#DavidIcke believes the British royal family are shape-shifting lizards.
#5G and #Covid_19
Icke claims the reptilian bloodline includes all American presidents, three British and two Canadian prime ministers, several Sumerian kings and Egyptian pharaohs, and a smattering of celebrities. Key bloodlines are said to include the Rockefellers, Rothschilds, various European aristocratic families, the establishment families of the Eastern United States, and the British House of Windsor.[93] Icke has claimed that he saw former British Prime Minister Ted Heath's eyes turn entirely "jet black" while the two men waited for a Sky News interview in 1989.[146][16] He confirmed to Andrew Neil in May 2016 that he believes the British royal family are shape-shifting lizards.[21]
In 2001, Icke said the Queen Mother was "seriously reptilian".[93] The Rothschilds, in Icke's opinion, are also blood-drinking, Satan-worshipers, which Daniel Allington and David Toube in 2018, argued was part of a revival of medieval antisemitic attitudes towards Jews.[147] In April 2020, Icke claimed in a YouTube video on the London Real channel that there was a link between the coronavirus pandemic and 5G mobile phone networks.
The video was removed from the platform, and YouTube tightened its rules to prevent its website being used to spread conspiracy theories about coronavirus.[171] It was also later deleted from Facebook.[172] A number of mobile phone masts were subject to arson attacks at this time, as well as telecom engineers being abused.[173] Nick Cohen in The Observer thought Icke was ambiguous as to whether the phone masts should be left alone. Icke said in the London Real interview: "If 5G continues and reaches where they want to take it, human life as we know it is over... so people have to make a decision."[171][174][175] weki London Live screened a similar interview with Icke about coronavirus on 8 April 2020.[176] He also made an unsupported claim that Israel was using the crisis "to test its technology” and also suggested any attempt to require people to be vaccinated against Covid-19 amounted to "fascism".[177]
After Ofcom's formal investigation the UK media regulator decided the 80 minute interview broke the terms of the broadcasting code as it "expressed views which had the potential to cause significant harm to viewers in London during the pandemic" which "were made without the support of any scientific or other evidence."[178] Icke's main page on Facebook was deleted on 1 May 2020, while other pages on the site promoting Icke with a smaller readership remained on the platform.[179] Facebook said it had removed Icke's page for its "health misinformation that could cause physical harm".[180] His YouTube channel was deleted a day later. A spokeswoman for YouTube told BBC News: "YouTube has clear policies prohibiting any content that disputes the existence and transmission of Covid-19 as described by the WHO and the NHS. Due to continued violation of these policies, we have terminated David Icke's YouTube channel." Icke's videos from other users are still allowed if they are within the rules.[181] weki