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Syringe

Best of the Web: Covid-19 outbreak at 95% vaccinated Belgian nursing home slays 12 residents


Comment: Using '2020 official virus science', either the vaccines didn't work, or they killed these people...


nursing home belgium
The nursing home in Nivelles, Belgium
An investigation is underway into how a care home in Nivelles in Walloon Brabant came to be infected with the Delta variant of the coronavirus, while 95% of the residents and 75% of staff were fully vaccinated.

According to the latest studies, the vaccines in use at present offer reliable protection against the Delta variant - the most virulent of the four variants so far uncovered.

Yet the home suffered an infection of 55 of its 119 residents. Most suffered relatively mild symptoms - although symptoms among elderly and infirm people can quickly change from mild to something much worse.

Nevertheless, 12 people died. According to figures from the health institute Sciensano, 34 people aged over 65 - not all of them in care homes - died in the week of 14 to 20 June in the entire country, down from 252 in the week of 4 to 11 April.

The investigation will now enquire into how the variant came to be present in the home, and why it had such a devastating effect.

At the same time, it will look into the odd situation whereby, while residents were being felled by the Delta variant, staff were becoming infected with the Alpha variant, formerly known as the British or Kent variant.

Comment: Ah, we see.

Last year it was "BUT PEOPLE ARE DYING!"

This year it's "meh, people die all the time."

Got it...


Yellow Vest

Best of the Web: HUGE anti-lockdown protest hits London, as city braces for weekend of demonstrations

london protest lockdowns
© AFP / Daniel Leal-Olivas
Thousands of protesters are marching through London demanding an end to lockdown restrictions. The weekend will be a busy one for the city's police, with climate change and anti-austerity protests also taking place.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson's recent decision to push back the UK's reopening until later next month was an unpopular one, and thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of London on Saturday to show their discontent. Starting out from Hyde Park, throngs of people marched through the centre of the British capital, demanding an end to coronavirus-related restrictions.

Estimating crowd sizes is an inexact science, but attendance easily reached the thousands, if not tens of thousands. Some estimates put attendance into six figures.

Comment: Lockdown Sceptics reports that some mainstream sources have actually bothered to report the protest unlike previous media blackouts:
Stop Press: BBC News has actually covered the protest, although it describes the number of protestors as "thousands" and is at pains to point out that the numbers aren't just made up by anti-lockdown protestors: "Whether it was austerity or Palestine, lockdown or the NHS, campaigners of all ages and backgrounds wanted to make their voices heard today."

Stop Press 2: The Evening Standard covered the protest in a surprisingly balanced way. The Guardian, on the other hand, did not.



X

Best of the Web: Canadian surgeon fired by College of Medicine for voicing safety concerns about Covid shots for children

Dr Christian
© UnknownDr. Francis Christian, Clinical Professor of General Surgery at the University of Saskatchewan
The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms represents Dr. Francis Christian, Clinical Professor of General Surgery at the University of Saskatchewan and a practising surgeon in Saskatoon. Dr. Christian was called into a meeting today, suspended from all teaching responsibilities effective immediately, and fired from his position with the University of Saskatchewan as of September 2021.

There is a recording of Dr. Christian's meeting today between Dr. Christian and Dr. Preston Smith, the Dean of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan, College of Medicine, Dr. Susan Shaw, the Chief Medical Officer of the Saskatchewan Health Authority, and Dr. Brian Ulmer, Head of the Department of Surgery at the Saskatchewan College of Medicine.

In addition, the Justice Centre will represent Dr. Christian in his defence of a complaint that was made against him and an investigation by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan. The complaint objects to Dr. Christian having advocated for the informed consent of Covid vaccines for children.

Dr. Christian has been a surgeon for more than 20 years and began working in Saskatoon in 2007. He was appointed Director of the Surgical Humanities Program and Director of Quality and Patient Safety in 2018 and co-founded the Surgical Humanities Program. Dr. Christian is also the Editor of the Journal of The Surgical Humanities.

Comment: The need to silence has reached a deafening pitch.


