On meeting Maajid Nawaz… and telling him the “story of the century”
This time four years ago, I had the privilege and misfortune to be in possession of quite possibly the biggest news story in decades. It was - and still is - quite possibly the biggest scandal in living history. Two years later, enter Maajid Nawaz.
I never wanted to be a news journalist: it always seemed more trouble than it was worth. I was earning enough - and having a whole lot of fun - writing short stories, teen fiction, tales of the weird and wonderful for spooky magazines, horoscope books and light-hearted human interest stories.
But from early 2020, I was suddenly cursed, Cassandra-style, with the ability to see exactly what was going on and was thrown into a whole new world. I became a woman on a mission. It was a case of “ah, Mr. Plandemic - I’ve been expecting you.” I knew what the future held but didn’t know what it held for me. It was time to get serious.
Over the last four and a half years, I’ve had many ‘Covid’-related stories published. The Telegraph editors were happy to pay me for opinion pieces about care homes and for tales of the trials and tribulations of my dad’s release from one. The Mail snapped up my stories about ‘crazy’ NHS staff who were resigning because they could see through the BS and were unwilling to play the lying game. The papers also liked what I wrote about people being prevented from seeing their loved ones; the couple who escaped from a quarantine hotel; the man who was arrested for serving soup to the homeless.
But there was one story not a single national paper would touch: the truth about the culling of the elderly in NHS facilities: thousands whose deaths were promptly hastened with ‘end of life’ protocols, all in the name of Covid, their lives snuffed out by lethal, high-dose cocktails of morphine and Midazolam.
Within months of the first whistleblower coming to me, I had enough evidence. More than enough. I went to the national newspapers - to 28 editors. I eventually had two meetings. Both editors agreed that the story was front page news. Then, after a bit of email ping pong… silence. One editor has ignored all my follow-up emails for years now. The other said he just didn’t really have time to deal with it. Something wasn’t right.
It didn’t take me long to realise that the mainstream papers were not able to run this story. They weren’t ALLOWED.
I really didn’t want to go the alternative route but I had to get the word out. Two websites and several internet radio and TV stations gave me a platform but it was the people who read the papers and watched TV that I wanted to reach. Singing to the choir wasn’t helping.
So I turned the story into a film: ‘A Good Death?’ It premiered in December 2021 and is one of Ickonic Media’s most-watched films, having been seen by hundreds of thousands of people worldwide. But as it wasn’t broadcast on TV or pushed by Netflix, it still wasn’t reaching the people I wanted it to reach.
Five months on, enter Maajid Nawaz. As an ex-LBC presenter, he was the nearest to mainstream I felt I was going to get. After a two-hour meeting with him and much to-ing and fro-ing with his producer, we put together a special programme called ‘Allegations Of Involuntary State Euthanasia Using Midazolam’.
Within 24 hours of its broadcast on Sunday May 29th 2022, the two-hour show had been watched by over 7,000 viewers and social media was awash with clips from it. On Twitter, one tweet was viewed over 30,000 times in 12 hours.
The content of the programme - which featured me, a doctor, a medical researcher and two women whose husbands (aged 68 and 54 - neither terminally ill) were euthanised in hospital - was powerful and deeply shocking. Although I knew Celia and Elena’s stories, I cried hearing them relayed again and seeing their faces as they did so.
I dare you to watch and keep a dry eye. I dare you to tell me what they’re saying isn’t true. I dare you to dismiss the salient views of the doctor and the knowledge of a man who’s researched this horrific subject every day for the last four years after both his parents were killed in care homes within six days of each other.
No one believes me when I say I have evidence of mass euthanasia within the NHS. Of course they don’t - it’s unbelievable. But the editors I’ve met face to face know it’s the truth. As did Maajid when I met with him. As will you when you watch this report.
https://odysee.com/@MaajidNawaz:d/Ep6-Radical:9
Note: Maajid has continued to support me and the relatives of victims to this day. He’s produced several other programmes and written some great articles on the subject of involuntary euthanasia. Follow him on Substack.