIS): CBDC surveillance statements
  • Escape Key/Barnon: Historical control system failures including League of Nations (cited as "resounding failure") and 1880s banking system attempt

Concluding Position

Despite apocalyptic warnings from other commentators, Yeadon resists predicting imminent collapse. He notes IT professionals questioning the technical feasibility of real-time biometric digital ID systems, citing merger integration failures in apparel logistics as evidence of implementation difficulties. His final counsel emphasises psychological resilience: "What they want is for you to be demoralised... resolve not to be."

Yeadon maintains Telegram (Dr Mike Yeadon solo) and Substack (Dr Mike Yeadon) channels, acknowledging these now function as "an echo chamber" reaching primarily established audiences rather than new converts.