UFO 2

Best of the Web: Watershed Pentagon UFO report says 143 'Unidentified Aerial Phenomena' incidents since 2004 'unexplained', does not rule out ET origin

pentagon
According to a much-anticipated interim report released Friday by a Pentagon task force on unidentified flying objects (UFOs), 143 of 144 reports since 2004 remain beyond the US government's explanation - and extraterrestrials haven't been ruled out as a potential origin.

Titled "Preliminary Assessment: Unidentified Aerial Phenomena," the nine-page report published by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) is intended to provide Congress with a glimpse of how the government would handle a fuller report on what it knows about UFOs - or UAPs, as the Pentagon and Intelligence Community have preferred to call them.

While the report fails to provide adequate natural explanations for 144 of the reported incidents, they also don't conclude the phenomena must be aliens visiting us from another world, either. However, that explanation is one among several possibilities not yet dismissed. Other possibilities include atmospheric phenomena, airborne clutter, and "developments and classified programs by US entities."


Comment: Additionally, the report notes that "UAP sightings tended to cluster around U.S. training and testing grounds," something that has consistently been the case since the Cold War, when UFOS regularly buzzed US bases, missile silos, and - in more recent decades - civilian airports.

There isn't much to the report. In fact, there's almost nothing of substance to it. However, just the fact that the phenomenon is no longer framed in terms intended to ridicule the phenomenon in the public's eyes speaks to a 'shift' in 'acclimating' people to the reality of UFOs.

'Disclosure' remains a ways off, but the overall official narrative has certainly shifted.


Snowflake Cold

Best of the Web: A record amount of snow and ice was added yesterday in Greenland - 4 gigatons in one day

So just when is all this ice going to disappear?
So just when is all this ice going to disappear?
Following a historic increase in snow and ice in late May, Greenland has seen huge gains at a time when it usually lost snow and ice.

If you look at the official figures provided by the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI), it turns out that yesterday, June 24, 4 gigatons were recorded in one day - an astonishing figure for this time of year: Greenland has never received so much snow and ice in recorded history, so late at the start of the season.

Despite decades of prophecies about the doom of glaciers that are "about" to melt due to "Global Warming", the ice sheet is currently gaining a record amount of "mass" - only for yesterday (June 24, 2021) - 4 gigatons.

There has never been such a large accumulation at this time of year - at least since DMI started recording in 1981. Growth of this magnitude would be considered normal in November-February, but not at the end of June.

Yoda

Best of the Web: Winston Marshall: Why I'm leaving Mumford & Sons

winston marshall mumford sons antifa
© Mumford & SonsWinston Marshall
I loved those first tours. Bouncing off a sweaty stage in an Edinburgh catacomb we then had to get to a gig in Camden by lunch the next day. We couldn't fit all four of us and Ted's double-bass into the VW Polo. I think it was Ben who drew the short-straw and had to follow by train with his keyboard. I remember blitzing it down the M6 through the night, the lads asleep beside me. We made it but my voice sadly didn't, completely shot by exhaustion, I had to mime my harmonies. Being in Mumford & Sons was exhilarating.

Every gig was its own adventure. Every gig its own story. Be it odysseys through the Scottish Islands, or soapbox shows in Soho. Where would we sleep that night? Hostels in Fort William, pub floors in Ipswich, even the Travelodge in Carlisle maintains a sort of charm in my mind. We saw the country and then, as things miraculously grew, the world. All the while doing what we loved. Music. And not just any music. These songs meant something. They felt important to me. Songs with the message of hope and love. I was surrounded by three supremely talented song-writers and Marcus, our singer with a one-in-a-million voice. A voice that can compel both a field of 80,000 and the intimacy of a front room. Fast-forward ten years and we were playing those same songs every night in arenas, flying first-class, staying in luxury hotels and being paid handsomely to do so. I was a lucky boy.

