COVID-19 'Pandemic'

Danbones

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COVID: If they haven’t isolated the virus, how can they make a vaccine?​


Jan27by Jon Rappoport by Jon Rappoport
January 27, 2021

Answer: They can’t.

“But…but, you see, we take a piece of RNA, and we inject it into the person, and the RNA forces the cells to manufacture a protein that’s very similar to a protein in SARS-CoV-2…and then the immune system swings into gear and produces antibodies to THAT protein, and THEN the person has achieved immunity from the virus…”

Sorry, no dice.

As I’ve been demonstrating for months now, there is no proof that SARS-CoV-2 exists [1] [2]. Therefore, “the piece of RNA” that’s injected can’t be assumed to be related to “the virus.”

Therefore, the protein which the cells produce in the body is merely CLAIMED to be similar to a protein in the unproven “SARS-CoV-2.”
There is no KNOWLEDGE here.

That piece of RNA which is injected into the body—why should we assume it has anything to do with a virus called SARS-CoV-2, when no one has an isolated specimen of this “SARS-CoV-2?”

We shouldn’t assume.

Therefore, everything that happens, inside the body, after the injection, is up for grabs. What is the immune system reacting to?
Why bother, in the first place, to make a vaccine against a virus when you don’t have the virus?

There are several ways to attack this absurdity, and they all come down to the same bottom line: no provable virus, forget the vaccine.
 

spaminator

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Blackleaf

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1611799622954.png

Michael Adebowale, who is serving a minimum of 45 years for murdering soldier Lee Rigby outside Woolwich Barracks in 2013, has Kung-Flu

 
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Blackleaf

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Remember Blackadder's aunt, Lady Whiteadder (Miriam Margolyes)?

Well, what's she getting up to nowadays?

 

Blackleaf

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Blackleaf

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  1. Is it not the case that there have been many, possibly thousands, of variants of Covid-19? Mutate is what viruses do, in order to advance themselves. How soon, do you estimate, before we have a variant which is resistant to our vaccines?
  2. The rise of this new variant and, indeed, the spread of the much-loved original occurred during the November lockdown. Does this not suggest to you that lockdowns are not very effective? And isn’t one minute in lockdown, the next minute out, the worst of all worlds?
  3. In some regions our hospitals are in crisis. And yet at the same moment we are busy dismantling the Nightingale Hospitals, set up last spring for precisely this purpose. Why not keep them open? There seemed to be no problem staffing them in March and April. What has changed?
  4. For how long will the vaccines be effective? We are hearing more and more stories of people who have been infected twice over a short period. If the vaccines afford protection for only a few months, will we each need several vaccinations per year? I am aware we can’t know for sure now, but what are the estimates of our scientific advisers?
  5. Given that, even after the vaccines, we will still need to wear masks and socially distance, how can government keep assuring us that things will be a lot better by Easter? Won’t things, post-vaccines, be exactly the same as they are now?
  6. Is the plan still to “defeat Covid”? And if so, what exactly does that mean?
No scientist I have read suggests the virus can be defeated.

It will end up as a pathogen we must live with, every year, much as we do with flu.

In which case, some might argue, why not live with it now?

I don’t ask the above questions out of a wish to be snarky, or to dig at the Government.

Simply because I feel quite a few people are asking the same questions at the moment.

And not getting a wholly honest response.

It’s time to treat us all as grown-ups.

 
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Blackleaf

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Lockdown has ravaged the working class​

In both lives and livelihoods, the poorest have borne the brunt of our disastrous response to the pandemic.

Lockdown has ravaged the working class

JOANNA WILLIAMS

COLUMNIST

28th January 2021
Spiked

Coronavirus might discriminate by age but lockdown discriminates by class. From the moment this disastrous policy was instigated, it became immediately apparent that we were not all in it together. In every single aspect of life, the working class has suffered most during lockdown. Worse still, over the course of the past year, class inequalities have grown wider and have become more entrenched.

