Hello, hello, hello. Good morning, everyone. Hello. I will give you a few comforting seconds
to wind down your conversations. I know it's hard. We are going to have so many great conversations.
The hardest part is going to be ending those conversations to start the sessions. And the
best part is how hard it is to end those conversations. So, ladies and gentlemen, distinguished
guests, friends, friends yet to be. Thank you so much for coming here today. It is a real
honor to have everyone. And to be here at this incredible conference, the energy has
just been extraordinary. I don't know what you've been experiencing, but it's really
amazing. Yeah. It's been amazing so far. So, first and foremost, I just want to extend
a very warm welcome to everyone here. This is going to be an incredible conference. A
few things first. No filming in this room, please, because this is being produced as
a filmed event, but I'm not here to camera shame. So, feel free to take pictures just
to parse that out for you. And we are going to be having number of breakouts. If any time
you want to figure out what's going on, you have your conference booklets right there
in front of you. So, also on the back, if you look at the very back page of your conference
booklet, it talks about something called Slido. And if you haven't been here before, this
is the way in which we found it's easier for you to ask questions during events. There's
a QR code, point your phone at it, opens up very easy to use application so that you will
be able to pose your questions. So, we'll have a format where we'll have people presenting,
and then there's Q&A. We're going to be selecting those questions from the Slido app, if you
could. So, if you could use that, it works very, very well. So, we'd love for you to
make use of that. It worked really well last year, so I know some of you are used to that.
And before we really start, I just have to extend an enormous amount of thanks to, I
know how much work goes into getting something like this. We're just ready. I mean, wow.
The team here has done an extraordinary job from the lanyards to the AV to every little
crevice of this. It's just been super, super well done, very well managed. And in addition
to the scheduled sessions, we want to encourage you, we've got some sponsor booths out there.
There is an FLCCC table room in there. Eric is sitting there. He's manning a laptop, which
is a very important thing because you're going to find a lot of these conferences about connecting
and how we connect. And the FLCCC, which Kelly will tell you soon, has made enormous strides
in a direction of helping people connect. So, Eric can help get you connected to what
the FLCCC offers now, which is great. And throughout, just, hey, participate, ask questions.
This is a conversation. This is, yeah, we've got a lot of amazing presenters, but this
is really about us communicating with each other. And I learned a lot already last night,
just informally at the bar. And I intend to learn a lot over the next few days. All right,
so now we've got a very short, this is a two minute video to show you which sets the stage
and we will start here. It's time for a health care revolution. It's time to put patients
before profits. It's time to be a rebel. To be bold enough to say, no, this has been
going on too long. To be bold enough to say, yes, I dream of something better. Rebels defy
the ordinary. They are unconventional thinkers, game changers, disruptors. Rebels refuse to
conform and they're not afraid to stand out. They would risk everything for their patients
because they took an oath to help or at least to do no harm. These rebels reject bureaucracy.
They put healing over paperwork. For them, it's not just a job. It's a mission. A mission
to provide comfort, to find solutions, to show kindness. Because sometimes a touch of
empathy is the most potent medicine. These are not just practitioners. They're revolutionaries,
challenging outdated systems and restoring humanity to health care. These rebel healers
are reshaping medicine. These rebel healers are you. Yes, a health care revolution. It's
underway. It sounds big and audacious, but it is and it's happening. How many of you
experience what I'm calling the quickening, that people are waking up and things seem
to be moving faster, everybody? Sure, it is happening. Over this past year, the FLCCC,
a scrappy startup in the moment dealing with an emergency COVID-oriented organization,
said, well, that's chapter one. Where do we go as chapter two and COVID is a big part of that
still, obviously, and vaccine injury and things like that. What we did is we sat down and did
what an organization should do and think it through and from a high end strategic direction.
Where are we? What we realized after a lot of discussion is we're moving from something to
something. There's a sick care system out there. It's the NIH, the AMA, Pfizer. It's sick care.
It's really organized around people being sick and then harvesting money from them,
if we could be so bold, to something. COVID woke me up. I thought before COVID,
vitamin D was an expensive way to take a leak. It's just a vitamin. That's what my doctor told
me. You excrete them. It's no big deal. Then I learned vitamin D is actually central. That's
a reclaiming for me and I was very well trained. This was something I needed to learn. A lot of
people are waking up to that idea of what's over there on the right side of this chart coming to
wellness. That's a movement. There's millions of people who've woken up, but they need a home.
