Links to extensive resources about the fraud that is the flu d’etat, i.e. the recklessly aggressive power grab by governments the world over in the name of fighting a scam virus with a 99.9% survival rate.
Thanks to Joe Enroughty on Facebook for compiling these screen grabs from outgoing Congressman Justin Amash. (I-MI) While I think Trump has done a few good things, he is no friend of personal liberty at all.
Churches should have heeded II Timothy 1:7 and been on front lines fighting the flu d’etat from early March onward. Instead, to their eternal shame, many have ignored Romans 12:2 and followed right along with the world system.
I have done my best to respect the diverse opinions regarding COVID-19 over these past few months, however, the ER nurse that posted this brilliantly sums up my train of thought :
Please just take politics out of it and read this with an open mind using common sense.”
Anyone out there who can tell me what our end game is with the covid 19?
What is the magic formula that is going to allow us to sound the all-clear?
Is it zero cases?
The only way that will happen is if we just stop testing and stop reporting.
Is it a vaccine?
It took 25 years for a chickenpox vaccine to be developed.
The smallpox inoculation was discovered in 1796 the last known natural case was in 1977.
We have a flu vaccine that is only 40 to 60% effective and less than half of the US population choose to get one, and roughly 20,000 Americans will die of the flu or flu complications.
Oh, you’ll mandate it, like other vaccines are mandated in order to attend school, travel to some foreign countries, etc.
We already have a growing number of anti-vaxxers refusing proven, tested, well-known vaccines that have been administered for decades but aren’t necessarily safe!
Do you really think people will flock to get a fast-tracked, quickly tested vaccine, whose long term side effects and overall efficacy are anyone’s best guess?
How long are we going to cancel and postpone and reconsider?
You aren’t doing in-person school until the second quarter?
What if October’s numbers are the same as August’s?
You moved football to spring?
What if next March is worse than this one was?
When do we decide the quality of life outweighs the risks?
I understand Covid can be deadly or very dangerous for SOME people, but so are strawberries and so is shellfish.
We take risks multiple times a day without a second thought.
We know driving a car can be dangerous, we don’t leave it in the garage. Many speed and don’t wear seat belts.
We know the dangers of smoking, drinking, and eating fried foods, we do it anyway.
Is hugging Grandma really more dangerous than rush hour on the freeway?
Is going out with friends after work more risky than 4-day old gas station sushi?
Or operating a chainsaw?
When and how did we so quickly lose our free will and give up our liberty?
Is there a waiver somewhere I can sign that says, “I understand the risks, but I choose a life with Hugs and Smiles, and the State Fair and go to Church and go hug my Mom in her retirement home?
I understand that there is a minuscule possibility I could die, but I will most likely end up feeling like crap for a few days.
I understand I could possibly pass it to someone else if I’m not careful, but I can pass any virus onto someone else.
I’m struggling to see where or how this ends.
We either get busy living or we get busy dying.
When God decides it’s your time, you don’t get any mulligans, so I guess I would rather spend my time enjoying it and living in the moment and not worrying about what-ifs and maybes, and I bet I’m not the only one.
“The majority of deaths during the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919 were not caused by the influenza virus acting alone, report researchers from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. Instead, most victims succumbed to bacterial pneumonia following influenza virus infection. The pneumonia was caused when bacteria that normally inhabit the nose and throat invaded the lungs along a pathway created when the virus destroyed the cells that line the bronchial tubes and lungs.”
It was almost as awesome as watching my beloved Los Angeles Dodgers win their first World Series in 32 years.
Justin Turner, their all-star third baseman, was removed from Game 6 of the World Series after a positive COVID test. Then, to the shock and dismay of Lockdown Nation, Turner, who was asymptomatic, ignored instructions to self-isolate and joined his teammates in the post-game victory celebration.
Needless to say, the drama queens at Major League Baseball have … you guessed it … launched an investigation.
Good for Justin Turner! We need to stop treating COVID like it’s the bubonic plague. Why don’t people come unhinged like this every flu season? Contagious diseases have been with us forever and will never go away. Let’s just get on with normal life.
Turner, my new hero, with the red beard, celebrating the Dodgers’ World Series victory. Photo credit: AP
I almost never wear a mask for a variety of reasons. Among these is the PTSD I contracted after receiving a death threat in 2018. It had been almost totally dormant for over 2 years until this past August, when wearing a face diaper for just a few minutes prompted 2 attacks.
I had known about mask rash, mask mouth, hypoxia, headaches, difficulty breathing and the dangers of inhaling one’s own CO2. Now, the long-time editor of the trade journal Hazmat Management says that frequent and prolonged mask wearing can give a person lung cancer.
And while we are on the subject of hazmat, the following has been asked: why don’t aren’t there hazmat and biohazard bins everywhere so as to properly dispose of gloves and face diapers?
An elementary school in the Chicago suburb of Highwood. Credit: CNN
By Doug Newman – email me here. Here I am on Facebook. If you would like to share this elsewhere – who knows why? – please link to this URL. Thanks! ______________________________________________________________________________________
“We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason”. ~ Edward R. Murrow
One of the favorite guilt trips of COVID crusaders, when they have exhausted all others is “Well, if you knew someone who had died of COVID you’d wear a mask too.”
And you’d also support lockdowns, cancelling events, shutting down the economy, social distancing and all the rest of the flu d’etat.
My question to these people is: why don’t you treat every potential cause of illness or death this aggressively?
In a recent week, I lost two friends to cancer. One was more of an acquaintance, but she always seemed like a nice person. The other one was someone I sat next to in fifth grade. And even though we could not have been more different people, we had some great times together in the years that followed.
As I write this, 218,000 Americans have died with COVID. However, if these CDC numbers are accurate, only 6 percent – or 13,080 – have died from COVID alone. That means that, if you are otherwise healthy, you have less than a one in 25,000 chance of dying from COVID. And for this the entire fabric of American society has been radically, and perhaps irreparably, altered.
I’ve been saying it since March: the risk exists and the deaths are tragic. But the fear is criminally overblown.
The American Cancer Society predicts that over 606,000 Americans will die from various forms of cancer in 2020. We’ve known for decades that, while not contagious, perhaps a majority of cancer is behaviorally induced. So, with this in mind why don’t we outlaw tobacco, alcohol, processed foods and let’s limit sun exposure to 2 hours a day. And as obesity is a leading risk factor for cancer, let’s mandate a 3-mile run for everyone 5 days a week with no health exceptions such as bad knees or being in a wheelchair.
Would you want to live in such a society? Would you want your life nanomanaged to such an extent?
If you would slam the brakes on society to fight COVID, why not take similarly drastic measures to fight cancer and, for that matter, anything else that could potentially be fatal?
If the media incessantly bombarded you with graphic images of the mangled bodies of the 100-plus people killed in auto accidents on an average day in America, a great hue and cry would no doubt go forth to outlaw left turns and set a maximum national speed limit of 10 miles per hour. Indeed, many would demand that cars be outlawed altogether.
And if the war on COVID has been so necessary, why haven’t we shut society down for 90 days every year during flu season?
And if you are wearing a mask out of benevolence to keep others from getting sick, why don’t you just wear one for the rest of your life? Contagious diseases have been with us since the dawn of time and will always be with us.
And where did you get the idea that the key to health was goose-stepping along with whatever orders the government happened to be barking at the moment? Whatever happened to diet, exercise, supplementation, as well as healthy rewarding friendships and relationships?
I have one more question for you mask people out there: why weren’t you wearing a mask in March, April, and May, when COVID did 90 percent of its damage? I think I know: it’s because mayors and governors weren’t mandating them. Most of these mandates only came about after the death counts had dropped to a small fraction of their late-April peak.
COVID did what viruses do. It came, it did damage, and it has largely faded away. The curve did what all curves do: it flattened itself.
Three things have not gone away: the ability of the powers that be to scare the smack out of people, the urge of so many people in the halls of government as well as behind the neighborhood lunch counter to control others, and the willingness of people to believe whatever they think sounds good.
Centuries ago, men feared witches, so they burned women. After World War I, we feared Germans, so we outlawed beer and all other alcohol. During World War II, we feared Japanese, so we put them in internment camps.
In these times, we fear terrorists, so we permit the groping of crotches as a condition of travel. And people fear a disease with a 99.99 percent survival rate, so they demand a full-frontal assault on personal and economic liberty as well as human dignity.
Times, technology, and terminology change. And so, do the actors on the stage. But human nature and – I’ll just say it – human stupidity don’t change.