The BBC Kicks Off the Holidays With a New Season of Pandemic Fearmongering
The BBC has launched into the pandemic fearmongering a bit early this year with their recent article: Flu wave hits England’s busiest A&E – hundreds of patients are arriving a day.
For those who don’t live in England, A&E stands for Accident and Emergency. But in this case, it might as well stand for Arts and Entertainment.
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Check out the dramatic opener to the propaganda piece:
At England’s busiest emergency unit, all the beds are full by midday.
As one patient leaves his room at Leicester Royal Infirmary’s acute unit, cleaning staff are waiting outside.
He is barely out of the room before the bed is stripped and bleach is sprayed. The next patient is already waiting to come in.
All those bleach fumes must be great for the lungs.
The article continues with more drama — citing staff who are “doing all they can to avoid becoming completely overwhelmed” and “working at the limits of [their] ability.”
The author even describes how patients who can sit are being asked to… sit in a chair (what is the world coming to?), so that patients who need to lie down can use a precious hospital bed. Maybe most of these seat-restricted patients should stay home and rest in their own beds?
The article also claims the surge of patients is worse than the winter of 2020/21 — at the peak of the COVID scamdemic.
Yet, as journalist Nick Trigglase — a rare voice of sanity at the BBC — points out, this winter is nowhere near as bad as the winters of 2014/15 or 2017/18.
Which is exactly what Stefanie illustrates in my novel, Much Ado About Corona (Chapter 50: How to Fake a Pandemic) when she covers the window of her bakery with news reports dating back to the 70s, showing how hospitals are regularly overrun with flu cases.
Here’s an excerpt to counter the BBC’s hysteria:
“So you’re enjoying my collage?” she asked, smiling at the info bomb coverithrough fiction with a story about courage overcoming the word I would use,” I replied. “It’s way too mind-boggling. How did you find all these articles?”
She grinned. “It was so easy even a moose could do it. Just Google ‘hospitals overwhelmed by flu.’”
“I thought you said Google was a lying, spying, censoring monolithic shill for the overlords trying to rule the world?”
“Probably is,” she responded flatly. “Yet, even they can’t hide the truth.”
Help me counter the “lying, spying, censoring monolithic shill” that the BBC has proven itself to be by sharing this article with friends and family.
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John C. A. Manley is the author of the world’s best-selling COVID-dissent novel, Much Ado About Corona — spreading the truth about the scamdemic with a well-crafted fiction. Mark Bell, retired NHL hockey player for the Toronto Maple Leafs, says he “absolutely enjoyed Much Ado About Corona from start to finish. Read more reviews, buy the book or get a free sample in ebook or audiobook format at MuchAdoAboutCorona.com
Featured image is from Pandemic.news
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