They need to know who to go to. They need to know which providers they can trust.
That brings us to the second part of this is that word trust. This got fundamentally violated
during COVID, but maybe it always had been violated and COVID just revealed it. Who knows?
But I will go to the hospital willingly if I'm arterially bleeding and under a few other
conditions, but that's about it. My trust got broken. How do we begin to rebuild trust? What does
that actually look like? Trust has all these elements in it. It's you're reliable. Trust is
repeated consistent actions over time. It's when you show your commitment to things. It's your
integrity and that's I think the binding word for most of the people in this room is you're
going to do the right thing because it's the right thing. It's kind of out of that. That's
a dangerous proposition in some work environments these days, but that's a big part of who we are
and competence, of course, and sincerity and consistency. Yeah. The FLCCC, when we looked at
it, it's already been replacing elements of these things. Sound bold, right? The NIH replacing
the NIH? Well, the NIH has a 400 and some odd page COVID treatment guideline, which is all
but useless. The few pages that Paul Merrick and Pierre Corey and the rest of the FLCCC team with
a lot of help put together for the COVID protocols saved lives. It replaced what the NIH should have
been doing, but didn't. So that vacuum already that's being replaced that element. How about the
AMA? The AMA says, oh, you know, our job here is to, let's see, we publish research to advance
public health and advocates for the interests of registered physician members.
They're comedians in their spare time, apparently. So this is what the FLCCC is starting to do is
advocate for people who want to say step out of the system, begin to do things like primary
direct care or just improve their practice or learn things and actually find the cutting edge
research and packaging it and bringing it to people so that that 17-year gap between discovery
that washing your hands is a good thing after an autopsy before delivery and actually having that
in practice, maybe that 17 years could be shortened. So we thought about that. As well,
the CDC, right? The CDC also comedians, they say here, their goal is to accomplish our mission.
CDC conducts critical science to provide health information that protects our nation against
expensive and dangerous health threats. Yeah, they forgot about ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine
and mouthwash and nasal spray and a dozen other things, right? But in that vacuum, that terrible
vacuum of lack of leadership, it creates an opportunity for somebody to step in and start
doing it right. That's what we're here to discuss over these next few days. It's about that.
How about also in the CDC, it's straight off their website two days ago. It's like eat well,
eat plenty of fruits, vegetables, but limiting saturated fats. And then you got Paul Merrick
over here and his thing saying saturated fats are healthy fats. Don't be fooled.
Giant gap, right? So closing that gap, that's where a lot of the energy comes in because we
know we can do right. We know we can do better. We know it doesn't have to be this way and we
want it to be better. So that's really the core of the strategy. We have many, many, many more
things to talk about, but it's really that. That's what we want to talk about today in some
respects is the movement that we're all part of and how we can actually contribute to that movement
and give it lots of momentum, breathe life into it and keep doing what we're doing so that
we can do good in the world. So with that, I now want to introduce a man who needs zero
introductions, Pierre Corrie. A man for whom doctoring is not just a job because you've
lost several of those along the way, right? It's a vocation. It's Pierre's integrity and commitment
and helping people, his patients using the best possible treatments and protocols that are out
there. He's just done an extraordinary amount in this world and has changed millions of lives
for the better. So, Pierre, welcome to the stage. Come on up.
Let me bring Paul up. And as well, I want to bring Paul Merrick up. Paul truly embodies
the most sublime definition of integrity that I hold, which is that he's willing to completely be
reeducated at any moment in time, as long as you bring the data, right?
Yeah, so you'll probably hear this over and over, but it's really good to be here. The energy is
amazing. Meeting people last night, hearing stories. We're all here for a reason. There's
some connection that we're forming. And I don't think it's an overstatement where Chris said
about this as a revolution. What I knew about the system and how we run healthcare, not really
healthcare, medical care in this country, and I was deep inside of it and I couldn't see it.
