May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
Meanwhile, if the reporting is correct, the Amish in the US have long since reached herd immunity; no vaccines, regular church meetings with outcomes no worse than the surrounding non-Amish population.
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
Patrick Henry said we would one day live under "Judicial Tyranny,"
I said one day we will live under "Pharmaceutical Tyranny,"
and now We Have Both.
"They" have been weaponizing disease since the ancient times of throwing corpses over the walls with a catapult, but I never expected it to happen within the medical systems despite three decades of exposure to the rip offs, scams, outright criminality and crony capitalism of Big Pharma/ Big Medicine.
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
"elderly and vulnerable who also don’t respond well to vaccination"
"Lauterbach welcomed the ruling"
which is interesting in the light that he, among others, are now also having a stab (pun intended) at mandates for everyone >= 60 again. You know, those elderly who don't respond well.
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
The ruling sounds incoherent, based on your summary. Either the individual’s corporal sanctity has a meaning or it does not. The justices would appear to be attempting to straddle a bar.
Fundamentally, this is a clear breach of medical ethics (regarding informed consent prior to individuals being administered experimental substances). You’d think that a certain Mengele might have figured into the subject matter of one or two of the required legal history courses for achieving a Doctorate in Law…
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
No new information come to light?!! With Omicron you get a few weeks of protection before becoming more susceptible to infection than the unvaccinated. So unless they enforce monthly shots they have just guaranteed that hospital workers will be more at risk of catching and spreading the virus. With Omi 4 and 5 this will surely be exaggerated. And by enforcing identical and partial immunity on all workers in a high transmission environment together with sick and immunodepressed people, they are creating the ideal conditions for more variants - putting not only the vulnerable at increased risk, but everyone else too.
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
This has never been about data or science. It is about politics, very dark politics, and until the political balance of power shifts dramatically the current direction is not going to change. As I have said before, these people will not stop until they are defeated, one way or the other.
May 19, 2022·edited May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
german here. this court has for years succumbed to a cesspool of justifications for the current political idiocy. shortly before that decision the judges went to have dinner with merkel. the leading judge, mr. harbarth -- politically appointed -- was involved in the volkswagen scandal. on the side of the enterprise of course. this court is also in the process of throwing out complaints of individuals and companies against government covid policies almost on a daily basis. it's a laughing stock. it's so plainly corrupt.
in general all the courts in germany operated like this: "you don't like to shut your business? but the rki writes there's current danger to life. fuck off."
the rki is kind of like the niaid/cdc. while "the science" changed and new information was gathered they always, and never changed, put into their daily reports: "highly dynamic contagious situation. very dangerous." while the central registry of ITUs, the DIVI, clearly showed that there was never any surge whatsoever in ITU occupacy. the courts said "but rki is the leading institution with final say" completely disregarding that it's governing body is the health ministry.
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
Austria‘s Supreme Court will probably rule like the German one. In Austria we have been having a general vaxx mandate for everybody over 18 since February.
I was 100 % sure that the Supreme Court will declare this mandate as unconstitutional. Until the apartheid rule „2G“ (entry to everyday institutions just for vaxxed and recovered) and the lockdown for unvaxxed were declared absolutely constitutional and appropriate some weeks ago. And now with this German ruling going on here, I am 99 % sure that we will see the same for Austria. Creepy but necessary I guess - so that a lot of people notice the corruption that has been going on for years even in the legislative sector.
You may be missing the point. Who cares if you have or haven't had a cold?
By accepting the QR code for your status you have succumbed to the true object of the pandemic, "Digital ID for everyone." Every time I see a QR code now, in any context, I think "The Mark of Cain" and feel the presence of the Anti-Christ, and I don't even partake of organised religion.
May 19, 2022Liked by NE - Naked Emperor Newsletter
Well heck. You'd think everyone would've smelled the mammoth-sized rats a good few years ago, maybe, given that the Nuremberg Code "has not been officially accepted as law by any nation or as official ethics guidelines by any association." [Wikipedia]
No one in authority anywhere was really horrified by Dr. Mengele. They envied him his latitude to do anything he damned well wanted to.
So inch by inch, year by year, they make it easier for themselves.
Nothing short of world-wide strikes and boycotts will save us. None of the extraordinary hard work that's gone into all these Substacks will save us without an absolute refusal to keep pouring our consumer dollars into the institutions that enable our slaughter. None of the exhortations from commenters that we stockpile essentials and homeschool our children will save us.
I'll ask again: Where do you bank? Who holds your mortgage? Are you reading this on a smartphone? How often do you use that smartphone for nonsense? How often do you text for no particular urgent reason?
