Feb 162022
 
 February 16, 2022  Posted by at 9:22 am Finance Tagged with: , , , , , , , ,


Leonardo da Vinci Ginevra de’ Benci 1474-78

 

The Global Covid Vaccination Campaign Is Courting Catastrophe (Kohlmayer)
New Research Points To Possible Reason For Long Covid (JPost)
Ukraine Crisis: A Nightmare Caused by US Interventionism (Ron Paul)
US Has New Ukraine Coup Plot Theory (RT)
‘West Has Been Destroyed Without A Shot Fired’ – Russia (RT)
US Accuses Zero Hedge Of Spreading Russian Propaganda (AP)
Protesters to End Border Blockades as Trudeau’s Threats Hit Home (BBG)
Democrats, the More Effective Evil (Chris Hedges)
Novak Djokovic’s Propensity For Self-sabotage Has Become A Defining Trait (G.)
Special Counsel John Durham Has Triggered a Media Meltdown (Turley)
’60 Minutes,’ CNN, MSNBC, Downplayed, Criticized Durham Probe (Fox)

 

 

 

 

I was ‘barred’ from publishing anything on Fauci: Former Forbes contributor

 

 

Dowd: Summation of Major Insurance company corporate group policy Loss Ratios (Death Claims) Q4 rate vs 2019 rate:

Unum $UNM +36%
Lincoln $LNC +57%
Pru $PRU +41%
$RGA +21%
Hartford $HIG +32%
MetLife $MET +24%

 

 

 

 

“..Under the normal schedule, the Covid vaccines Phase III trials would be completed in April of 2024. If this phase went without a hitch, April of 2024 would be the earliest that anyone could justifiably start saying that the Covid vaccines are “safe and effective.”

The Global Covid Vaccination Campaign Is Courting Catastrophe (Kohlmayer)

After receiving full approval, vaccines continue to be carefully monitored for adverse events in case some vaccinal flaw may have escaped detection during the multi-year trial phase. There have been a number of vaccines that were pulled from the market after they received full approval due to unexpected safety issues. Some of these include vaccines for Rotavirus, Lyme Disease, and Whole-Cell Pertussis among others. Therefore, for a vaccine to be justifiably declared “completely safe,” it must undergo at least five years of intensive testing in clinical trials and then several years of monitoring as it is administered in populations at large. The Covid vaccines, however, were publicly declared to be “completely safe” less than 8 months after the start of human clinical trials.

On the normal vaccine trial timeline, month 8 is in Phase 2 of the three-stage clinical trial regime. The claim that the Covid vaccines were “completely safe,” was, therefore, completely unjustifiable and unsubstantiated. Those who made this claim engaged in a deliberate and unconscionable act of public deception. And yet this claim was used as the basis for a worldwide campaign in which more than half of Earth’s inhabitants have been injected with experimental pharmaceuticals that did not undergo proper testing. The phrase “safe and effective” became the de-facto slogan of the planet-wide vaccination enterprise. Believing that the vaccines were “completely safe,” billions of people willingly – and even enthusiastically – lined up to receive their Covid injections.

Needless to say, not everyone was ready to accept the propaganda. Disregarding all reasonable objections, however, many governments decided that universal vaccination was their goal and decided that the unwilling needed to be coerced. This they sought to do through direct vaccines mandates and covid passports or digital certificates. The latter two were designed in such a way as to compel the hesitant to submit to the shots on pain of being excluded from the normal course of societal life. Government and public health officials justified this drastic approach by repeatedly stating that the vaccines were “completely safe” and effective, and because of this it was okay to force the shots even on those who did not want to take them.

The claim “safe and effective” was thus used as a means of allurement and coercion for the planet-wide Covid vaccination crusade. We need to pause here and contemplate the enormity of what the vaccinators have “accomplished.” Less than 22 months after the beginning of the clinical trials, they have managed to inject the plurality of mankind with their inadequately tested products. If things were being done properly, right now the vaccine developers would have been gearing for Phase III of clinical trials. This stage normally takes place between months 24 and 48 after the initiation of the trial process. This is how Johns Hopkins University describes what this stage is about: “Phase III clinical trials are critical to understanding whether vaccines are safe and effective.”

[..] Under the normal schedule, the Covid vaccines Phase III trials would be completed in April of 2024. If this phase went without a hitch, April of 2024 would be the earliest that anyone could justifiably start saying that the Covid vaccines are “safe and effective.”

Read more …

“It runs from the brain throughout the entirety of the face and chest, reaching the abdomen.”

New Research Points To Possible Reason For Long Covid (JPost)

Many symptoms of post-COVID syndrome could be caused by lasting damage sustained to one of the most important nerves in the human body during initial infection with coronavirus, new research has suggested. What is the vagus nerve? The vagus nerve is the 10th cranial nerve and is the longest and most complex of all of them. It runs from the brain throughout the entirety of the face and chest, reaching the abdomen. The vagus nerve serves as the main connection between the brain and the gastrointestinal tract, sending back information about the state of the inner organs.

As well as being crucial to the gastrointestinal system, as it controls the transfer of food from the mouth to the stomach and moves food through the intestines, the vagus nerve is also responsible for multiple other processes, such as controlling the heart rate, sweat production and the gag reflex, as well as certain muscle movements in the mouth, including those necessary for speech. New research set to be presented at this year’s European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ECCMID) investigates the connection between post-COVID syndrome, also known as long COVID, and the vagus nerve. The pilot study was authored by Dr. Gemma Lladós and Dr. Lourdes Mateu of the Germans Trias i Pujol University Hospital in Badalona, Spain. Its findings will be presented at the congress in Lisbon from April 23-26.

The study suggests that SARS-CoV-2-mediated vagus nerve dysfunction (VND) could be responsible for many of the symptoms of long COVID, including persistent voice problems, difficulty swallowing, dizziness, abnormally high heart rate (tachycardia), low blood pressure and digestive issues.

Read more …

“..Or it’s coming next Tuesday, or Wednesday, or surely before the end of the Olympics.”

Ukraine Crisis: A Nightmare Caused by US Interventionism (Ron Paul)

Over the weekend we heard that the US is evacuating its embassy in Kiev for fear of a Russian invasion. We also heard that Russia is evacuating its embassy in Kiev for fear of a US-backed provocation in eastern Ukraine that may lead to a Russian military response. We are in “uncharted territory” the media tells us. Yes, that is true. But it is uncharted because no one had ever imagined in the past that the US government would be so foolish to risk a thermonuclear war over the borders of a country – Ukraine – that have changed so many times over the past century. An urgent Biden-Putin phone call on Saturday did not lead to any breakthrough – as if anyone thought it would. Instead, it provided cover for Biden Administration hawks to claim they tried every diplomatic approach, but war seems to be the only option.

But this whole thing is a farce. As I see it, here is the Ukraine crisis in a nutshell: Biden to Putin: “Don’t invade Ukraine.” Putin to Biden: “We have no intention of invading Ukraine.” Biden to the US media: “Putin is about to invade Ukraine!” Then Biden’s top officials proceed to embarrass themselves by warning that the invasion was imminent. Or it’s coming next Tuesday, or Wednesday, or surely before the end of the Olympics. Does anyone think they have any credibility left with their constant hysterical warnings? Meanwhile “US intelligence” continues to leak incendiary information – likely self-serving – to a US media that has lost any interest in skepticism toward any “scoop” handed down by US government officials.

What the US media will not report is that this entire crisis – and the threat of a serious war – has all been brought about by US interference in the internal affairs of Ukraine, specifically the US-backed coup that overthrew an elected government in 2014. Every bit of unrest in Ukraine proceeded from that single foolish and immoral act by the Obama Administration.

Read more …

“..the former presidential candidate called the suggestion “funny,” noting that his current job description is “director of a sanatorium.”

US Has New Ukraine Coup Plot Theory (RT)

American intelligence believes that former MP Oleg Tsaryov could be made leader of a Ukrainian puppet regime after a successful Russian invasion causes the Kiev government to fall, Britain’s Financial Times reported on Tuesday. Citing an anonymous source in a Western intelligence agency, the outlet suggested that Tsaryov, who served in Ukraine’s parliament until 2014, would be made head of the country. Moscow “might position Oleg Tsaryov, and others, in leadership roles as part of this effort,” the source said, as quoted by FT. According to the newspaper, his name appeared in US intelligence materials that were shared with Australia, Britain, Canada, and New Zealand, all members of Five Eyes intelligence alliance.


Tsaryov, who served in Parliament for twelve years, is best known for standing as a pro-Russia candidate in the 2014 presidential election until he withdrew after attacks from Ukrainian nationalists. He then defected to Donetsk, where he became the first speaker of the parliament of Novorossiya, a breakaway state in east Ukraine that lasted less than a year. He later moved to Crimea, where he now resides and runs a medical retreat. Speaking to the FT, the former presidential candidate called the suggestion “funny,” noting that his current job description is “director of a sanatorium.”

Read more …

“15 February 2022 will go down in history as the day Western war propaganda failed..”

‘West Has Been Destroyed Without A Shot Fired’ – Russia (RT)

With Russia announcing that its troops are pulling back following the completion of exercises near the border with Ukraine, Moscow has insisted that predictions it could be just moments away from ordering a full-blown invasion have been proven false. In a fiery statement on Tuesday, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova poured scorn on weeks of reports and claims from US and European officials that Moscow’s armed forces could be just hours away from launching a strike against its neighbor. “15 February 2022 will go down in history as the day Western war propaganda failed,” she wrote. According to her, the West has been “shamed and destroyed without firing a single shot.”