Tornado2

Best of the Web: Tornado kills at least 5 people, injures hundreds more, and destroys THOUSANDS of homes in Czechia

A tornado touches down in Czechia
© Twitter/@nedavidlak; Twitter/@kutka18A tornado touches down in Czechia, June 24, 2021; aftermath in the village of Lužice
At least three people have died and hundreds more injured after a rare tornado tore through a region in the southeastern Czech Republic.


Comment: The death toll is now up to 5 people.


The tornado was formed late on Thursday during a series of strong thunderstorms that hit the entire country. Seven towns and villages have been badly damaged, with entire buildings turned into ruins and cars overturned. Over 120,000 households were without electricity.

Some 360 extra police officers were sent to the area together with the military. The rescuers from many parts of the country who came to help were joined by their counterparts from nearby Austria and Slovakia.

They were using drones and helicopters to search the rubble. One person died of injuries in the hospital in the town of Hodonin.

The regional rescue service said more people likely died.



Comment: One Czech TV station said the tornado may have been a F3 or F4 on the Fujita scale, rated at "significant" to "severe" damage. Meteorologist Michal Žák said it was "probably the strongest tornado in recent [Czech]history" and very uncommon in Europe reports RT. Here's more incredible footage:



This major and rare tornado in Europe comes only days after powerful storms ripped through Belgium, including a tornado that obliterates almost 100 homes in country's south.

To understand why this uptick in tornado activity may be occurring now, see the comment here: More intense and frequent thunderstorms linked to global climate variability


Chess

Best of the Web: US investment giants buying up neighborhoods, MSM telling us we should rent - this 'new normal' spells the death of the American Dream

Blackstone Schwarzman
© Reuters/Gary HeStephen Schwarzman of Blackstone Group
Predatory private equity firms buying up neighborhoods only to rent homes at a premium hints at the real meaning of the World Economic Forum's "sharing economy." Americans never voted for this, but their leaders are loving it.

Owning a home is no longer feasible for Americans coming of age in the 21st century, according to Bloomberg columnist Karl Smith, who smugly suggested in an op-ed that they stop worrying about whether they can afford a house, ignore the asset-stripping investment vultures, and just embrace the depressing reality of lifelong debt peonage under the rule of those same private equity giants.

Lest there be any misunderstanding, the feudalist character of this glorious new "sharing economy" is reflected in one increasingly popular "solution" for the generation currently facing the steep uphill climb to pay off their student loans. Under this scheme, known as Student Loan Asset Backed Securities (SLABs), students are invited to essentially indenture themselves to some corporation, paying off their debts by selling off a percentage of every paycheck they subsequently receive until the balance is zero. Any questions?

Comment: Meanwhile over in China, '70% of Chinese millennials (ages 19 to 36) already own their own homes': The American Dream is Alive And Well... in China


Black Cat 2

Best of the Web: Covering up true origins? Scientist discovers that key early Covid-19 Wuhan samples are MISSING from US government NIH database

Fort Detrick Maryland
Fort Detrick, Maryland, actual source of the 'Wuhan' Flu?
Chinese scientists have deleted crucial data from the earliest confirmed Covid patients, it emerged today amid intense scrutiny about the true origins of the disease.


Comment: As we'll see below in this report, the contention that it was Chinese scientists who did this - working, presumably, at the behest of the Chinese government - is ludicrous.


Dozens of test samples from patients in epicentre Wuhan were found to have been wiped from an international database used to track the virus' evolution.

The files could have provided vital clues about how the virus originated and how long it had been spreading before the seafood market outbreak in December 2019.

The American professor who spotted their deletion and managed to recover some of the data said they suggested Covid was circulating long before China's official timeline.


Comment: Long before THE official timeline. China is not particularly attached to it commencing in December 2019.


Comment: This study further cements the fact the virus was circulating the globe before the Chinese were caught unawares by it in Wuhan in December 2019.


Attention

Best of the Web: COVID-19 mRNA vaccines likely linked to rare heart condition in kids: CDC panel

vaccination children
© SOPA Images/LightRocket via GettA CDC panel has suggested vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna may be linked to rare heart inflammation in kids.

Comment: See also: