Date: December 23, 2021
“Krystal and Saagar respond to the comments former President Trump made in a recent event about taking the covid vaccine and getting a booster shot”
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Date: December 23, 2021
“Thanks to a Freedom of Information Act request, a trove of emails between high-level American health officials, including Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins of the NIH, have been released to the public. In one incriminating email from October 2020, Collins reaches out to Fauci to insist that a smear campaign be launched to discredit doctors Martin Kulldorff, Sunetra Gupta and Jay Bhattacharya, authors of the Great Barrington Declaration, which recommended against widespread lockdowns in favor of “focused protection” concentrated on vulnerable groups.
Jimmy and Max Blumenthal discuss the reasons for these behind-the-scene machinations.
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December 23, 2021
Thanks to feinmann!
“America has more than a million lawyers. Thomas Renz is only one of them, and he hasn’t been a lawyer very long. Now, Renz is promoting a letter he has drafted for the public to send to their elected representatives. The letter points out many of the same things you’ve heard on this program: That the vast majority of Covid victims recover, that there is ample evidence of deaths linked to the vaccines, that the vaccines seem barely effective at stopping Covid infections, that shots are being forced on children even though they are at zero statistical risk of death from the virus.
He joins us to discuss.
Send this letter to your representatives:
COMMENT from SUBMITTER:
Well done Thomas Renz! Time for change. Here is his letter: https://renz-law.com/renzletter/“
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December 23, 2021 Thanks to GK! “The provenance of the video was unclear—it was not affiliated with Operation Underground Railroad and bore no resemblance to the official materials its volunteers had been handing out—but the term digital soldier rang a bell. It was a reference to a QAnon conspiracy theory that emerged in 2017 on an out-of-the-way message board and describes Donald Trump as a lone hero waging war against a “deep state” and a cabal of elites who are pedophiles and child murderers; these conspirators will soon be exposed—and perhaps brutally executed—during a promised “storm.” Notably, the video isn’t asking for money, and isn’t presenting an argument. It’s more like a daily devotional for people who already believe in its premise, or something like it. Anxiety about the nation’s children, which is at a steady simmer in the best of times, boiled over in the summer of 2020, when the digital soldiers of QAnon occupied the otherwise innocuous hashtag #SaveTheChildren. Around the same time, major social-media platforms had started blocking overt QAnon accounts and hashtags. From their new beachhead, the digital soldiers were able to disseminate a cascade of false information about child trafficking on Instagram and Facebook: Children were being trafficked on the hospital ship USNS Comfort, then docked in New York City, and through tunnels underneath Central Park. As outrageous as these allegations were, their timing may have made them sound less fantastical to some. They coincided with the release of popular documentaries about the real sex-trafficking crimes allegedly committed by Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who was arrested in July 2019 and committed suicide that August, and who was known for his wide circle of rich and famous acquaintances. (His death had set off a new slew of conspiracy theories.) In this context, the suddenly ubiquitous #SaveTheChildren posts created the illusion of an organic movement rising up to confront a massive social problem. Americans who knew little about QAnon became heavily involved, and when QAnon moved on to other concerns—a stolen election, a poisonous vaccine—these volunteers stayed devoted to the cause of opposing child sex trafficking. […] In some ways, this is just the most recent expression of a fear that has been part of the American landscape since the early 20th century—roughly the moment, as the sociologist Viviana Zelizer has argued, when children came to be viewed as “economically useless but emotionally priceless.” As in previous moral panics, messages about the threat of child sex trafficking are spread by means of friendly chitchat, flyers in the windows of diners, and coverage on local TV news. But the present panic is different in one important respect: It is sustained by the social web. On Facebook and Instagram, friends and neighbors share unsettling statistics and dire images in formats designed for online communities that reward displays of concern. Because today’s messaging about child sex trafficking is so decentralized and fluid, it is impervious to gatekeepers who would knock down its most outlandish claims. The phenomenon suggests the possibility of a new law of social-media physics: A panic in motion can stay in motion. COMMENT from SUBMITTER: Just saw this article and wondered if you could use it. A tiny, (very tiny) bit of sanity on child sex and child abductions.” Great article…and I’m not even quoting the true meat in it…Go read it!…archive it…share it. |
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Sub-Blog Archive |
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Date: December 23, 2021
“Nikk describes her experiences after vaccination and her struggles to be heard, thank you Nikk. This is the link referred to in the discussion, https://www.c19vaxreactions.com On a separate note, John would like to talk to Eric Clapton, if anyone knows Mr Clapton please pass on this request, campbellteaching@hotmail.com” |
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