COVID-19 'Pandemic'

Danbones

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Blackleaf

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Ever watch Kak and Mak?
A little tour of empty hospitals...
( vid ends at 5:04 it's just a screwed up upload for some reason)
I've never seen this but I have seen plenty of other videos showing empty hospitals at a time when the Government keeps telling us they are overrun because of Covid. In Britain, over 70,000 NHS nurses have been off work for the last few weeks. Why are they all dossing about at home if hospitals are overcrowded?
 

spaminator

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Blackleaf

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Why the EU has struggled with the vaccine​

Its botched rollout shows the importance of nation states.

Why the EU has struggled with the vaccine

PATRICK HESS

1st January 2021​

Spiked

Whenever I become sceptical of the UK’s decision to leave the European Union, I am almost instantly reminded by some event or story of the inefficiency of the EU. As the transition period ends and we leave the EU’s structures, it is worth comparing the UK’s up-and-running (though far from perfect) vaccine rollout with the EU’s largely failed attempts to secure itself reliable vaccine doses.

UK prime minister Boris Johnson’s decision in June not to join the EU vaccine programme was derided by numerous MPs as ‘putting ideology before saving lives’ and playing ‘silly Brexit games’. Now, however, with the UK likely nearing one million vaccinations by the end of the week, and Europe having begun its rollout only this week, it would appear such complaints had it completely the wrong way round.

As the German news magazine, Der Spiegel, reported recently, the EU’s approach to securing vaccine doses has been messy from the beginning, starting with its choice of suppliers. The EU’s ‘vaccine alliance’, made up of Germany, Italy, France and the Netherlands, concluded contracts with pharmaceutical giants Sanofi, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca early on, while strangely leaving out the companies that had demonstrated some of the most promising results at the time – BioNTech and Moderna. While many countries took advantage of some of these latter vaccines’ hopeful results by securing millions of doses as early as July, the EU did not get around to ordering these vaccines until November, delaying delivery by precious weeks.

Even by November, when BioNTech was reporting 95 per cent effectiveness, the EU ordered far too few doses. BioNTech offered 500million doses, but the EU only took 200million. The two vaccines with which the EU secured its first orders – Johnson & Johnson and Sanofi – have both now delayed seeking approval until well into next year. The only vaccine model at this moment which the EU has approved is the BioNTech model, which it hedged its bets against. This has delayed the continent’s vaccine rollout, resulting in lots of unnecessary deaths, while needlessly prolonging the economic misery of lockdown. Hopefully, things will speed up if the EU follows the UK in approving the Oxford / AstraZeneca vaccine.

In contrast, the UK’s early securing of sufficient batches of BioNTech doses and quick approval of that vaccine, as well as our securing of 100million doses from Oxford / AstraZeneca, means an earlier rollout, an earlier easing back to normality, and hopefully an earlier economic recovery. Though there are serious questions to be asked about the speed with which vaccinations are being rolled out in the UK, with other countries like Israel already racing ahead of us, we have undoubtedly had a headstart compared with the EU.

I say this with no glee – I would be much happier to see our European neighbours get out of the trap of this pandemic as quickly as possible. However, in observing the contrast here, it is important to recognise the bureaucratic inefficiency and immobility we have freed ourselves from. As we come to the end of the transition period, this story should be further reason for us to believe in our ability to make the right decisions and secure our interests as a sovereign nation outside of the European Union’s structures and programmes.

Although there are many things the EU is good for, its inadequacy in handling crises like pandemics has been driven home by these vaccine failures. For all the talk of ‘international solidarity’ within the bloc, the EU’s handling of the pandemic has largely been a story of nation states reasserting themselves against the EU’s supra-nation state. Such was the case during the outbreak of the virus, with the unilateral restrictions on the movement of drugs within the EU and the failure of joint procurement and distribution of what PPE equipment was available. So it is again with vaccination stage: the German federal government is now trying to secure millions of doses to be used exclusively in Germany, separately from the vaccine alliance’s orders. This is likely to be a bone of contention in the bloc. For if this allows Germany to open up earlier, the Mediterranean countries whose economies have been the worst hit by the pandemic will ask why Germany should be able to use its economic clout to get out of the pandemic-induced lockdown restrictions faster than they can.

Brexit, of course, has its trade-offs. But had we opted to join the EU’s vaccine alliance, its slow, immobile and bureaucratic decision-making process would have been a potential liability for the UK. Hopefully, the EU can learn from this and adapt itself to better handle future crises. However, as we begin our future outside the bloc, the UK will fortunately not have to rely on it doing so.

