"The virus is coming, the virus is coming."
As my readers know, I've been presenting evidence that this so-called
viral epidemic is unproven. I've detailed the fraud from a number of
angles.
Here I want to comment on the true contagion of propaganda.
The press is piling on, as it always does. A story, true or false---it
doesn't matter---describes how basic items are disappearing from store
shelves in a town like there's no tomorrow.
The STORY causes fear. So more products disappear from store shelves in
more places. Now a NEW story with photos of empty shelves takes center
stage. More fear. More panic buying. And so forth and so on. The
build-out of propaganda.
The psychological equation is: if there is fear, then the virus must be
dangerous. But this is actually like saying: if a man walking on a
street at night believes a mugger is about to parachute out of the sky,
the sky-mugger must be real.
The story the press should be featuring is: "our coverage of so-called panic is creating panic." RUN THAT PIECE.
"Today in Manhattan, six greed-head editors of major newspapers and
television news outlets met to discuss how their coverage is causing
more and more fear. They agreed they were collaborating to incur a
desired reaction..."
"Hey, guess what?" five hundred thousand readers and viewers of
mainstream news say immediately. "THEY'RE making us afraid." If only
that could happen, we'd be living in a different world.
The press is also cross-cutting stories. This technique works well. In
the middle of a piece about empty store shelves, we're suddenly treated
to a statement from some public health official, who says, "Epidemic
cases are coming to America. We can't stop
them." Now you have two themes; each one gives added strength to the
other. But wait. There's more. In the SAME STORY, we read or hear
about a man in Montana or Arizona who has been identified as a carrier
of the virus. He's being sequestered in a hospital.
It's a triple play. Three streams of nonsense pouring into one
another.
We're not nearly finished yet, because...social media. Someone takes
the above story and flashes it on Twitter. Comments stretch out. A
Twitter reader with a YouTube account sits down and turns out a quick
video and posts it. His twist is: this is the big
one; doomsday; it's a planned attack using the coronavirus.
Comments below the video feature a brawl about whether the virus was
made in a lab, leaked out of the lab, or was designed as a weapon. And
if a weapon, who did it? The Americans? The Chinese?
YouTube demonetizes the video. This gives rise to several articles in the "alternative press."
Now, a scuzzy outlet uses the demonetized video to make a point: people
shouldn't fly off the handle with conspiracy theories; instead they
should listen to the medical authorities talking sense about the virus.
Of course, the medical authorities are blowing out tons of their own
version of fear porn. They're the propaganda experts. They use
"science" to make their claims.
There are what, 20 or 30 supposed cases of the supposed coronavirus in
America, out of a population of 300 hundred million? As I've detailed,
the diagnostic tests, on which "new cases" are based, are worthless.
But no matter. Join the Club of Fear. Your
friends are in the Club. You don't want to feel left out, do you?
Soon, I expect this kind of story: "Today, in Rigatoni, Delaware, a man
in a supermarket unleashed a volley of profanities at the store manager,
because the shelves were fully stocked..."
"Authorities transported the man to a local hospital, where he was
interviewed briefly by a resident psychiatrist, who then gave a
statement to the press: "I believe Mr. (name withheld) was correct. The
store manager gave the wrong impression to shoppers.
The stocked shelves could impart the message that we are in a condition
of social normalcy, which is far from true. The virus is a very
serious and immediate problem. I have contacted the town council. I
recommend products should be removed from the supermarket
shelves..."
TWEET THAT.
Let's get back to reality. Oh, sorry, we can't. Because in more
theater of the absurd, Mike Bloomberg, running for the presidency, just
spent a million bucks (or more) for a TV ad, in which he's posing as the
president in an Oval Office-like setting, assuring
the nation he would/will guide us through the coronavirus crisis.
And more politics: Part of the press fear porn is critically directed at
Trump, who addressed the country with the message that the government
"is doing great" at handling the virus situation.
The ladder, descending from the top, looks something like this:
* Pharma plus elite Globalists are on the lookout for: a new excuse to
exert more control over populations, and new billions in drug and
vaccine sales.
* In Wuhan, China, where the poisonous air pollution is creating serious
illness, researchers decide a new outbreak has occurred---and it must
be a virus. These professionals---local Chinese, World Health
Organization and CDC---claim to find the new coronavirus
in five minutes. (They never adequately confirm this.)
* The World Health Organization and CDC feed the press ominous tales
about the new virus, the "outbreak," and five minutes later, "the
epidemic."
* The Chinese government locks down several giant cities.
* The epidemic story explodes in the press.
* The "virus is spreading." "Containment will be difficult."
* "Containment isn't working."
* "New cases in other countries."
* "It's coming to your country."
* Fear porn follows.
* Panic buying in stores.
* People think, "If shoppers are buying up food and water like the world
is ending, I better buy food and water, too, before they're all gone."
Lovely, isn't it?
An artificial crisis. The propaganda germ.
My shelves and closets and rooms at home are filled with essentials.
They're piled so high and packed so tight, I can barely move. I'm
building a machine-gun nest on my front lawn, and a moat stocked with
alligators. My neighbor is watching. He sees what
I'm doing, so he's installing rocket launchers in his yard...
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