Society's Child
We are dealing with a virus that around 99.7% of people will easily survive according to the medical establishment's own studies and stats as well as numerous independent studies, yet, for some reason we are being bombarded with fear mongering from the media and from governments.
Why is the only solution being suggested to the general public involve us giving up all of our freedoms and medical autonomy? Why is 99.7% of the population supposed to lock down, mask up and submit to an experimental mRNA vaccine with no long term testing data to prove its safety? Why don't the 0.26% of people that are truly at risk of dying from the virus simply take precautions or stay home while the rest of us get on with normal life? Hell, I would be fine with contributing to a fund to help support the 0.26% at risk, to help their families and help with their medical bills.
The Federal Reserve and other central banks burned trillions of dollars in stimulus measures and PPP loans to keep businesses from going completely bankrupt, and to keep jobless "non-essential" workers from starving during the initial shutdowns. But, we could have simply kept the economy going this entire time and paid a fraction of that cost helping the tiny minority of people that would actually suffer from the illness.

US investor, founder of the Baring Vostok investment fund, Michael Calvey in Moscow, Russia.
The former head of Baring Vostok, a $3.7-billion investment firm he founded, Calvey was accused of overstating the value of an asset as part of a financial transaction and misappropriating funds worth 2.5 billion rubles ($34.2 million).
A judge at the Meshchansky Court in the Russian capital found him and his French business partner, Philip Delpalle, guilty of the charges in Thursday's hearing. Prosecutors are seeking a six-year suspended prison sentence for Calvey, and five years for Delpalle. Other members of the fund's top team are facing similar terms.
The official, who spoke to the Associated Press on the condition of anonymity, said the requirement would be part of the administration's easing up on travel restrictions for foreign citizens entering the United States. A timeline has not been determined yet, as working groups within federal agencies are studying how to best resume normal travel. But all foreign travelers, with a few exceptions, will be expected to have received the COVID-19 vaccine to enter the country, according to the AP.
Currently, travel restrictions are still in place, as any residents from outside the U.S. who have visited Brazil, Ireland, the United Kingdom, India, South Africa, China, and the European Schengen area in two weeks prior to traveling to the United States are prevented from entering, the AP reported.
Comment: Speaking of mandatory vaccination, from The Hill:
Defense Secretary Austin expected to seek authorization to make vaccine mandatory for active duty troops
Defense Secretary Gen. Lloyd Austin is reportedly seeking authorization to make COVID-19 vaccinations mandatory for active-duty troops, according to CNN.
A defense official told CNN that Austin would be seeking a presidential waiver for the vaccine to be administered to troops before getting full approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Biden's recent push for vaccinations created pressure to seek a presidential waiver quickly instead of waiting for FDA approval, CNN reported. Several officials said a recommendation for how to proceed could come as soon as this week.
The potential decision comes as Biden announced that all federal employees must be vaccinated or be tested daily.
Remember, they want you to "own nothing and be happy". And right at the top of the list of things you definitely shouldn't own, is your own home.
The headlines about this have been steady for the last few years, but it has picked up pace in the wake of the "pandemic" (as has so much else). An agenda hidden on back pages, behind by Covid's meaningless big red numbers, but perhaps no less sinister.
You can find articles all over the net talking up renting over owning.
Last month, for example, Bloomberg ran an article headlined:
"America Should Become a Nation of Renters"Which praises what they call "the liquefaction of the housing market" and gleefully expounds on the idea that "The very features that made home buying an affordable and stable investment are coming to an end."

Law student Aya Hachem, 19, who was shot dead during a botched drive-by shooting in Blackburn.
Tyre firm boss Feroz Suleman, 40, arranged the execution of a rival businessman in broad daylight but the gunman he hired instead shot dead innocent passer-by Aya Hachem.
The 19-year-old, who dreamed of becoming a solicitor, had fled from violence in her native Lebanon as a child to settle with her family in Blackburn, Lancashire.
Comment: There is clearly something wrong with the minds of all involved in this ridiculously petty vengeance scheme and now an innocent woman is dead. They deserve every year of their sentences.

Not wearing a face mask on the Tube should be a CRIMINAL offence says Sadiq Khan as London Mayor says he is lobbying government to bring in by law to issue fixed penalty notices
The London Mayor has been pushing the the government to allow Transport for London (TfL) to impose a by-law requiring face coverings on the capital's transport network.
Since the easing of restrictions on July 19 'Freedom Day', passengers have only been required to wear a covering as a 'condition of carriage' rather than a legal requirement.
Comment: For more on Sadiq Khan's achievements, see:
- 3 men killed in London stabbing frenzy - Knife crime doubled since 2014
- Failed London Garden Bridge project cost £53m - overseen by London Mayor Boris Johnson then Sadiq Khan
- 'Taxpayer's money shouldn't be spent on political stunts': London mayor Khan blasted for spending £2.3M on pro-EU New Year extravaganza
- London crime wave: Theft, burglary, rape, violent crime and homicide skyrocket
Comment: The CDC recently revealed that 3 out of 4 cases of the Delta variant were in the vaccinated.
Over the next three days authorities plan to test all 680,000 residents at 41 testing centres, the government said.
The testing is one of a host of new measures announced after the gambling hub recorded 491 days without a single local infection.
Comment: RT reports that China is reimposing restrictions on "non-emergency and non-essential" overseas travel following the detection of just 71 cases:
On Wednesday, China recorded 71 domestic Covid cases - the highest number since January. Officials in a number of cities have implemented mass testing and enforced local lockdown to prevent the virus from spreading rapidly. Chinese officials said they traced the outbreak back to passengers on a flight from Moscow that then spread to cleaners in Nanjing and into the local community.
With around 500 domestic Covid cases total having been reported in China since mid-July, a range of domestic restrictions have been reintroduced in some areas, including closing transport hubs and issuing stay-at-home orders to prevent a widespread outbreak that could threaten to overwhelm medical facilities.
As restrictions were imposed, China Railway began offering full refunds for any tickets purchased prior to August 4 to help discourage mobility, telling those who must travel to take proper anti-virus precautions. Similarly, China's civil aviation authority has demanded that domestic airlines provide complete refunds for any flights between Wednesday and the end of the month to "cope with the COVID-19 prevention and control measures." Would-be passengers who decide not to travel can avail of the refund at any point before the plane takes off, according to the agency.
Page reportedly sought medical treatment for his twelve year old son earlier this year in the country's capital Aukland.
While even New Zealand citizens and permanent residents of the country were barred from entering without facing a raft of restrictions, including spending two weeks at a government quarantine facility, Page was allowed to just walk right in.
Nahid Taghavi was arrested at her Tehran apartment in October 2020 and has been held at Tehran's Evin prison since. She was known to be an advocate for human rights in Iran, in particular for women's rights and freedom of expression, according to the human rights group IGFM. The 66-year-old was handed a prison sentence of 10 years and eight months.
Her daughter Mariam Claren confirmed the sentence in a post on Twitter.
News site Mash splashed the gruesome details on Thursday, naming the occult-loving duo as Andrey Tregubenko and Olga Bolshakova, living in the capital, Moscow. They had apparently been initially called in for questioning by police on drugs charges, before making the gory admission that they were responsible for the deaths of two young people in the forests of Karelia, which borders Finland, Sweden and Norway.












Comment: Calvey trying to spin a not guilty ruling as being 'good for business' for Moscow is a rather slimy tactic which only makes him seem more guilty.
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