Truth Teller: The Price by Vernon Coleman
"Distrust the government; Avoid mass media; Fight the lies." — Vernon Coleman
Another angry author…who has every right to be angry. In the beginning of Truth Teller: The Price Vernon Coleman writes:
I once had agents and publishers selling my books in 26 languages and just about every country in the world. I’ve now lost all those agents and publishers. I’ve had a number of books banned by independent online platforms.
It seems quite a price to pay just for telling the truth.1
Coleman has been banned from YouTube (no surprise there), lost a substantial income, been “discredited,” labelled a conspiracy theorist, had his phone tapped, been expelled from the Royal Society of Arts, been suppressed on social media and the list goes on. He repeats this and more throughout the book. I don’t blame him.
Coleman, like Steve Kirsch, has offered to debate his detractors but no one has accepted. It is more effective to simply ignore someone who tells the truth than to actually get in the ring where weaknesses and shoddy logic quickly come to light. It’s the same tactic we’ve seen used throughout these last four years. People who rely on mainstream media for their news often don’t even know the alternative views that are out there.
Jim Gaffigan in his Dark Pale special said, “I don’t know much about global warming, but I do know they stopped debating it.” I guess that’s true in one sense…the mainstream stopped debating it a long time ago by simply ignoring those who disagree. For most people it’s comforting to have everything settled—doing your own research, i.e. thinking, is messy business, better left to the experts.
My one criticism of the book is that it is not divided up into chapters. It’s one long essay and Coleman writes about many things, most of them Covid related, but many of them are personal stories about what he did before Covid came along. Coleman doesn’t hold back. There’s not a lot tact exhibited in this book. Coleman is through with being nice:
Since the covid-19 vaccine was and is experimental, all the doctors who gave the vaccine without telling their patients that the vaccine was experimental, and then duly obtaining their permission, were and are guilty of war crimes.2
The fake pandemic which started in 2020 proved beyond question that governments everywhere want to kill their elderly citizens.3
It now seems laughable that Google’s corporate motto used to be ‘First do no evil’. Google and its subsidiary YouTube, have become among the most fascist, evil, censorious and oppressive media organisations in the world – totally opposed to free speech.4
Today, Parliament and the institutions consist of men and women who are devoid of any sense of responsibility. Both are run by greedy, self-serving individuals whose only interest is in furthering their own ambitions. And the medical establishment, all of it, was bought long ago by the pharmaceutical industry and is now full of whores.5
Remember: anyone who is a pro-vaxxer is an ignorant, deluded and dangerous fool.6
I have learned many things in the last twelve months but the one thing I’ve learned for certain is that there are far more lob dotterels, joltheads and lobcocks around than I would have thought possible.7
Today’s BBC is Biased, Bought and Corrupt.8
Second, Sridhar says this experimental vaccine, which only has a temporary approval let us not forget, is 100% safe for children.
And that is a downright, 100%, solid gold, lie.
And for that lie alone this bloody woman should be hung, drawn quartered, boiled in oil and tarred and feathered.9
I’ll end this section with this one. Coleman writes:
I hope, dear reader, that you begin to sense my frustration, my anger and my weariness.10
We do Vernon, we do. I wouldn’t call this a fun book. It’s a lot commentary about where we find ourselves after 2020 and a lot personal stories about what happens when you genuinely want to tell the truth and have a large audience (they’ll be coming after us nobodies down the road). He writes a lot about the BBC and drug companies in general. He has little use for today’s U.K. doctors or politicians…as you would expect.
He’s angry about what they’ve done to him and his wife. He’s angry about what they’ve done to children.
Vernon Coleman is angry and rightly so.
I’ll close with this:
You think it’s unlikely that anyone would dare ban huge chunks of the internet?
You don’t think they would do that?
I’m afraid those sentiments don’t work anymore.
Who would have thought they would have dared lock up whole nations and destroy the global economy?
The people behind this fraud have deliberately killed millions of people and if we don’t stop them they will kill billions.
There isn’t anything they wouldn’t do.11
NOTES
Coleman, Vernon. Truth Teller: The Price (p. 14). UNKNOWN. Kindle Edition.
p. 23.
p. 24.
p. 36.
p. 49.
p. 79.
p. 85.
p. 131.
p. 135.
p. 116.
pp. 149-150.
This post also appears on my website, The Asylum. The website also has several things that are not possible to do on Substack: The World Economic Forum Members Reference (thanks to Dr. Malone), quotes, a large resources section, a robust search feature and some other things unique to the site: quizzes, word games and leaked communications.
Buy the book: I'm Nobody. Who Are You? Can We Save the World?
Some comments on the book:
“It’s a cool gift for a fellow-dissident friend that can relate to the material. It’s like reading a war journal by someone you never met that was in the same conflict as you; you mostly read it for the good feelings you have as you nod along in agreement and reinforce the neural pathways that got fired up as you lived through your particular shared-but-unshared moment of history’s hell.” —Guttermouth from The Gutter
“I received your book today, and I can now honestly say, I couldn’t put it down. I read it from cover to cover, flipping pages with anticipation and delight. I read words and sentences that sounded as though they were flowing from my own mind (even to the point of reading the sentences that “filled that empty space” at the very end).
I will review. I will share. I will continue the fight of the nobodies of the world.” — John here on Substack
"This was a fun and very funny book, written in an interesting and innovative style. We’re all basically inmates in this open-air asylum known as Western Civilization in 2023. Here’s an enjoyable letter from a fellow inmate to lift your spirits, let you know you’re not alone, and inspire you with the possibility that maybe there are enough kindred spirits that we can change this world for the better. For anyone who feels like our postmodern culture has gone completely crazy, this book will be a thoroughly enjoyable read." — Mr. Thursday, Amazon Review
"A great way to spend an hour or so. The words of so many who love freedom, but who have never written them for others to embrace, are now available in short order and short form.
If you love freedom, reality and truth, all sprinkled with levity, more honesty and bit of snarky meme, this book will delight.
We can, we must, and we will save the world." — John, Amazon Review
The way the British speak never ceases to amuse me. It's pretty easy to infer that being called a lob dotterel, a jolthead, or a lobcock is NOT a compliment. I think I'm going to have to add them to my arsenal of insults.