And yet, at each turn, left-wing lockdown lovers have demanded ever-more severe restrictions on people’s lives.

Take housing. The rich worried about the tax implications of building the perfect home office and stressed about the etiquette of Zoom calling someone with a smaller garden or more down-at-heel kitchen. Meanwhile, poorer families struggled to cope in tiny flats with no outside space at all.

While the government advised allocating a separate bathroom to a family member who might catch Covid, or opening Christmas presents under a tree in the garden, it became increasingly apparent that coronavirus was spreading more rapidly in areas of high density and overcrowded housing.

Clearly, these inequalities existed before the pandemic. But rather than demanding playgrounds be opened up so children in cramped housing had somewhere to play, the Guardian’s lockdown fanatics told us that, yes, it was absolutely acceptable ‘to shout at strangers who aren’t social distancing’ in a park or at the beach.

Or take education. We know that closing schools to all but a tiny number of pupils has had a devastating impact on the educational attainment of the poorest children. It’s not just that better-off families were able to provide the laptops, wifi, desk and quiet room to work in. When teaching falls on parents, educational inequalities reverberate through the generations. And, tragically, it was in the most disadvantaged homes that teaching was most likely to be left to parents.

State schools may have got their act together this time around but the lesson of the first lockdown was that private-school pupils received more online teaching. Middle-class children were more likely to be engaged with the online classes on offer and, as a result, were less likely to have fallen behind. These inequalities are real, measurable, and will set back the life chances and career aspirations of working-class kids.

And yet the left-wing lockdown lovers, from their well-paid positions as union leaders or headteachers, insist schools must remain closed to all pupils. Worse, they now look for ways to keep even the most disadvantaged children out of the classroom.

Lockdown class inequalities are perhaps most starkly apparent when it comes to work. We know that the mega-rich have had a fantastic pandemic. The likes of Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos have racked up billions of dollars in additional revenue.

When shops are closed and we are ordered to spend all day online, Amazon becomes the one-stop-shop for an entire nation. Then comes the professional and managerial class in salaried and secure employment. Working from home may become a bind, but with no commute or after-work socialising to shell out for, savings are growing. Data from the Bank of England showed that wealthy families were twice as likely to have saved money during 2020.

Meanwhile, separate research found that the bank balances of the poorest fifth of households declined by £170 per month on average between March and September. It’s not hard to see why. Even prior to the pandemic, people on minimum wage struggled to get by. ‘In-work poverty’ was at record levels. Furlough has provided a sticking plaster for some of those left unable to work. But those who were already struggling to get by on their full-time wage have no choice but to run up debts when they lose a fifth of their income. And those on temporary contracts, zero-hours workers, and the newly self-employed have not even had furlough to fall back on.

For the millions who still have to earn a living, but are not able to work from home, lockdown is something that happens to other people. Bus drivers, refuse collectors, nurses, agricultural workers, supermarket shelf-stackers, delivery drivers and carers are just some of the workers who have continued to turn out each day. We now know at what personal cost. Men who did manual work or were employed in caring, leisure and other service occupations have had the highest rates of death among working-age adults. Presumably, this news came as a shock to the likes of Jo Grady and Mary Bousted who seem convinced that it is university lecturers and schoolteachers who are most likely to die on the job.

For a growing number of people, furlough is now giving way to redundancy. Unemployment is slowly rising and is predicted to reach 2.6million, or 7.5 per cent of the working-age population, in just a few months time. Behind such statistics are parents lying awake worrying about how to feed their children, debt, evictions, ill health and growing social inequality. It is lockdown – not coronavirus – that has thrown an increasing number of families into poverty. But, like a broken record, self-styled champions of the working class, people like Paul Mason, continue to demand stricter, longer lockdowns. And Owen Jones, in blaming ‘the combination of Covid and class’ for devastating Britain’s poorest, accepts no responsibility for the policy he was once vocal in calling for.

