Had a quick listen to a few minutes and I'm not sure why this is on here tbh. Yeadon does not seem like a credible or even reasonable person.
> Yeadon falsely claimed that the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom was "effectively over" in October 2020,[17][18][a] that there would be no "second wave" of infections,[6][20] and that healthy people could not spread the SARS-CoV-2 virus.[1][21] He has claimed without evidence that COVID-19 vaccines were unnecessary,[22][21][20] unsafe,[1][23] and could cause infertility in women.[1][6][24] In a letter to the European Medicines Agency, Yeadon and the German physician Wolfgang Wodarg called for all vaccine trials to be stopped, falsely suggesting[25][26][27][28] that mRNA vaccines could target the syncytin-1 protein needed for placenta formation.[29][30][b] In an interview with political strategist Steve Bannon, Yeadon falsely asserted that children were "50 times more likely to be killed by the COVID vaccines than the virus itself", citing a high number of events following COVID-19 vaccination reported on the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) database.[34][35][3] The US Centers for Disease Control, which operates the database, cautions that such reports are not verified and do not prove that vaccines caused any given adverse event.
> Yeadon falsely claimed that the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom was "effectively over" in October 2020,[17][18][a] that there would be no "second wave" of infections,[6][20] and that healthy people could not spread the SARS-CoV-2 virus.[1][21] He has claimed without evidence that COVID-19 vaccines were unnecessary,[22][21][20] unsafe,[1][23] and could cause infertility in women.[1][6][24] In a letter to the European Medicines Agency, Yeadon and the German physician Wolfgang Wodarg called for all vaccine trials to be stopped, falsely suggesting[25][26][27][28] that mRNA vaccines could target the syncytin-1 protein needed for placenta formation.[29][30][b] In an interview with political strategist Steve Bannon, Yeadon falsely asserted that children were "50 times more likely to be killed by the COVID vaccines than the virus itself", citing a high number of events following COVID-19 vaccination reported on the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) database.[34][35][3] The US Centers for Disease Control, which operates the database, cautions that such reports are not verified and do not prove that vaccines caused any given adverse event.