But I think it's exposed how broken it is to so many millions of people. And I think now there's
a need. When we started out, Paul and I, we were just two guys seeing this disease coming at us
through these TV images and all these full ICUs and hazmat suits. And we knew we were going to
be on the front lines and we were going to hit this thing head-on. And I think we just started
talking and sharing papers. And Joe Verone, who's here and our other colleagues in Berto
Maduri and Jose Iglesias, that and many hundreds of other doctors, doctors who were really doing
what we were supposed to do, which is figure out the disease, figure out how to treat it,
and save lives. And I think we did that from day one. And here we are three, four, four years now,
three, four years, four years later. And we ran at 100 miles an hour and even more. I mean,
it was really kind of disorienting, really challenging. We had lots of up and downs, Paul
and I. We had really good days. By the way, this is one of the good days. You don't want to see the
bad days. And, you know, I think we found a place. And along the way, like Chris said,
you know, we were a scrappy little startup. And suddenly that scrappy little startup suddenly
started seeing this huge amount of support from everywhere, not only all over the country, but
all over the world. And it was a bit overwhelming. And it was really surreal, to be honest. I mean,
I sit in my office and I talk to this guy all day. And we just kind of figure things out and we
argue and, you know, we just keep moving forward. But we saw this huge foundation come around us.
And we just keep doing what we're doing. And I think, you know, we appreciate all the appreciation
for this organization, but we also see opportunity and really at demand. And so, you know, our board,
Chris, some really important, really big thinkers have sort of helped us in thinking about how to
move forward. And really, you know, the system is broken, you know, but we're not, you know. We've
been open, honest, transparent. And thank you. And hardworking. And I think, you know, with those
qualities, we'll go forward. But, you know, one thing that I think we haven't done as great as we
should is, you know, I think there's more opportunity for collaboration. I think it's,
I wouldn't say it's only a one-way street. We have lots of advisors. We have networks of colleagues
that we reach out to. But there's a whole wealth of knowledge from many, many different disciplines,
from lay people, from providers. And, you know, we see an opportunity now to build like a home,
a community, where people can come to get sound medical advice, share insights, especially since
right now we're dealing with two humanitarian catastrophes, which have been unleashed. You
know, this epidemic of vaccine injury, which is, Paul and I will tell you, is the most complex
disease we've ever encountered. I don't know if I'll ever master it. We're learning, you know,
answers every step of the way. But many of those answers are coming from collaborators. Many of
those collaborators are here today and that will speak. And I think we need to widen that brain
trust, that brain pool, and figure out really how to connect everyone together, providers,
patients. And so we have, you know, a home, a place you can come to where you can be helped.
You're not going to be lied to. You're not going to be given a pill that's going to hurt you.
And that's kind of our vision for going forward. And you're going to hear today some of how we're
going to operationalize that. And I'm looking forward to being part of that success and working
with all of you. And I'm just really glad you're all here. So thank you.
Thank you. Kelly said I must come up here and say something. So something.
That's my talk.
So I just want to thank you all for being here because you are our warriors. You are our warriors.
We can't do this without you. And as you will see our entire healthcare system,
well it's not a healthcare system, from A to Z is completely broken and it's based on fraud.
It's a terrible thing for me to say that. And I've learned through my own personal
tragedies that it's a fraud from A to Z. And Dr. Lufkin tomorrow is going to tell us the lies he
taught at medical school. And so for every healthcare provider in this room, you need to
figure out that you have been lied to. You have been told the false information. You have been
manipulated and brainwashed. And so the messages healthcare providers have to reeducate themselves
and follow the truth. Unfortunately, the patients are the ones that get the bad end of the stick.
And so the patients need to empower themselves and understand that they're not subservient to
these fraudulent doctors. And so what we have to do is work together because we took the oath.
We have to work together for what's in the patient's best interests. And the current
system is not in the patient's best interests. It's to empower the big pharma and this industrial
complex. And so we have an enormous mission and it goes from A to Z. The whole system is completely
and utterly fraudulent. And we can't do this alone, although Pierre's a big boy.
And we need you because we can't do this alone. So you, we have to work together
to reeducate ourselves and reeducate our patients. And that's what we're going to do. So
thank you for being here. And this will be really hopefully an eye-opening symposium.
But we need you and we need to communicate together. We need to engage in conversation.
So it seems like, you know, speaking the truth and trying to get information out is, it goes
against, you know, the rules. But we have to break those rules and communicate because science is
based on open dialogue and communication. And so what a lot of what he says is really, you know,
I question it, but that's fine because we engage in a conversation and by engaging in a conversation,
you both grow and understand things a lot better. And you reach an endpoint where you can, you know,
have some agreement, but you go to sciences based on collaboration itself correcting. As you'll see,
we, we updating our protocols because nothing stays the same. And so it's really a matter of
people engaging with one another. Anyway, that's enough. I said my something. So something, something.
