9 Comments
Apr 28, 2023·edited Apr 28, 2023Liked by Isaiah McCall

Dang! That is so spot on. It was cathartic just reading it.

I wish I could find the chart, but the CDC tracks reported flu cases every year and then publishes a graph showing distribution by time. It's always a bell curve, starting sometime in October, peaking sometime around January, then declining and nearly disappearing some time in April. I found that chart in May of 2020 -- a few months after lockdowns. It was the same bell curve, with one exception: The right side of the curve fell to 0 flu cases in March of 2020. Flu disappeared. It hadn't ever done that in prior years. I went back to find that chart about a year later and it had been removed. I'm sure it's just a coincidence.

I'll share one more anecdote. I run a company where the vast majority of my employees work at our customers' corporate facilities. When the lockdowns started to get lifted, these customers wanted their employees to return to work. But, everyone was scared. One thing they did to try to quell that fear was to have all employees undergo a temperature check before being admitted to the corporate facilities. At the start of the pandemic, a temperature check meant that a human had to approach you with a handheld thermometer and take a reading of the temperature of your forehead. No 6-foot social distancing possible there. My company supplied the personnel who conducted these temperature checks to many of our corporate customers.

Like you, it was quickly quite obvious to me that this virus, to which no one had immunity, predominantly was a risk to the elderly and those with many co-morbidities. So, what did we do as a company? We restricted those who could work as temperature screeners to those under 65, and without co-morbidities (no pregnancy, diabetes, etc.). The guidance we used for this was lifted, verbatim, from the CDC's website: 'COVID is more dangerous for those with co-morbidities and those who are 65 years old and older.' Literally, our job restrictions were taken word for word from the CDC's website.

Now, mind you, we didn't lay anyone off, and those with co-morbidities or who were elderly were not denied any work. They simply couldn't work as screeners who would have to present within a foot or so of 500 - 1,000 individuals who might have COVID each day. We didn't want anyone dying on our watch, so we limited those at high risk per the CDC from working this one set of positions.

What happened? We were sued by the EEOC. We pointed out that our job restrictions were taken straight from the CDC's website. What do you think the EEOC's response was? They said 'that's a sister organization and we are not bound by their guidance.' Those lawsuits are still pending to this day.

That's government.

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Apr 29, 2023·edited Apr 29, 2023Liked by Isaiah McCall

If I recall correctly you lived in NYC … we got to see first hand how absurd the Covid theatre was. Trauma based mind control at its finest

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Apr 28, 2023Liked by Isaiah McCall

Without a doubt psyop. Im from Melbourne Australia, we had the priveldge of being lucky lab rats. How much could a passive population be manipulated ? A great deal apparently. We had curfews and 10 KLM travel restrictions from home. We had full battle attired goons breaking up passive small demonstrations. We had hugefines slapped on cafe owners for serving the unvaccinated. Finally we had 1 million strong parade through the city expressing their opposition to emergency laws being passed so next time , and there will be a next time, theGovernment can slam into gear quicker and harder. Guess what? They were passed . The State, that State in particular l have since relocated, do not give a flying fuck about the peoples voice. If you live in a so called Social Democracy be afraid , very afraid. PS:: in November last year this self same Part y and leader were reelected.

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Apr 28, 2023Liked by Isaiah McCall

So important to bring this up with people now that they are started to come out of the Hypnosis! I live in Southern California and I wouldn't say that we had "lockdowns", we had "shutdowns" of small businesses but I could go anywhere anytime. Not talking about LA, it's crazy over there. They "suggested" people to stay home and had "mandates" that you could follow, but none of this was enforceable. It was actually easier because there was no traffic. Real LOCKDOWNS where in CHINA! Insane. They did close beaches over here for 3 weeks around Easter, but you could alway walk by the beach sidewalk (closer to each other), it was ridiculous.

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