At the same time, Moscow’s Ministry of Defense announced that a number of Russian troops had finished their training exercises in Belarus, close to the Ukrainian border, and will begin the process of withdrawing. Zakharova’s comments come after American business outlet Bloomberg reported on Saturday, citing unnamed officials, that an offensive against Ukraine could take place as early as Tuesday. The agency reported that a possible attack might include a provocation in the Donbass region or against Kiev. The White House’s national security advisor, Jake Sullivan, told CNN over the weekend that “sources” and “gathered intelligence” suggested “major military action” could “begin any day now.” He said that this included the coming week before the end of the Olympic games.

Read more …

Ha ha ha ha ha!

US Accuses Zero Hedge Of Spreading Russian Propaganda (AP)

U.S. intelligence officials on Tuesday accused a conservative financial news website with a significant American readership of amplifying Kremlin propaganda and alleged five media outlets targeting Ukrainians have taken direction from Russian spies. The officials said Zero Hedge, which has 1.2 million Twitter followers, published articles created by Moscow-controlled media that were then shared by outlets and people unaware of their nexus to Russian intelligence. The officials did not say whether they thought Zero Hedge knew of any links to spy agencies and did not allege direct links between the website and Russia. Zero Hedge denied the claims and said it tries to “publish a wide spectrum of views that cover both sides of a given story.”

In a response posted online Tuesday morning, the website said it has “has never worked, collaborated or cooperated with Russia, nor are there any links to spy agencies.” The officials briefed The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence sources. It was the latest effort by President Joe Biden’s administration to release U.S. intelligence findings about Russian activity involving Ukraine as part of a concerted push to expose and influence the moves of Russian President Vladimir Putin. U.S. officials previously accused Putin of planning a “false-flag” operation to create a pretext for a new invasion of Ukraine and detailed what they believe are final-stage Russian preparations for an assault. It’s unclear whether U.S. efforts are changing Putin’s behavior.

And without releasing more proof of its findings, Washington has been criticized and reminded of past intelligence failures such as the debunked allegations that pre-war Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. Zero Hedge has been sharply critical of Biden and posted stories about allegations of wrongdoing by his son Hunter. While perhaps best known for its coverage of markets and finance, the website also covers politics with a conservative bent. In its response online, the website accused the AP of publishing a “bizarre hit piece” and said government officials were trying to distract from “our views of the current dismal US economic situation.” “The bottom line is that such hit piece accusations that we somehow work with or for the Kremlin are nothing new: we have repeatedly faced similar allegations over the years, and we can absolutely confirm that all of them are ‘errors,’” the website said.

Read more …

According to Bloomberg, the truckers are utterly defeated.

“A lot of grown men were crying,” Klassen said. “We didn’t think he was going to enact that. We could lose everything.”

Protesters to End Border Blockades as Trudeau’s Threats Hit Home (BBG)

Protesters against vaccine mandates at two border crossings in Western Canada plan to leave after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government invoked emergency powers that could freeze their bank accounts and suspend their insurance. A border crossing between Coutts, Alberta and Sweet Grass, Montana that had been closed Monday has partially reopened to traffic, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Cpl. Gina Slaney said Tuesday by phone. Demonstrators have been at the border post since late January in a protest against vaccine mandates and Covid-19 restrictions. “People are going home,” Slaney said, noting traffic is moving slowly as there are still vehicles on the road. “Vehicles can get through north and southbound lanes right now and it seems that vehicles are crossing the border.”

Demonstrators at a border crossing between Manitoba and North Dakota are also preparing to leave in unison Wednesday with a police escort, said Jake Klassen, a truck driver who joined the protest out of frustration he can not visit his daughter receiving palliative care unless he is fully vaccinated. People are worried the government will seize their property and protesters plan to leave in a “slow roll” tomorrow and reopen traffic, Klassen said by phone. “A lot of grown men were crying,” Klassen said. “We didn’t think he was going to enact that. We could lose everything.” The Manitoba border to the U.S. at Emerson was still closed as of 12:14 p.m. New York time, according to the website of Canada’s border agency. “We accomplished something, I believe, but we didn’t accomplish what we went there to accomplish,” Klassen said.

Ezra Levant

Read more …

“The war industry [..] is a bipartisan project. ”

Democrats, the More Effective Evil (Chris Hedges)

The desperate measures to stave off an economic crisis are self-defeating. The bag of tricks is empty. Massive defaults on mortgages, student loans, credit cards, household debt, car debt and other loans in the United States is probably inevitable. With no short-term mechanisms left to paper over the disaster, it will usher in a prolonged depression. An economic crisis means a political crisis. And a political crisis is traditionally solved by war against enemies inside and outside the nation. The Democrats are as guilty of this as the Republicans. Wars can get started by Democrats, such as Harry S. Truman in Korea or John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson in Vietnam, and perpetuated by Republicans. Or they can get started by Republicans, such as George W. Bush, and perpetuated by Democrats such as Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Bill Clinton, without declaring war, imposed punishing sanctions on Iraq and authorized the Navy and the Air Force to carry out tens of thousands of sorties against the country, dropping thousands of bombs and launching hundreds of missiles. The war industry, with its $768 billion military budget, along with the expansion of Homeland Security, the FBI, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the National Security Agency, is a bipartisan project. The handful of national political leaders, such as Henry Wallace in 1948 and George McGovern in 1972, who dared to challenge the war machine were ruthlessly hounded into political oblivion by the leaders of both parties. Biden’s bellicose rhetoric towards China and especially Russia, more strident than that of the Trump administration, has been accompanied by the formation of new security alliances such as those with India, Japan, Australia, and Great Britain in the Indo-Pacific.

U.S. aggression has, ironically, pushed China and Russia into a forced marriage, something the architects of the Cold War, including Nixon and Kissinger with their opening to China in 1971, worked very hard to avoid. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping, after meeting recently in Beijing, issued a 5,300-word statement that condemned NATO expansion in eastern Europe, denounced the formation of security blocs in the Asia Pacific region, and criticized the AUKUS trilateral security pact between the US, Great Britain and Australia. They also vowed to thwart “color revolutions” and strengthen “back-to-back” strategic coordination.

Read more …

People with principles are dangerous today. But he sabotages himself by NOT getting vaxxed?!

Novak Djokovic’s Propensity For Self-sabotage Has Become A Defining Trait (G.)

Over the past 11 years of men’s tennis, during which Novak Djokovic rose to dominance and improbably positioned himself as one of the greatest to play the game, the only time his success has been in doubt came after the summer of 2017 when he suffered through many months with an elbow injury. The injury became a point of contention between himself and his then-coach, Andre Agassi, who later said he had swiftly advocated for surgery. But Djokovic addressed the injury by resting for nearly six months, believing his body was built to heal itself naturally. It was not. After returning the next year to pain and early losses, Djokovic finally underwent surgery in February 2018. As he digested his guilt about agreeing to the surgery, he cried for days.

On Tuesday, Djokovic gave his first full interview since his deportation from Australia after arriving in the country without being vaccinated against Covid. Djokovic acknowledged that, as things stand in a worldwide sport that moves from country to country each week, his unvaccinated status means he is unable to play in the majority of tournaments. “That is the price I am willing to pay,” he said. In the same breath, Djokovic said with a smile that at such a critical moment in tennis history he understands his actions may deprive him of the possibility of winning the highest number of grand slam tournaments. He framed his decision in libertarian terms: “The principles of decision making on my body are more important than any title or anything else.”

Djokovic’s conversation with the BBC was a reminder that his propensity for self-sabotage has become a defining trait. The principles that made him so averse to surgery in 2017 were not in tune with reality. After his surgery, he won the final two majors of that 2018 season and he has won eight since. The most controversial on-court moment of his career so far, his disqualification from the 2020 US Open after unintentionally hitting a line judge with a ball, came after near misses from which he failed to learn. Here he is again, his own worst enemy. As Djokovic attempts to navigate the world while unvaccinated – and while his biggest rival, Rafael Nadal, just took advantage of his absence to win a historic 21st grand slam title at the Australian Open – according to the ATP 99% of the top 100 is now vaccinated. He stands alone.

Read more …

“..to this day, many refuse to cover extensive evidence of how the Clinton campaign manufactured this story that largely occupied the entire term of President Donald Trump.”

Special Counsel John Durham Has Triggered a Media Meltdown (Turley)

What is striking about the Durham filings is the audacity of the Perkins Coie operation. While the funding was buried away, the lawyers were seemingly unconcerned about approving such efforts or personally reaching out to sympathetic government and media figures. They were, to some degree, justified in their sense of immunity. Indeed, to this day, many refuse to cover extensive evidence of how the Clinton campaign manufactured this story that largely occupied the entire term of President Donald Trump. Before the Steele dossier was given to the FBI and the press, then-CIA Director John Brennan briefed former President Obama on Clinton’s alleged “plan” to tie candidate Trump to Russia as “a means of distracting the public from her use of a private email server.” That operation appears to have been launched through Elias and Perkins Coie.

After the 2020 election, Democratic members and legal experts demanded the disbarring of a host of Republican attorneys for their spreading disinformation of a widespread election fraud. These same figures, however, are entirely silent about the role of Clinton lawyers in secretly funding the debunked Russian collusion claims. There is no interest in whether, as alleged by reporters, figures like Elias lied about the involvement of the Clinton campaign. Sussmann is now facing a trial on this role in the operation. Elias remains unindicted. With little sense of irony, he has established a law firm to deal with ethics and campaign disclosures. Durham’s continued investigation may be pushing the media to the final stage called “postsyncope,” which involves “protracted confusion, disorientation, nausea, dizziness, and a general sense of poor health.”

That has reflected in the flailing effort by some to deflect from the alarming disclosures. New York Times reporter Mike McIntire seemed to express alarm that the Durham story was “trending.” However, McIntire offered “a periodic reminder that Trump’s campaign chairman secretly met and shared info with a Russian intelligence agent.” The “info” was polling data on the campaign that Paul Manafort gave a person with Russian intelligence ties. That, of course, has no relevance to the question of whether the Clinton Campaign spied on the Trump Tower, campaign, or the White House itself. The “periodic reminder” seemed to be to other media that they needed to continue to hold their breath and not recognize a major story. Such “protracted confusion” is natural, but it will not dissipate any time soon. Durham apparently is calling more people into the grand jury.

Durham Zero

Read more …

“This is ’60 Minutes.’ We can’t put on things we can’t verify.”

’60 Minutes,’ CNN, MSNBC, Downplayed, Criticized Durham Probe (Fox)

The mainstream media is getting a wake-up call after new allegations in the Durham investigation that President Trump and his campaign were being spied on. Special Counsel John Durham released in a filing Saturday that the Hillary Clinton campaign hired techs to “infiltrate” Trump Tower and White House servers to establish a “narrative” to link Trump to Russia. The new findings contradict various doubtful media coverage from programs like CBS’ “60 Minutes.” In an October 2020 interview, Trump appeared on the newsmagazine to address the ongoing investigation and his claim his campaign was spied on. He was shot down by host Lesley Stahl, who insisted the president was spreading unverified information. “There’s no real evidence,” she said.

“This is ’60 Minutes.’ We can’t put on things we can’t verify.” Meanwhile, former CNN dynamic duo Don Lemon and Chris Cuomo criticized John Durham and the Trump administration back in December 2019 for being adamant about uncovering the truth, yet coming up short. “Nothing happens and they just move on to the next conspiracy theory,” Lemon said to Cuomo during a handover. “It is never going to end and guess what? People who want to believe that BS are going to believe it.” In an October 2021 episode of MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show,” host Rachel Maddow suggested the intention behind efforts to probe the investigation was always to re-route the investigation away from Trump himself. “It’s a boomerang,” she said.

“Because it’s apparently an ongoing, concerted Republican and pro-Trump project to try to turn the investigation of the Russia scandal into some kind of scandal itself.” Since Durham’s bombshell report dropped, media pundits on the left have gone largely quiet. Publications like the Washington Post and The New York Times have failed to commission any coverage of the latest allegations as of Monday, nor has CNN.

Read more …

 

 

 

 

 

Kolakusic

 

 

 

 

Arthur C. Clarke

 

 

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Home Forums Debt Rattle February 16 2022

Viewing 40 posts - 121 through 160 (of 162 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #101677
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    “John Locke”… was an interesting fellow but he also wrote the charter for the slave colony called South Carolina, my natal state, in 1669.

    #101678
    those darned kids
    Participant

    Moderna begins trial of HIV vaccine that uses mRNA technology

    “The trial will test 56 healthy, HIV-negative adults, and is being funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.”

    #101679
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    Okay. My last post about masks because everyone’s mind is probably already made up:


    @EoinW

    You may recall that in the early days of the pandemic, the superspreader events were events with a lot of vocalization. Churches and choir practice, for example. In Korea it was often call centers with many people sitting in close quarters and talking all day long. It was never buses and subways where people sit in close quarters but usually do NOT talk . Here is the visual evidence of what happens when you speak without a mask, but for some people, I know, seeing is NOT believing:

    Yes, we learned later that the virus also passes by aerosolized transmission, but that is in addition to droplet transmission, not instead of droplet transmission. Besides, areosolized transmission requires a longer exposure in a confined space with poor ventilation.

    @Absolute Galore
    Japan never used Ivermectin on a wide scale, though the head of the Tokyo Medical Association made favorable comments about it in August 2021. And to the extent it was used, it was used primarily for treatment, not prophylaxis. Korea has its own co-morbidities. Obesity is not as big a problem, but Vitamin-D deficiency is more severe. That is why as recently as December, Korea had to go back to strict social distancing because the hospitals were full with only 7000 new infections per day — a drop in the bucket compared to the US. Finally, I don’t think there were a lot of unreported cases here. Track and trace remained in effect, so many people were sent for testing even if they had no symptoms. Several times my employer sent me for testing because someone in the office was a positive case.

    @TDK
    Understood with the comment about the kids, but that speaks to a different issue. Speaking from personal experience, the kids here would rather be in school wearing masks than sitting at home without a mask and connecting by Zoom. The kids have plenty of time to play at home after school with other kids in a maskless environment. If the message from the parents is that it is normal and common sense to wear a mask in schools, the kids adjust just fine. If the message from the parents is that this is scarring you for life, then I fear it becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy.


    @jpbrichta

    Again, there was some use of Ivermectin in Japan, but this was never widespread, and it was never used as a prophylaxis strategy.

    Bottom line: This is the real life clinical trial. There are 25 million people in greater Seoul, and almost all have complied with widespread masking. We never had a lockdown. People always went along with their normal routines, except that the size of gatherings in restaurants was limited. I am convinced that widespread masking is a big factor, and I have not heard a better explanation. I look at the other major cities in Asia, and compare those to the major cities in the West, and there is an obvious difference in behaviors and outcomes. I think that is undeniable, but I also recognize that nobody in the West wants to see what I see.

    #101680
    chooch
    Participant

    DB Smith,

    Thanks again for the Corona Investigation Committee info. I have a check about it though, there is a very subtle counterintelligence vibe about it. Credible but yet incredible enough to marginalize a large number of people. I get it names, dates
    documents and so forth.

    I never really need to (should never) go there when discussing this with a true believer vaccinator type.

    I just have to ask a few questions.

    Do you know what is in the vaccines? Typically they do not.

    I say there are three things that trouble me, aluminum, LNPs and foreign protein antigens that are produced in the trillions upon injection.

    I demonstrate how the lymph flows from the muscle back into the bloodstream into heart then out to the critical organs.

    I then say, aluminum, LNPs, and spike proteins cross the blood brain barrier. Please look it up and the we can have a proper discussion.

    Though that other stuff is (seems) credible, I have greatly diminished my risk of being labeled or marginalized. Not to say that they won’t but they will be lying. I mean go ahead and tell anybody that main ingredients in these shots cross the blood brain barrier.

    Having said that, I am totally in on trying to figure out how credibly narrate the incredible. There are plenty of signals but a lot of denial to work through.

    #101681
    those darned kids
    Participant

    kids never needed to take zoom classes; all of us would have been better off if they had caught covid from the start and developed immunity.

    we have needlessly tortured a generation of children for two years.

    one can easily find statistical evidence of the harm it has done.

    as to masking adults, ¿why is it that our so-called “leaders” only seem to need a mask for certain photo ops?

    https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/your-mask-ennobles-me

    what a scam..

    #101682
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    “No, I have commented on the westerners in humanity, not all of humanity and nowhere near a majority.”

    True, and also a clutched pearl, obviously. Replace “bulk of” with ‘a whole big bunch of’, if we must pick that nit (even though we both know that Chinese are functionally as “western” as westerners, just with added older flavors plus new ones like lingering Communist Party issues. You are, if anything, displaying here some kind of chauvinism and/or bigotry. Regardless, China/Japan have taken Westerndom and injected it into their social DNA for many decades now).

    “I would certainly consider that as a contribution, but it is so obvious that I didn’t bother.”*1

    But then, “retards”, only used as a slur these days, is inappropriate. They’re victims of circumstance just like you and me. Some of us are luckier than others in all kinds of different ways. No two people have the same circumstances. Development in youth is crucial to intellectual (and emotional) capacity.

    But let’s just call them retards because… on second thought, let’s not. It’s just mean and arrogant, like how you tore into Sumac.carol a few days ago.

    “The best way to address this is to use a conventional algorithm which limits the actions of the AI analysis. .”

    This just prolongs the time before rigid logic-bound analog modeling by computation is unable to follow the veerings of humanity, which runs on faulty logic and incomplete data, while the AI suffers only incomplete data (assuming quality programming). They inevitably diverge.

    Now, if HUMANS practice the restraint you say and regularly ‘rewind’ the AI before it gets too far off, that is HUMAN decision-making not AI decision-making which, as you explained to us, “is a form of mathematical modelling used to guide decision making: this decision making is not the same as humanity’s decision making” to which, returning the favor of your dismissive remark*1, I reply, “Please tell us something that we don’t already know already.”

    “When AI “misreads humanity”, as you call it, the most common cause is that it was never trained with the required data to provide a statistically valuable analysis, and as AI has no “common sense” (as there is no cognition involved) it is unable to work out a reasonable versus unreasonable response.”

    It is a typical human error to think that such complete data can be assembled, without which AIs inevitably proceed from brilliant height to higher peak only to suddenly fall in its own self-created landslide.

    Humans, however, working with constantly incomplete and shifting data, generally don’t do this unless they’re really messed in the head like a socio/narco-psychopath.