All right, I'd like to invite Kelly Booman, Executive Director of the FL-60C up here to
tell us a little bit more about some of the detail that's gone into all of this incredible
transformation. So Kelly, come on up. Here you go. Well, hello, everybody.
Revolution. It is a revolution. First, I want to thank everyone for being here.
It's not only our amazing doctors on stage, but all the doctors are in the audience today and
all the providers and nurses and everyone that's here. We couldn't do this without you. There's
so many people that need your help. And there are many people actually in this audience today
that are looking for solutions and more and other hundred people are going to join tomorrow
for the rest of the conference. So I want to say thank you to all of you,
rebel healers as well. I wanted to kind of talk a little bit about revolution. We were
really purposeful when we used the term revolution as part of our title. So it was important to
connotate that we're going through a point of disruption. We want to really look for change
and transform and we want to replace established systems, but we cannot do this alone.
The other thing that has always been a core principle for us at FLCCC is putting patients
first. I think everyone here shares that principle as well and really being true to the
Hippocratic oath and that's why that is something that really aligns us with our values. So all of
you are upstanders. All of you are healthcare heroes and we really appreciate your ability to
focus on solutions. I wouldn't be doing my job if I didn't welcome all the amazing people in
this audience, but also we have a lot of great board members that are here today. Chris is
very humble, but he's been an amazing resource for us as an organization and all his thoughts
have guided us with the development of our business strategy. I also'm going to try to kind
of call out a couple other people. We've got Tom Marks in here who works tirelessly. So thank you,
Tom. And I've got Steve Timbs who is our general counsel. We don't pay Steve, but
he is a huge counsel to us and legal issues are unfortunately a big part of what we have to kind
of stay on top of. Jeff Hansen is going to join us tomorrow. He's coming in tomorrow. He's actually
taking his company public right now, so he's a rather busy gentleman, but he has been a very
special person to our organization, helped us really get the funding to start the organization
and is completely committed and we really appreciate that. One board member that had
to leave early this morning is Joyce Caiman, but she helped make the stage beautiful and she did
all the arrangements on the table and Joyce had to go leap to be with her bar mitzvah, but I just
wanted to thank her for coming. She just came all the way here just to kind of help our team get
ready and set for today. So thank you so much. We also can't do any of this without our donors
and we've got some fabulous people that have become friends that have supported us throughout
our journey. So I want to thank Diana and Bob Carter. I don't know where you are. There we go.
Diana and Bob, thank you so much for your continued support. And then we've got Matt Isaac. Matt,
are you here somewhere? I'm trying to look, but Matt is one of our very original, he's like our
OG donor, like one of the donors that kind of helped us when we were afraid that there wasn't
going to be any kind of money to kind of keep continuing to do things and he really stepped
up. So it was really fabulous to kind of see Matt last night. Then I also want to thank Bill Beakley,
William Minatar, Barbara and John Meister, Helen Arnold, Angie Van Cleet and Barbara Cobb.
We also have a number of benefactors. A lot of people paid extra to give to our organization
and we're part of the benefactor past today. So thank you very much for your support. This is not
an inexpensive event to do. It's really important to our doctors to make this accessible for many
people. So this is not a money-making adventure for us. In fact, we're probably about 70,000 short
by the end of the day on doing this whole event. But it's something that we invest in because we
think it's so critical to get the education and bring all the amazing talent that we have together
to the organization. And who am I missing here? We also have speaker sponsors and I'm going to
call out Tom again. Tom Markson actually is helping us kind of pull off a VIP event
and helping us sponsor it. He doesn't like to be recognized. He told me he wants to remain
anonymous but I would not be doing my duty if I didn't thank him because we just really couldn't
do what we do without him. So I appreciate that. None of this would happen without your support,
but we also have an incredible team behind us as well. And so I want to thank them too. We'll
come back to that. We started our life out as Frontline COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance.
And if any of you had seen some of the previous webinars that they'd done, I think there was
like another three or four names that the doctors wanted to include in this at the very beginning.
But when we started looking at our strategy, we really want to move beyond this.
So FLCC Alliance is officially our new name. So think about Kentucky Fried Chicken goes to KFC,
FLCC, Frontline COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, we're FLCC Alliance officially today.
We're always kind of built on the principles that built the organization when we continue to be
focused on our dedication to long COVID and vaccine injury of course. And that's a big part
of our program the next couple of days. But also building and expanding to other chronic diseases.
So you can see we have lectures with Dr. Reddy on cancer. Dr. Nathan Goodyear will join us on that.
