I really feel sorry for people who are incapable of critical thinking for themselves.
Let me break it down, in case you cannot see the slick way they use nonsense and half-truths to stir up an emotional response.
First: They use the typical flat earth ploy of selling the argument rather than selling the facts. If you have a sharp eye, you'd notice that then went on and on bragging how they uncovered real facts that no one is able to debunk or refute (in the time they labored on trying to convince the listener their evidence is so great, they could have simply displayed the evidence allowing the looker to make his own mind up). They instead decided to damn turn it into an infomercial complete with a warm heartfelt antidotal story about how Gardiner had a heart attack after the shot, and how some lady's arm started to shake. But as in the case with many skillful liars, it's not what they say but what they choose to omit, and in this case, they failed to provide evidence that:
A: Their symptoms were related to the vaccine (remember correlation doesn't mean causation).
B: No evidence was provided to support the notion that what he witnessed wasn't some abnormality. The only thing he suggested that it was impossible to know two people who may have negative side effects, again he didn't bother supplying any evidence to support that claim.
I have no problem with his hypothesis, anyone is free to speculate, however, it would have been nice if he had actual statistics that show the number of people getting sick from the vaccine, and/or medical ligature that outlines the dangers of spiked protein spreading all over the body. Instead, they used buzz words such as saying its toxic, but without quantifying the level of the toxicity, this logic has as much plausibility as saying water is toxic (this is a true statement, but without specifying how much water it takes for it to be toxic in humans, the statement carries little or no weight.
These guys are good at spreading false propaganda, and if you aren't able to filter out the bullshit, you might actually be impressed.