Hey--I ain't pure. I got cable (not allowed to have my own satellite dish etc.). But I just had to upgrade my 2003 dumbphone so I got a nice new slightly less dumbphone. But my cellphone is only for emergencies. I never use it. I just carry it with me if I go out in the event wolves start chewing off my legs and need a bit of assistance. So--survey: How often do YOU use your smartphone every day? Let's start with just one thing and see where we can start, you know, sacrificing just a little to begin to make them notice?
Since no-one dares to reply (not that I blame them, you ask the scary questions), I'll volunteer for a potential hiding:
Bank: use the state bank for the simple reason that if that one folds, money has ceased to matter. Then it's time for back-woods "Rambo meets Mad Max".
Mortgage: ain't got one. Paid off the house quickly as we could, in large thanks to the wife's godmother (childless) who left a small but large enough inheritance to her, but also thanks to 15 years of savings.
Reading this on my 5 year old laptop, ain't got a smart phone but an old-school Caterpillar phone, the kind you can drive a truck over.
Haven't owned a TV for more than 15 years, never bought one either - got friends' old ones instead. Got a radio though, for emergency messages and such. Solar, battery and hand cranked radio.
Got two cars (Shut up, Greta!). Two american cars at that, because up until recently your nation produced some real good vehicles. A Ford Windstar, I think the original or nxt to original model, and a Jeep Grand Cherokee (the wife grins like the Joker when driving it off road - she looks like when she was 20 and we went joyriding, ahh memories).
Shopping: every quarter we stock up on necessities with long shelf life, rotating our supplies. Most fruit and veg are homegrown and preserved in various ways. Meat we buy, much of it local or game. Fish is in every lake and the license fee for permanent residents is $10/year.
Got more water in the ground than we need, so we don't need to use tap water for pretty much anything. The village has got a communal laundry, bake house and gym with bastu (sauna) and showers so we use that for $45/year.
Drink, as in beer, mead, juice and saft (we separate juice into two categories, saft is also a kind of juice but I can't find the english word if one exists) we make ourselves, got the root cellar stocked with stuff , some of it from 2018. This includes juice from fireweed flowers and mead wort - a unique taste as they say.
Currently, I'm building a new chicken coop from an outhouse I tore down, making the cost approach zero. The reason is the first one I built wasn't sufficiently insulated so we had to use a heater when it dropped below -25C; this one will have three inches of hard packed saw dust from the nearby sawmill (owned communally by the village) for insulation.
And for a closer: I absolutely agree with your question and your call to arms. The easiest and most profitable way to throw a clog in the machine is to simply choke off one's consumtion to bare essentials. Be ungovernable is fine and all, but being unprofitable for the machine is even better. What are those old slogans? "Can do!", "Learn to do without" and "Adapt and overcome" - sure sounds better than "Change you can believe in" and "Build back better", don't they?
Of course you are greatly fortunate for having such a place to live in, and in having had the upbringing and availability of natural resources that you're fully competent to make best use of.
I've always tried to use smaller local banks and credit unions, and when I moved up here I opened an acct. with a regional mutually-owned bank. Of course all waters eventually flow back to the centralized institutions but I do what I can.
Saft: Appears to be fruit syrup/sharbat to be diluted with water/sparkling water before drinking. I once lived with a family overseas where the wife (a horribly accomplished woman in all spheres; it was hard not to hate that level of ability) made bitter orange sharbat and bottled it for use all year round.
I now and again treat myself to Hafi Elderflower Syrup when I feel I've been a very very good girl.
Elderflower won't grow here, and I got hooked on the stuff when living in Scania (the Deep South of Sweden). We used to make "sham-pain" from it. Sham as in not real champagne, and pain as in the morning after the day before.
Regarding where to live: while it sure is a hassle for lots of folks to move out from the cities (depending on nation of course, but I think all western and westernised nations follow the same pattern of urbanisation since at least the 14th century) and I fully appreciate the concerns one might have and the logistics, economy and all the other big scary things...
...well, you have those in the city too plus all the other problems of living in a city.
I think everyone born post 1960 or so chases Perfection, really. Not just /a/ house, but /the/ house, if you see what I mean? Replace "house" with any word really. People divorce because they aren't happy all the time, or because the argue. Why not find out what you're unhappy about, and solve the root cause of arguing instead? It's like "If it's not perfect the way I imagine it, it's rubbish" is the mindset of the age.
I don't mean "It'll have to do" so much as "This is what we can get, now let's make it all it can be".
And I ain't no fortunate son, despite being born on a Sunday. :)
I don't know if you ever heard that Malvina Reynolds' 1962 song "Little Boxes" (became a Pete Seeger hit) which was supposed to be such a wonderful indictment of those contemptible middle-class Americans and their execrable conformist taste--
--and after I really finally grew up and had more life experience than just watching Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In etc.--I realized the shameful cruelty of laughing at people who were, in fact, willing to settle for a common little house, as long as it meant they could have a little grass in front and a swing set for the kids in the back, and at least it wasn't urban air they were forced to choke on, and they could barbecue with the neighbors and the kids could bike ride until dark.
I think that horror of having a little ticky-tacky house that one's doctor's-wife cousin would sneer at started the whole canker-worm destruction of the right to have a very small dream, attain it, and enjoy it in peace.
I have Pete Seeger singing "Little Boxes" on a 1963 record, from a live concert at Carnegie Hall.
I have not seen anything like the 1960's protest movement songs in the current situation, and am not able to generate them myself. (Too much time spent in science and medicine!)
Some of the songs are available on YouTube, but the impact of the entire concert is hard to dismiss. I hope that the songs are revived or updated for our present difficulties.
Nightmare clown world
Where are those servicing guys when you need them? We need to flip the switch. I'm allright with clowns per se, we've always had them...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vTCzi8WY3Y&t=48s
Meanwhile, if the reporting is correct, the Amish in the US have long since reached herd immunity; no vaccines, regular church meetings with outcomes no worse than the surrounding non-Amish population.
Homeless people in big cities with supposed huge COVID tolls had little to no issues
It's a disease of the mind.
Virology is a fucking fraudulent "science"
New virology is. But old virology is quite alright. Not sure if you can still find it in print.
No, smallpox polio etc were caused by other issues,
Polio by pesticides.
Smallpox by sanitation.
Spanish flu even they couldn't prove transmission
https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/67902
Sorry but we were sold a huge stinking pile of garbage
No need to apologize for being correct!
Proving once again that to the Branch Covidians, The Science™ is whatever they say it is.
Patrick Henry said we would one day live under "Judicial Tyranny,"
I said one day we will live under "Pharmaceutical Tyranny,"
and now We Have Both.
"They" have been weaponizing disease since the ancient times of throwing corpses over the walls with a catapult, but I never expected it to happen within the medical systems despite three decades of exposure to the rip offs, scams, outright criminality and crony capitalism of Big Pharma/ Big Medicine.
The ACA was created for this.
"elderly and vulnerable who also don’t respond well to vaccination"
"Lauterbach welcomed the ruling"
which is interesting in the light that he, among others, are now also having a stab (pun intended) at mandates for everyone >= 60 again. You know, those elderly who don't respond well.
And the body count after the muzzles, the fraudulent tests, and the lethal injections keeps rising.
Who is protecting whom here?
The ruling sounds incoherent, based on your summary. Either the individual’s corporal sanctity has a meaning or it does not. The justices would appear to be attempting to straddle a bar.
Fundamentally, this is a clear breach of medical ethics (regarding informed consent prior to individuals being administered experimental substances). You’d think that a certain Mengele might have figured into the subject matter of one or two of the required legal history courses for achieving a Doctorate in Law…
Obfuscation of language is a specialty of the loons on the left & they’re very good @ it
The obfuscation only achieves traction if thinking dissidents remain silent, unwilling to make a fuss.
It happened the 1st round w/ many. Yes, many more have eyes open now but are there enough?
Vote.
Protest peacefully.
Speak to family and friends.
Stay calm, but determined.
Don’t lose your sense of humor.
yes, especially the sense of humor. laughter helps dull the frustration a little.
Be firm as well. And no harm in a few eye rolls or shoulder shrugs and even a bit of pushback.
Yes, there are plenty.
Why, I see "thinking-dissidents" all around...
BINGO!!! Nudge back, People.
if you want an ongoing mass medical event to look bigger and more damaging, remove as many thinking people as possible from the healthcare sector.
you can do it by running them out with unconscionable choices and crippling a percentage of those who don't leave using novel substance injections.
Yup. Then you just get people there that "follow orders", not intelligently provide healthcare to people.
ah yes, the mantra of the "I didn't mean to" killers... "I was just following orders."
The banal evil.
No new information come to light?!! With Omicron you get a few weeks of protection before becoming more susceptible to infection than the unvaccinated. So unless they enforce monthly shots they have just guaranteed that hospital workers will be more at risk of catching and spreading the virus. With Omi 4 and 5 this will surely be exaggerated. And by enforcing identical and partial immunity on all workers in a high transmission environment together with sick and immunodepressed people, they are creating the ideal conditions for more variants - putting not only the vulnerable at increased risk, but everyone else too.
Insanity
This has never been about data or science. It is about politics, very dark politics, and until the political balance of power shifts dramatically the current direction is not going to change. As I have said before, these people will not stop until they are defeated, one way or the other.
We need to push on the preventative measures like ivm hcq nasal washes.
That wouldn’t do for Big Pharm & recipients of their largess
Too bad.
This is grievously disappointing. "Experts," huh?
_The_ Experts(TM).
"The Experts" ™©®
Maybe people need to protest outside the judges' domiciles.
Maybe these people need to remember who the fk they serve
german here. this court has for years succumbed to a cesspool of justifications for the current political idiocy. shortly before that decision the judges went to have dinner with merkel. the leading judge, mr. harbarth -- politically appointed -- was involved in the volkswagen scandal. on the side of the enterprise of course. this court is also in the process of throwing out complaints of individuals and companies against government covid policies almost on a daily basis. it's a laughing stock. it's so plainly corrupt.
in general all the courts in germany operated like this: "you don't like to shut your business? but the rki writes there's current danger to life. fuck off."
the rki is kind of like the niaid/cdc. while "the science" changed and new information was gathered they always, and never changed, put into their daily reports: "highly dynamic contagious situation. very dangerous." while the central registry of ITUs, the DIVI, clearly showed that there was never any surge whatsoever in ITU occupacy. the courts said "but rki is the leading institution with final say" completely disregarding that it's governing body is the health ministry.
90% of germans don't know any of this.
What is wrong with 90% of Germans??!!
Austria‘s Supreme Court will probably rule like the German one. In Austria we have been having a general vaxx mandate for everybody over 18 since February.
I was 100 % sure that the Supreme Court will declare this mandate as unconstitutional. Until the apartheid rule „2G“ (entry to everyday institutions just for vaxxed and recovered) and the lockdown for unvaxxed were declared absolutely constitutional and appropriate some weeks ago. And now with this German ruling going on here, I am 99 % sure that we will see the same for Austria. Creepy but necessary I guess - so that a lot of people notice the corruption that has been going on for years even in the legislative sector.
You may be missing the point. Who cares if you have or haven't had a cold?
By accepting the QR code for your status you have succumbed to the true object of the pandemic, "Digital ID for everyone." Every time I see a QR code now, in any context, I think "The Mark of Cain" and feel the presence of the Anti-Christ, and I don't even partake of organised religion.
Well heck. You'd think everyone would've smelled the mammoth-sized rats a good few years ago, maybe, given that the Nuremberg Code "has not been officially accepted as law by any nation or as official ethics guidelines by any association." [Wikipedia]
No one in authority anywhere was really horrified by Dr. Mengele. They envied him his latitude to do anything he damned well wanted to.
So inch by inch, year by year, they make it easier for themselves.
Nothing short of world-wide strikes and boycotts will save us. None of the extraordinary hard work that's gone into all these Substacks will save us without an absolute refusal to keep pouring our consumer dollars into the institutions that enable our slaughter. None of the exhortations from commenters that we stockpile essentials and homeschool our children will save us.
I'll ask again: Where do you bank? Who holds your mortgage? Are you reading this on a smartphone? How often do you use that smartphone for nonsense? How often do you text for no particular urgent reason?
Hey--I ain't pure. I got cable (not allowed to have my own satellite dish etc.). But I just had to upgrade my 2003 dumbphone so I got a nice new slightly less dumbphone. But my cellphone is only for emergencies. I never use it. I just carry it with me if I go out in the event wolves start chewing off my legs and need a bit of assistance. So--survey: How often do YOU use your smartphone every day? Let's start with just one thing and see where we can start, you know, sacrificing just a little to begin to make them notice?
Since no-one dares to reply (not that I blame them, you ask the scary questions), I'll volunteer for a potential hiding:
Bank: use the state bank for the simple reason that if that one folds, money has ceased to matter. Then it's time for back-woods "Rambo meets Mad Max".
Mortgage: ain't got one. Paid off the house quickly as we could, in large thanks to the wife's godmother (childless) who left a small but large enough inheritance to her, but also thanks to 15 years of savings.
Reading this on my 5 year old laptop, ain't got a smart phone but an old-school Caterpillar phone, the kind you can drive a truck over.
Haven't owned a TV for more than 15 years, never bought one either - got friends' old ones instead. Got a radio though, for emergency messages and such. Solar, battery and hand cranked radio.
Got two cars (Shut up, Greta!). Two american cars at that, because up until recently your nation produced some real good vehicles. A Ford Windstar, I think the original or nxt to original model, and a Jeep Grand Cherokee (the wife grins like the Joker when driving it off road - she looks like when she was 20 and we went joyriding, ahh memories).
Shopping: every quarter we stock up on necessities with long shelf life, rotating our supplies. Most fruit and veg are homegrown and preserved in various ways. Meat we buy, much of it local or game. Fish is in every lake and the license fee for permanent residents is $10/year.
Got more water in the ground than we need, so we don't need to use tap water for pretty much anything. The village has got a communal laundry, bake house and gym with bastu (sauna) and showers so we use that for $45/year.
Drink, as in beer, mead, juice and saft (we separate juice into two categories, saft is also a kind of juice but I can't find the english word if one exists) we make ourselves, got the root cellar stocked with stuff , some of it from 2018. This includes juice from fireweed flowers and mead wort - a unique taste as they say.
Currently, I'm building a new chicken coop from an outhouse I tore down, making the cost approach zero. The reason is the first one I built wasn't sufficiently insulated so we had to use a heater when it dropped below -25C; this one will have three inches of hard packed saw dust from the nearby sawmill (owned communally by the village) for insulation.
And for a closer: I absolutely agree with your question and your call to arms. The easiest and most profitable way to throw a clog in the machine is to simply choke off one's consumtion to bare essentials. Be ungovernable is fine and all, but being unprofitable for the machine is even better. What are those old slogans? "Can do!", "Learn to do without" and "Adapt and overcome" - sure sounds better than "Change you can believe in" and "Build back better", don't they?
Of course you are greatly fortunate for having such a place to live in, and in having had the upbringing and availability of natural resources that you're fully competent to make best use of.
I've always tried to use smaller local banks and credit unions, and when I moved up here I opened an acct. with a regional mutually-owned bank. Of course all waters eventually flow back to the centralized institutions but I do what I can.
Saft: Appears to be fruit syrup/sharbat to be diluted with water/sparkling water before drinking. I once lived with a family overseas where the wife (a horribly accomplished woman in all spheres; it was hard not to hate that level of ability) made bitter orange sharbat and bottled it for use all year round.
I now and again treat myself to Hafi Elderflower Syrup when I feel I've been a very very good girl.
Elderflower won't grow here, and I got hooked on the stuff when living in Scania (the Deep South of Sweden). We used to make "sham-pain" from it. Sham as in not real champagne, and pain as in the morning after the day before.
Regarding where to live: while it sure is a hassle for lots of folks to move out from the cities (depending on nation of course, but I think all western and westernised nations follow the same pattern of urbanisation since at least the 14th century) and I fully appreciate the concerns one might have and the logistics, economy and all the other big scary things...
...well, you have those in the city too plus all the other problems of living in a city.
I think everyone born post 1960 or so chases Perfection, really. Not just /a/ house, but /the/ house, if you see what I mean? Replace "house" with any word really. People divorce because they aren't happy all the time, or because the argue. Why not find out what you're unhappy about, and solve the root cause of arguing instead? It's like "If it's not perfect the way I imagine it, it's rubbish" is the mindset of the age.
I don't mean "It'll have to do" so much as "This is what we can get, now let's make it all it can be".
And I ain't no fortunate son, despite being born on a Sunday. :)
I don't know if you ever heard that Malvina Reynolds' 1962 song "Little Boxes" (became a Pete Seeger hit) which was supposed to be such a wonderful indictment of those contemptible middle-class Americans and their execrable conformist taste--
--and after I really finally grew up and had more life experience than just watching Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In etc.--I realized the shameful cruelty of laughing at people who were, in fact, willing to settle for a common little house, as long as it meant they could have a little grass in front and a swing set for the kids in the back, and at least it wasn't urban air they were forced to choke on, and they could barbecue with the neighbors and the kids could bike ride until dark.
I think that horror of having a little ticky-tacky house that one's doctor's-wife cousin would sneer at started the whole canker-worm destruction of the right to have a very small dream, attain it, and enjoy it in peace.
Not just keeping up with the Joneses, but keeping so far ahead of them you see their backs, sort of. Not healthy for the soul nor the body.
Oh, verrry eeenteresting!
You make an excellent point. I often wonder if the whole “hippie” rebelliousness was not top-down mind-infiltration.
I have Pete Seeger singing "Little Boxes" on a 1963 record, from a live concert at Carnegie Hall.
I have not seen anything like the 1960's protest movement songs in the current situation, and am not able to generate them myself. (Too much time spent in science and medicine!)
Some of the songs are available on YouTube, but the impact of the entire concert is hard to dismiss. I hope that the songs are revived or updated for our present difficulties.