BRITS PROTEST LOCKDOWNS, VACCINES
NEWS: VIDEO REPORTS
Distrust of government grows to boiling point

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TRANSCRIPT
The British are displaying public unrest amid prolonged lockdowns and concern regarding the experimental vaccines.
Catholic nun: "We have to speak out about this, there's something not normal about this."
On Saturday, thousands of Brits took to the streets of London to protest COVID restrictions in what was labeled a Freedom March.
The United Kingdom was slated to open restaurants and most social venues on June 21, but Prime Minister Boris Johnson decided to delay it another month.
Boris Johnson: "Since today I cannot say we have met all our four tests for proceeding on step four on June the 21st. I think it is sensible to wait just a little longer."
But lockdown fever isn't the only concern — in the United Kingdom or here in America. Lingering doubts continue about the safety and effectiveness of the experimental jabs. A Catholic nun told London reporters her concerns about the vaccines.
Nun: "We pray for 64 people who have died — one this morning, a good friend of ours. And I'm praying for a 17-year-old boy. My friend asked me to pray for him. He has to have brain surgery. And it’s all due to the vaccine. That's not normal."
She is not alone.
Tucker Carlson: "Good evening and welcome to Tucker Carlson Tonight."
Dr. Robert Malone, inventor of mRNA technology, told Fox News' Tucker Carlson he fears government leaders aren't being straight with the people.
Dr. Malone: "The government is not being transparent with us about what those risks are. ... They would be data-based, and science-based. They're not right now. It's kind of a little bit of the seat of the pants."
While the mainstream media continues to label vaccine skepticism as "conspiracy theories," experience shows this is not the case.
Nun: "What we're saying is not conspiracy. These are people who have talked to us face-to-face, have written to us, have telephoned us. We speak to them. We didn't get this from Facebook or Twitter or BBC or Guardian."
The Britons are now demanding their basic freedoms, and people on both sides of the Atlantic are claiming the cure may be more deadly than the disease.