We've got a Dr. Vaughn that's going to talk about microclotting, Suzanne Garza coming on.
We'll talk about neurological impacts. So we're really going far beyond COVID,
acute COVID, but also to other chronic diseases that are critical. And we always focus on patient
empowerment. I know that both Paul and Pierre have always said we're going to need an army of people
to go to their doctors and help educate them directly as well. So it's going to take more
than just the doctors. And we're always conflict free. It's very purposeful that we don't have kind
of paid commercial sponsors at this, but we do have fabulous partners here today and they are
in the hallway behind us. So don't forget when you're at breaks to kind of go around the corner
and we've got some amazing partners and I'll kind of get a full list for you in a minute.
We came up with a short statement. So it's like what's our little elevator pitch when we're talking
about FLCCC, a healthcare nonprofit on a mission to restore trust, integrity, and the doctor-patient
relationship. And there's a lot packed into here that we highlighted. But I hope that that's
something that speaks to you all and something that would make you all proud that support us
and get behind us. I don't know if you noticed a little message at the end of our video today,
but honest medicine. You can see we actually just kind of lit up our sides of each of,
we got little gobos that lit up kind of the sides here. But honest medicine is a tagline
that we came up with and actually Tony Vengrove with kind of Miles Finch actually kind of helped
us kind of pull this together. And it's really hard to come up with something really simple
that really kind of resonates with so many. And this immediately resonated with our entire team,
our board, our doctors, our founders, and the entire staff organization too. And I think the
reason is because both the meanings under honest and medicine might seem so trite, but it's like
honest really embodies the values of being genuine and real and humble. Paul talked about
being self-correcting. We're going to admit when we're wrong and say we've got new information
and kind of update that. Reputable integrity. I think the integrity of both of our doctors
and our founders is one that stood up at the cost of, you know, as many here in this room
and losing their jobs. But medicine is really critical too. It's about treating disease
and alleviation and creating kind of preparation and ways to kind of cure and help people's well
being. And it's a science and an art. So honest medicine, here we are. We hope that's something
that you guys will enjoy with and be very proud of as well. One thing that we're doing that's
really exciting and we're announcing it today as part of our beta launch. And we've got a whole
team in our FLCC hub that's going to be kind of helping you all if you want to get some demos of it.
But we talked a lot about community. Well, how do we organize a community if we don't have some way
of collecting all the information? So community forums is something that we're going to be
launching. We're going to have it throughout our website, but we're also going to have some
membership programs too. And what we need today is a safe and secure place where we don't have
to worry about posting information and it's going to get pulled off of Facebook or Instagram.
We got pulled off a couple years ago posting on Instagram for just using vitamin D. It's crazy.
It's crazy. So we all have to kind of navigate what we can get away with and what we can post
and not post. So this is a place that's safe and secure. You can say whatever you want. We can have
kind of public debate. Want to be respectful. You know, so we'll have some kind of community
guidelines, but we want to foster that discussion and debate and we need this army to help us
because we can have so much more impact together. We can be one huge collective brain that could
have so much more impact than kind of the small team at FLCC can have alone. And it's also an
opportunity to build referrals and connections, especially amongst the professionals. So we
hear so many times from, you know, patients directly, I don't trust any of my doctors. I need
an orthopedic. I need a cardiologist. I need a, you know, I need a urologist. I mean, all different
disciplines people aren't trusting. So this can be a place where we can start to kind of get,
connect both doctors and patients together. Doctors can work with other professionals
and kind of extend their professional base as well. So the beta, we're inviting you. It's really
easy. You can go in your phone. You actually in the QR code, I'm going to show you in the back of
your book. Let me pull this up. So in the very back of the book here on the left hand side,
we've got join the conversation. Chris talked about using Slido for any of your questions. And
on the right hand side is the QR code if you want to join the forums. And it's actually live now.
Everything is live now. So it starts today and anyone can access the information in the public
forums. But we also want to kind of make sure that this is a place that even within the context
of our conference the next couple of days, you can post questions. You can post a study that we
haven't mentioned that you think would be really vital for us to look at. Maybe you've got a new
therapy that you've been using that's really critical that Dr. Corey should consider. So we
want to hear from you. It's very simple. You go to flcc.net forums. I'm going to talk a little bit
about, we're going to have that broadly available, but we're going to have two membership programs.
One for professionals. So this is really going to be where we ask people to share their credentials.
