Continuing my "greatest COVID hits" articles. To read my introduction to this ongoing series, go here. To support my work and get value for value, order my Matrix collections here and subscribe to my substack here.
March 9, 2020
Let’s go to NBC News for the word on what’s happening in Italy. March 8, 2020, “Coronavirus updates live: Million quarantined in Italy, as D.C. reports first case”.
Let’s
all try fear as a lifestyle. How about an unproven virus blowing around
the world? It could be a kick. Just turn on your TV.
The news is a huge deli.
Authoritative and supreme baloney sellers are cutting extra-thick slices for the public.
Zero
Hedge: 3/8, “An infectious diseases expert at the forefront of the
search for a coronavirus vaccine said on Friday that it was the most
‘frightening disease’ he's ever encountered, and that ‘war is an
appropriate analogy’ for what the country is facing, as ‘50 - 70 percent
of the global population’ may become infected.”
“Dr.
Richard Hatchett, who sat on the White House Homeland Security Council
in 2005 - 2006 and was a principal author of the National Strategy for
Pandemic Influenza Implementation Plan, and currently heads the
Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, told the UK's
Channel-4:”
“This
is the most frightening disease I've ever encountered in my career, and
that includes Ebola, it includes MERS, it includes SARS. And it's
frightening because of the combination of infectiousness and a lethality
that appears to be manyfold higher than flu’.”
Let’s look at these “frightening diseases” Dr. Hatchett has encountered. Out of a population of seven BILLION people...
Ebola (2014-16): 11,325 deaths.
SARS (2003): 800 deaths.
MERS (2012-2020): 866 deaths.
These
are official figures. In my articles on past “epidemics,” I’ve
presented evidence that factors having nothing to do with viruses caused
illness and death; and the tests for diagnosing cases are wholly
inadequate and unreliable.
Dr.
Hatchett also did work on the Swine Flu “pandemic” (2009). I’ve covered
that fraud extensively. In the summer of 2009, while the CDC was
claiming there were thousands of cases in America, star investigative
CBS reporter, Sharyl Attkisson, discovered the CDC had secretly stopped
counting cases. Why? Because the overwhelming percentage of samples
taken from the most likely Swine Flu patients, sent to labs, were coming
back with: no sign of Swine Flu or any other kind of flu. About a month
after Attkisson’s investigation was shut down at CBS, the CDC estimated
there were, yes, 22 MILLION CASES of Swine Flu in America.
Another
expert is currently weighing in on the coronavirus: Harvard
epidemiologist, Marc Lipsitch. He told CBS reporter Jim Axelrod that he
predicts 40 to 70 percent of the world’s population may become
“infected” with the virus, and millions of people will die.
This
prediction, of course, is based on a computer model. What could
possibly go awry? We should all step up to the counter and buy more
baloney. The same brand the CDC was selling when they proclaimed there
were 22 million cases of Swine Flu in America. Funny thing---every
computer model I’ve ever bumped into always seemed to predict MORE. More
of whatever it was calculating. I’ve never met a computer model that
stated: “there will only be three of these, instead of 40 million.” “The
projections of five years of drought have been downgraded to six days.”
There
was an oddity in this CBS interview with the Harvard epidemiologist,
Marc Lipsitch. It’s what both the reporter, Jim Axelrod, and Lipsitch
didn’t ask or say. After all, when an expert tells you millions are
going to die, you want to know more, right? Here is my proposed
continuation of the conversation. It might go this way:
Axelrod: When you make a computer model, I assume it yields specifics, correct?
Lipsitch: Well, yes. That’s why we do models.
Axelrod: In this case, how many deaths---how many millions of deaths--- from the coronavirus did your model predict?
Lipsitch: There is a range of numbers.
Axelrod:
I understand. But you should understand that when you sit here and tell
our audience that millions are going to die, there are further
questions.
Lipsitch: The model adjusts the range, as we gather more information.
Axelrod:
How many people will die? Our viewers, I believe, know there would be a
difference between, say, two million, ten million, and a hundred
million. When you just say millions, it leaves a hole...
And
then, Axelrod would keep on going and find out how many millions of
people Lipsitch thinks are going to die, based on the computer model.
In other words, let’s get the number or the range of numbers on the record. Let’s have the Harvard expert go all the way.
But
for some reason, Axelrod and Lipsitch were satisfied to avoid doing
it. Perhaps it was a case of “don’t frighten the
children.” Unfortunately, too late for that. I prefer to think CBS and
Lipsitch didn’t want to lift some very visible and specific roll of
baloney and slice it thickly in front of the viewing audience. A year
from now---speaking of millions---a whole lot of people might repost
that interview and say: CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS? AND YOU TRUST CBS AND
HARVARD? LOOK AT THE BALONEY.
The
current soft meme, a white-collar corporate and government virus,
spreading rapidly, is: “social distancing.” Also known, in a slightly
harder version, as “self-isolation.” If you think you might sneeze in
the next four months, work from home. Stay at home.
I
thought we were already in the middle of a social distancing pandemic,
judging from how many people walk down streets and sit in restaurants,
heads bowed, looking at their cell phones and exercising their thumbs.
But
if people listen to the experts, they’ll undoubtedly shrink and
contract even further. They’ll live in kitchens and bathrooms, shut down
the rest of their homes, and only venture out to buy food and toilet
paper.
The intrepid hero of our time will be the pizza delivery Magellan, circumnavigating empty neighborhoods, braving the night air.
“Do you guys make baloney deep dish? I’ll take six.”
~~~
(The link to this republished COVID article posted on my blog is here. For the article published on Friday, click here.)
(Follow me on Substack, Twitter, and Gab at @jonrappoport) |
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