    It’s a matter of rigidity (AI )vs. flexibility (humans).

    Does Not Compute

    #101684
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    “Me I’m more insecure and suffer when criticised especially by people I admire – you Dr D, Raul, others here…”

    Oxy, have I ever criticized you in a deliberately insulting or dismissive manner? Without being provoked first by the same? I don’t remember doing so, but I am known for coming on strong, and that alone can be intimidating and be misconstrued as negative. Do tell me if I have, and if so, I would surely make apology.

    Like Doc D, I go through times when my brain and heart run so fast they get ahead of each other.

    That said, let me state for the record that I am one of those guys who doesn’t overlook a sleight, cuz where there’s stink there’s shit, and it’s best to stop it while the fellow’s still just farting. It’s a matter of personal and group hygiene. But sometimes I mistake the smell of my upper lip for someone else’s feces, and make an ass of myself.

    Do let me know, ‘k?

    #101685
    those darned kids
    Participant

    mr. trudeau’s district manager: https://www.weforum.org/people/chrystia-freeland

    #101686
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    “I never really need to (should never) go there” (vakzine conspiracy theory data) when discussing this with a true believer vaccinator type.”

    It tends to be counter-productive. When that much cognitive dissonance is fueling their denial, gentler is way-y-y better.

    “Having said that, I am totally in on trying to figure out how credibly narrate the incredible. There are plenty of signals but a lot of denial to work through.”

    The question being a paradox, the answers are likely to be also? But, I confess, I’ve given up on it. But this seems to be very effective: “I am SO sick of wearing these masks.”

    They agree with that. And if they follow with,

    “But covid, do the right thing, etc.”, you don’t have to even disagree with them, just say, “I’m not saying that. I’m just saying that I’m SICK of wearing these masks, aren’t you?” Sidestep dispute straight into sympatico.

    Since mostly unconscious irrationality is a major driver of public compliance, perhaps mostly physical irrational discomfort is a major wedge to drive into ol’ Vlad the Injector’s Draculoid heart?

    #101687
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    tdk: Ms. Freeland has a smile that smells toxically narcissistic to me.

    #101688
    those darned kids
    Participant

    this is only reply that should be given to deflationista if it ever has the courage to rear its shameless head here again:

    https://nomoresilence.world/pfizer-biontech/milo-edberg-aged-6-pfizer-severe-adverse-reaction/

    #101689
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    “But covid, do the right thing, etc.”, you don’t have to even disagree with them, just say, “I’m not saying that. I’m just saying that I’m SICK of wearing these masks, aren’t you?” Sidestep dispute straight into sympatico.”

    You can also go aggressive:

    “But covid, do the right thing…”

    “Am I not wearing a mask? Am I not incompliance. Am I not doing the right thing?”

    “Yes.”

    “Well, all I’m saying is that I’m SICK of wearing these icky smelly hot hard-to-talk-through<>hard-to-breathe-through masks. That’s all. I’m fucking sick.and.tired.of wearing a mask. Is that a crime?”

    #101691
    V. Arnold
    Participant

    ₿oogaloo
    Get out while you can; but, where to go is not clear…

    I think the best bet is a non-Western country, where you don’t speak the language, and where most human interaction is with people you know personally. V. Arnold, I might join you down in Thailand. The Korean countryside would be OK, but city living here in Seoul is becoming too expensive, and living with 25 million neighbors is not good for the nerves. My first choice would be Nong Khai on the Laos border. Great memories of that hamlet . . .

    Come on down…
    One good thing about Nong Khai is it is just across the Mehkong river from Vientiane; a great city to explore…

    As to Thailand being “too repressive”; nonsense. Spoken by someone who has not spent time here. I’ve lived here through 2 military coups and wouldn’t have known if I hadn’t read the news…
    Far more personal freedom than the U.S. and friendly, smiling, police who won’t murder you for a burned out tail light.
    The language is daunting but doable…plus, Thai’s light up if you speak to them in their language; it’s a lot of fun…I speak enough that I could take my sister to tourist spots and shopping without my wife to translate (she had to work). I am still learning after 19 years here…

    #101692
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    “@TDK
    Understood with the comment about the kids, but that speaks to a different issue. Speaking from personal experience, the kids here would rather be in school wearing masks than sitting at home without a mask and connecting by Zoom. The kids have plenty of time to play at home after school with other kids in a maskless environment. If the message from the parents is that it is normal and common sense to wear a mask in schools, the kids adjust just fine. If the message from the parents is that this is scarring you for life, then I fear it becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy.”

    I think those are some excellent considerations to keep in mind.

