VIRUS: Response welcomes dystopia
In March, mayors statewide were “encouraged” to issue seven-day emergency proclamations regarding COVID-19. City councils were stampeded to extend those proclamations indefinitely, in extreme haste, under pressure, without consideration of negative impacts in doing so.
Much is unknown, experts even disagree whether a virus is a living thing. The RT-PCR test does not test for a virus; the gold standard scientific method-based virus determination, the Koch Postulates, has been ignored. Proven treatments, banned by governors.
The WHO and CDC are either incompetent or fraudulent, leaning more toward the latter especially with the CDC directive (NVSS COVID-19 Alert 2) to count otherwise unspecified cause of death as COVID-19, ensuring both overcounting and misrepresentation, died “with,” rather than “from.”
“Opening up North Idaho” — malevolence or madness? Recommending the use of cashless transactions, when cash has not been demonstrated to be a form of transmission. What next? — certainly anything in a store has been handled by multiple persons, will clothing no longer be available for trial fitting? What about the U.S. Mail system, with many unknown handlers. Books in libraries or book stores, even newspapers, again multiple handlers, with advertising supplements shipped in from around the country.
These responses appear intended to usher in the totalitarian dream of a dystopian future, where all human interactions and transactions are recorded, analyzed, segmented, scored and acted upon.
William Pitt warned, “Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom, it is the argument of tyrants, the creed of slaves.”
Heed.
MIKE CHASE
Dalton Gardens