Celia Farber is one of the most notable American journalists of the past 35 years. After achieving mainstream success at age 20, her verve and honesty served her well…until she took on Anthony Fauci and the AIDS industrial complex. By covering both sides of that story—including critiques of the virus-causes-AIDS hypothesis from a long list of distinguished scientists including Peter Duesberg, Nobel Laureate Kerry Mullis, and National Medal of Science winner Lynn Margulis—Celia Farber found herself in the gunsights of a powerful, ruthless lobby willing to go to extreme lengths to censor dissenting views. She’s currently living in Granada and writing on Substack.
Transcript:
We are here at the Alhambra in Granada with Celia Farber, the legendary journalist. Hello, Celia. You were just saying that Granada is one of the most diverse populations in the world.
A melting pot.
Yeah. I’m not a historian, so I don’t know exactly how to characterize it other than to say that it is known around the world as the place where Christians, Jews, and Muslims co-existed peacefully for hundreds of years. And I understand then things changed. But there’s so many books written about this, about Granada, as a rare place on Earth where the three the three faiths lived together peacefully.
And how about today, with the different ethnicities?
Well, I live in Albaicín, in the Arab quarter. And all I can say is I see nothing but harmony and peace and goodwill.
So we don’t need to expel the Muslims again.
Absolutely not.
And the Jews.
No. I mean, Spain has such a Muslim influence, right? I’ve never seen any tension here. When I see in our media about all this…I live right here. I just don’t see it.
You’re not terrified to be living among Muslims?
Of course not. It hurts my heart that we’re being brainwashed to think like that. I’d like to talk to you more about where did that all come from. It’s very malignant.
Okay, we’ll do a long-form interview about that. Well, thank you, Celia. That was beautiful.
You’re very welcome.