This government, with all its talk of ‘levelling up’, needs to be held to account not just for coronavirus deaths but for the lives destroyed because of lockdown. And we must never forget the role a privileged left-wing elite has played in calling for lockdowns and cheering on each new restriction.

 

Blackleaf

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...and yet there are people still supporting this royalist corporate communist GLOBAL nazi 2030 slaughter of good people's lives by BANKERS.
:(
All the people on here supporting lockdowns are middle class well off lefties who aren't affected detrimentally by the lockdowns. Unlike me, they haven't been made furloughed for an unknown period of time - possibly a few months - languishing at home everyday surviving off 80% wages paid for by the Government. They don't have children that aren't receiving education and are themselves having to stay off work to look after their children who aren't on school. They don't have family and friends they aren't able to see. So it doesn't affect them and they don't understand what millions of other people are suffering through.
 

Danbones

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As the “science” around Covid-19 continues to evolve over the course of a year of debilitating lockdowns and mask ordinances, “experts” in China are now recommending anal swabs inserted rectally to detect traces of Covid as opposed to serum antibody tests and nasal and throat swabs.​

 
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Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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All the people on here supporting lockdowns are middle class well off lefties who aren't affected detrimentally by the lockdowns. Unlike me, they haven't been made furloughed for an unknown period of time - possibly a few months - languishing at home everyday surviving off 80% wages paid for by the Government. They don't have children that aren't receiving education and are themselves having to stay off work to look after their children who aren't on school. They don't have family and friends they aren't able to see. So it doesn't affect them and they don't understand what millions of other people are suffering through.
Yeah, while they fly around on vacations and have parties, play hockey, allow antifa and BLM demonstrations, and probably are betting against shutdown corporations on the stock market too. too.

UPDATE: The subreddit WallStreetBets was privated and then unprivated, with their Discord server banned, as the community pulls off a successful short squeeze on GameStop stock.​

WallStreetBets was involved in a short squeeze of GameStop and other stock this week, screwing over hedgefunds that had bet against the company, with users seeing massive profits, and the investment bankers on Wall Street losing billions

GameStop is an American video game, consumer electronics, and gaming merchandise retailer.[2] The company is headquartered in Grapevine, Texas, United States, a suburb of Dallas, and operates 5,509 retail stores throughout the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Europe as of February 1, 2020.[1][3] The company's retail stores primarily operate under the GameStop, EB Games, ThinkGeek, and Micromania-Zing brands.[2]

GameStop closes retail doors after backlash amid coronavirus concerns​

GameStop, the video game retailer, said Sunday that it would shift to online sales and curbside pick-up orders only and close its U.S. retail operations temporarily.

The retailer had remained open at a time when most other non-essential retail stores had closed and had urged its employees to inform law enforcement of that if questioned, according to gaming site Kotaku, which got ahold of a company memo.

“Due to the products we carry that enable and enhance our customers’ experience in working from home, we believe GameStop is classified as essential retail and therefore is able to remain open during this time,” said the memo, per Kotaku.

Kotaku had interviewed GameStop employees who feared for their safety.

HaHa, is all I can say to that.
 
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Serryah

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Dec 3, 2008
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All the people on here supporting lockdowns are middle class well off lefties

No.

who aren't affected detrimentally by the lockdowns.

Lie.

Unlike me, they haven't been made furloughed for an unknown period of time - possibly a few months - languishing at home everyday surviving off 80% wages paid for by the Government.

No, because I'm under the essential worker label and am risking my ass every day I work to see patients who either take it seriously or who are like you, fucking idiots who don't.

They don't have children that aren't receiving education and are themselves having to stay off work to look after their children who aren't on school.

I'd rather be staying home with my kid and take care of their education but then I also believe home schooling is better than public school.

They don't have family and friends they aren't able to see.

Lie, lie, lie SO much lie in this one sentence.
So it doesn't affect them and they don't understand what millions of other people are suffering through.

LOLOL!

You poor little snowflake...