So it's a place for different medical professionals and scientists to share information. And we'll
have one that's for champions. What we mean by champions is our everyday health and soothe
us, medical freedom advocates, patient individuals. And we're going to do a very small fee that will
help us cover the cost of doing this. But for this audience only, we've got a special three month
free and you can see the codes for together one. You know, we'll allow you to kind of get that rate.
And then we also have a bundle where you can kind of get a discount for an annual fee as well.
And all this will help us just do our good work. Again, we're looking just to kind of help us
contribute to covering the effort of our staff and the good work that we do. So I'm going to do
a live demo and see if we'll kind of transition there. Zara and Tom are going to help me in the
back. But this is actually live. So everything you're seeing right here. So you go to the forum page,
you can see sign in and register. And if you actually have gone and used education on demand
from our prior conferences, you may have gotten an ID. So you're already a member. So you can
just use that sign on and you're immediately in. And you can see all the different form options in
conference. We have one conference 2024 that's been set up just for this area. And you can already
see in the feed, we've got different postings. And actually, Zara posted our whole program there.
So if you kind of miss your program, you can't find it, you can just go on there, you can download
it, refer to it. I think I also posted a little bit about our fund band that's going to kind of
be closing the conference on Sunday as well. And then you can also go to our professional forum
for many of our pros in the audience today. And again, right now we've got about 66 members,
but we're literally just launching it. So we would love for all of you to kind of consider
kind of joining as well. And we've got information both in the discussions and the feed. The feed
is kind of just like every updated message discussion. You can go by different topic that
you might be interested. And then you can also, what's really fun about this is it's almost got
a Facebook-like profile. So we want people to show their personality. So this is Eric. Eric
is going to, I think he's got his cowboy hat on in the FLCC hub. And that's kind of his personality.
And he'll do a great job. He and his team, I really want to kind of give props. Eric is our head
of technology, very humble, and just does amazing work really quietly. So he, not only he, but a
team with Michael Goller, Kyle Thompson, Christy Young, Allison Smeltz, really kind of help pull
this together. And Karen Stewart, who's not with us today, has done an awesome job helping us kind
of from a moderation standpoint. So the team has done great work. You can see examples of kind of
all the different kind of friends that Eric has. So luckily I'm a friend of Eric's. So, and I built
my own profile page. I'm from Colorado. So I've got some beautiful Colorado background. So anyway,
people can have fun with this. You can message each other. You can kind of connect in many
different ways. So just wanted to give you a quick little glimpse and hopefully something exciting.
And again, you can just kind of find that at the back of our, at the program.
I would be remiss not thanking everybody that helped put this event together. There's a huge
crew. This looks like a lot of people. This includes our contractors, our core team, people
that help us volunteer. So everyone's in teal shirts. So if you find anyone with kind of a badge,
you know, that says staff on it in a teal shirt, then let them help you introduce yourself and
answer any questions. And the other thing I wanted to point out is I think hopefully everyone noticed
that on your badge, there actually is your home state. So that's what we did that purposely so
everyone could connect. So it's like, oh, you're from Colorado. Where in Colorado are you from?
I'm from Castle Pines, you know, and so we want you all to connect. And actually at registration,
if you want, we've got a list of all the cities and states and regions. So if you say, I want to
find all the people from Colorado and start seeking them out, you can kind of take a picture of that.
So kind of ask the team at registration. Again, this is all about connections and we really hope
we build something really powerful as we start. Thank you so much.
Well, thank you.
All right. Well, I have a little bit of experience running online communities. I've been doing that
for a number of years at peak prosperity. And I'm really thrilled with this development because
there's an old African proverb, which is if you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far,
go together. The internet, this thing, this one-on-one we're going to experience, there is no
better way of communicating with other humans. However, if you can reach millions of people
and disseminate that, it's a little thinner, but it has a huge impact as well. So getting this forum
together has been a really, really big deal. I mean, all the work that went into this is
extraordinary. It's been very, very well done. And it's going to be a huge part because how many
people here ever were at the webinars that the FLCC would do on Wednesday nights? Yeah. Did any of
you participate in that chat that would go flying by? Yeah. Right? Yeah, that was the energy of this
situation and want to connect people in a maybe more durable way because that's very difficult to
sort of really get a sustained conversation going. And although it wasn't a tab that got put up
when this forum's open for a few months, it'll become a dating site. Just letting you know
based on my own experience.