 
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Danbones

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I think genocide was the goal in the first place, so on that note, it looks like these tyrannical bureaucrats are right in their orbital window so far.
See the W.E.F., 2030/carbon neutral, and their corporate partners, and all that jazz.
 

Aetheric

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BOMBSHELL: WHO Coronavirus PCR Test Primer Sequence is Found in All Human DNA​

This was important enough that I wanted to get it out immediately. My research into the NCBI database for nucleotide sequences has lead to a stunning discovery. One of the WHO primer sequences in the PCR test for SARS-CoV-2 is found in all human DNA!
...

Just to add more validity to this absolute fleecing of citizens (see Blackleaf's vid above from the English MP):
The British government's own MHRA (Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) admits they have never isolated the virus and the genomic sequence is computer generated.
This is from the Dec. 21, 2020, so don't even try to pretend this is old and they have isolated it after the initial Feb. 2020 Wuhan 'isolation' used for the PCR testing.

All those who have always tried to get this information out there have been vindicated,
no more can anyone say they have isolated the virus (an isolate from a symptomatic person not mixed with human or animal carriers).

BOOM!

1-computer isolate.png
 

Danbones

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Also in Ire land.​

Irish Government Admits: COVID-19 Does NOT Exist​


After months of painstaking freedom of information law requests the government of Ireland has finally come clean and admitted that it has no scientific proof that the SARS-CoV-2 virus (COVID-19) exists. Which other nations are going to be next and admit this pandemic was a scam?

“AS PART OF OUR LEGAL ACTION we had been demanding the evidence that this virus actually exists [as well as] evidence that lockdowns actually have any impact on the spread of viruses; that face-masks are safe, and do deter the spread of viruses – They don’t. No such studies exist; that social distancing is based in science – It isn’t. it’s made up; that contact tracing has any bearing on the spread of a virus – of course it doesn’t. This organisation here – is making it up as they go along.” – Gemma O’Doherty
Published on December 26, 2020

Oh, I'm feelin' the Ire too
:(

ps

Irish COVID-19 spread worse than formal reporting suggests​


DUBLIN (Reuters) -About 4,000 additional positive tests for COVID-19 in the last two to three days have yet to be formally confirmed in Ireland, meaning the situation is worse than recent record daily figures suggest, a senior health official said on Thursday....

...“The bottom line here is we must suppress transmission, there is no alternative. Failure to suppress transmission leaves us in far too stark a scenario to be acceptable,” Philip Nolan, the head of Ireland’s COVID-19 modelling group, told a news conference.

Nolan projected that the total number of people in hospital with COVID-19 will likely double to between 700 and 1,000 people by early January, potentially surpassing the first wave peak. That could reach an “intolerable” 1,500 to 2,000 patients if the virus is not suppressed, he added...


Why those cheeze eatin bastid...etc...etc...etc... Just like the FAKENEWS press that called the selection for Biden. NOTHING they say is true.
 
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Blackleaf

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FREXIT! 😳 The French Are REVOLTING 🇫🇷 You Won’t Believe This 🤦‍♂️ Macron Mass Jab Disaster 😂

138 French people have been given the vaccine, as opposed to over 1 million Brits

 

Danbones

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Yes, the French are revolting...
:)
They are going to need much better masks than that to stop that darn smell.

Ooops, I resemble that remark...Damn good thing I have some Irish and njn blood in me too.
 

Blackleaf

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Yes, the French are revolting...
:)
They are going to need much better masks than that to stop that darn smell.

Ooops, I resemble that remark...Damn good thing I have some Irish and njn blood in me too.
If covid doesn't exist, then it makes you wonder what all this is about. Makes you wonder what's in the vaccine. No wonder 60% of the French are "anti-vaccers."

And if the French want to Frexit the EU, I'd gladly support them on their noble endeavour. We should send Nigel over the Channel to help them.
 

Danbones

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If covid doesn't exist, then it makes you wonder what all this is about. Makes you wonder what's in the vaccine. No wonder 60% of the French are "anti-vaccers."

And if the French want to Frexit the EU, I'd gladly support them on their noble endeavour. We should send Nigel over the Channel to help them.
Hey, I don't know how it would go over there, but if it was around here, we would just send over a box of dynamite and a bottle of rye..
 

Rockybird 1949

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If covid doesn't exist, then it makes you wonder what all this is about. Makes you wonder what's in the vaccine. No wonder 60% of the French are "anti-vaccers."

And if the French want to Frexit the EU, I'd gladly support them on their noble endeavour. We should send Nigel over the Channel to help them.
“A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.”