They’re
just making up case numbers now. Wholesale. Check out the first two
paragraphs of this Oct. 28 NY Times piece. It doesn’t take a genius to
figure out what the Times is up to:
“The
United States reported a record of more than 500,000 new cases over the
past week, as states and cities resorted to stricter new measures to
contain the virus that is raging across the country, especially the
American heartland.”
“The
record was broken Tuesday, even as the Trump administration announced
what it called its first-term scientific accomplishments, in a press
release that included “ENDING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC” written in bold,
capital letters.”
Translation:
To try to keep Trump from a second term, public health officials are
claiming an absurd new leap in the number of cases.
Even
with a diagnostic test rigged to spit out false-positives like a river
running down from a high mountain…500,000 new cases in one
week?! Right. And my great grandmother just returned piloting a space
ship from Jupiter.
In
case you missed it, the total number of COVID cases in the US is now
being pegged at NINE MILLION. If my arithmetic is correct, this is
roughly one case for every 40 Americans.
I’d say we need nine million bulldozers and earthmovers to clear the bullshit out of the way.
I
expect to see this kind of press release soon: “Experts at the National
Institutes of Health have just discovered that SARS-CoV-2 is actually a
virus and a bacterium and a fungus and a brain parasite. It attacks the
spine, nervous system, liver, kidneys, blood, and big toe, as well as
the lungs…”
As I’ve been warning, a new wave of lockdowns is coming. Well, they’ve now invented the pretext. 500,000 new US cases in a week.
I
maintain what I’ve maintained from the beginning of this fake pandemic:
if you put all public health officials and Left press whores on a
platform and propelled it to Outer Mongolia, people here would live
their lives out in the open and go to work, and no one would notice
anything more serious than a flu season.
Here is a backgrounder:
THE KING AND THE ISLAND
“You say the existence of the virus is unproven. If it isn’t the virus, why are people getting sick and dying?”
I answered that question months ago in a number of articles. Here is a different version of the answer.
There
was a small country dominated by a king. He was crafty but not very
bright. His aim was pure control. How to maintain it was his ongoing
dilemma.
Fortunately for him, he had, at his side, an intelligent high priest.
During a period of unrest, when groups were chafing under the king’s domination, the priest appeared with a plan.
He said to his king, “We need an enemy. I’ve chosen one. I call him Vir.”
“Who is he?” the king asked.
“No
one,” the priest said. “He doesn’t exist. But we’ll sell a story about
him. We’ll say he’s a tiny demon who is invisible. He has the ability to
travel from person to person, causing illness and death.”
“But if he doesn’t exist,” the king said, “how can we prove he’s harmful? No one will fall ill or die.”
The
priest explained: “There are several ways. First of all, our people do
experience, in the course of living, illness. And obviously they do
die. So we’ll now say many of those illnesses and deaths are actually
caused by the demon.”
“I like it so far,” the king said.
The
priest went on. “Then there is this. Who are the most vulnerable of our
subjects? The elderly. They’re already suffering from diseases, and my
subordinate priests treat them with remedies which are, frankly,
toxic. We just need to give the elderly an extra push to send them over
the edge. When they fall, we’ll say the demon Vir did it.”
“What kind of push?” the king said.
“We
terrify the elderly with diagnosis. We tell them the demon is attacking
them. Then we isolate them from family. We cut them off from human
contact. Our reason? Once attacked by Vir, once infected, they could
transmit a Vir-like impulse to others, which would be exceedingly
harmful---so they must be isolated. Do you see? We force the premature
deaths of the elderly with these measures and techniques of terror. And
then we count their deaths and broadcast the numbers and call them Vir
numbers.”
“It makes sense,” the king said.
“There
is more,” the priest said. “There must be a certain small number of
unexplainable deaths, where supposedly healthy people suddenly fall ill
and perish. This will stir general fear in the population. We can
achieve this through seeding a few areas here and there with toxins. For
instance, I have one called a vaccine.”
“This is making more sense,” the king said. “I’m beginning to see the picture.”
“There
must be a test,” the priest said. “A way of showing that many, many
people have been touched by the demon Vir. These people won’t die. Most
of them will never become ill. But we will count them as ‘cases.’ The
test will claim thousands of our people are ‘touched by Vir.’ My priests
will administer this test broadly. It will consist of shaking liquid in
a jar next to the person. If the liquid turns cloudy, it means the
person has been ‘touched.’ We will use two different kinds of
liquid. One stays clear after shaking, which means ‘untouched,’ and
other automatically turns cloudy…”
“And then what?” the king said.
“Then,”
the priest said, “You will declare a state of emergency. You’ll say the
only way to contain Vir is by isolating the population. People must
stay indoors. Most shops and businesses will close. This will increase
your control. The lockdowns will last, on and off, for a long time…”
“Yes,” the king said.
“One
other thing,” the priest said. “When people fall ill, we will take some
of them to emergency centers and treat them with various methods. A few
of those methods will be harmful. I have designed a breathing apparatus
that damages the lungs. That’s just one example. We will say the
effects of the harmful treatments are Vir.”
“That
gives me an idea,” the king said. “Masks. We’ll order all citizens to
wear masks. To hide their faces. We’ll say this is to stop them from
breathing Vir-like impulses upon others. The mask will become a symbol
of submission.”
“Very
good,” the high priest said. “It shall be done. We will promise a new
treatment for the population. An anti-Vir vaccine. We will say it is a
miracle devised by you. It will prevent future visitations of the
demon. Some versions of this treatment will be toxic. When these
versions cause harm, we’ll say it was the doing of Vir.”
“One question,” the king said. “Are you sure Vir doesn’t exist?”
The
priest was about to answer, but he stopped himself. He realized his
king, who wasn’t very bright, might actually come to believe in
Vir. This would not be a bad thing. The king would be better equipped to
sell the story. The king would also be easier to control. Yes.
The
high priest smiled. “Well, we are never sure, sire,” he said. “Perhaps
Vir is real. Perhaps I wasn’t just making him up. Instead, I actually
perceived him without knowing it.”
The
king nodded solemnly. “That was my thought, too. We must be on our
guard. I take my oath to protect the people very seriously.”
“You certainly do,” the priest said.
And that was how a story about a demon became a useful story.
(The link to this article posted on my blog is here -- with sources.)
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