    “Bottom line: This is the real life clinical trial. There are 25 million people in greater Seoul, and almost all have complied with widespread masking. We never had a lockdown. People always went along with their normal routines, except that the size of gatherings in restaurants was limited. I am convinced that widespread masking is a big factor, and I have not heard a better explanation. I look at the other major cities in Asia, and compare those to the major cities in the West, and there is an obvious difference in behaviors and outcomes. I think that is undeniable, but I also recognize that nobody in the West wants to see what I see.”

    As for mask efficacy, I tend to agree with your assertion that they aren’t useless. They are neither useless nor fully protective.

    Sadly, they have been mostly used to create an environment of medical meaningless and political straitjacketing, so it’s almost impossible to discuss them of themselves anymore. Not only cuz people are so touchy about it, but because those other issues are now inextricably wound up in the concept of ‘protective mask’.

    But it would be nice if we weren’t dumping a few hundred million masks a day into landfills and oceans. A few hundred million here, a few there, pretty soon you’re talking real pollution.

    #101693
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @TDK Now we are starting to find common ground. I agree that this has gone on too long. From the beginning, the priority should have been to study repurposed drugs that might be used for early treatment. China was doing small chloroquine phosphate trials in January 2020! Favorable ivermectin studies were coming out in mid-2020. Once we had reasonable treatment protocols, economies should have started reopening. Instead, Western governments insisted on waiting for a vaccine and novel/expensive new treatments (and Korea being a US vassal state went along with it). The refusal to consider early treatments, and the persecution of physicians who spoke out in favor of early treatments: This was the crime against humanity. This is why Fauci and friends should be in jail.

    Yes, it has gone on too long. It was not only mismanaged, but the response has been a criminal enterprise. But my point is that masks were never the problem, and it was always wrong to say “masks don’t work.” They were always part of the solution, especially in the beginning when we needed to slow the spread for the first six months, which was the time required to identify early treatment protocols.

    #101694
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    Reviewing recent data and Biden’s more recent remarks re: Russia/Ukraine, I would guess that the gobmynt gonna do some infrastructure cyberattack and holler RussiaRussiaRussia again.

    Since the gubmint can no longer bully people abroad, it is of course our turn. I wonder how long we’ll take it. I wonder how long we’ll remain a UnitedSA. Not if we’ll break up, just how soon. It seems mighty nigh of late. THe next presidential election, if not the mid-terms, should do it?

    #101695
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    @chooch gamely wrote “. . . Having said that , I am totally in on trying to figure out how to credibly narrate the incredible. ”

    Same here. One of the reasons that I invest so much time consuming vast quantities of other people’s descriptions of these extremely complex and lengthy issues is to find out how THEY have explained them. From time to time I manage to learn bits and pieces from their brilliantly concise and eloquent translations of hyper-complexity into “understandable by us mere mortals” simplicity. Over time, I do believe that some of it is starting to sink in.

    #101696
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    2 & 1/2 minutes of Jordan Peterson talking about the Ottawa trucker phenom:

    Money Quote @ :50

    #101697
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    Oops. I wrote “KInd” instead of ‘King’, the word I really meant. But how insensitive of me not to acknowledge The Glory.

    “Of course, you’re not expressing your EGO when anointing yourselfKind of What Should and Shouldn’t Be Done.”

    #101698
    boscohorowitz
    Participant

    I thought I saw this posted here but maybe not. It’s brief and shows hope.

    Trucker Speaks

    #101699
    WES
    Participant

    Some happy news!

    Today the sap started running in my sugar maple tree here in Toronto!

    I figure I have so far collected from my 3 tap operation, about 1/2″ in the first orange juice container, about 1″ in the second, and 2″ in the third, for maybe 2 to 3 cups of sap!

    Boiled down by 1/32, I probably have about a table spoon of maple syrup! I’m rich!

    It isn’t going to freeze tonight but I doubt the sap will run onight without sunlight. Below freezing temperatures arrive at noon tomorrow so my sap operation will be shutdown until Sunday and Monday when it the sap should start running again for another 2 days.

    After that my maple sap operation will likely be shutdown for an extended period of colder than normal weather, until sometime after March 2nd.

    O.K. I am only going to get rich very slowly!

    And if I ever figure out the photo posting thing, thanks Bosco and Doc Robinson, I will post a photo of my huge 3 tap maple syrup operation!

    Michael Reid:

    Wow! You sure look like a modern lumberjack!
    I wouldn’t be too surprised if all the trees, in your neck of the woods, start running when they see you a coming!

    #101700
    VietnamVet
    Participant

    Invasion Day Wednesday, February 16, 2022, has come and gone in Ukraine with no Russian Invasion. The Russian Foreign Minister has a reason to laugh at the West. The CDC says excess deaths in the last two years in the USA surpassed 1 million but may be even more if insurance losses for life insurance payouts are real. The US government is a complete failure. Nothing it says can be believed.

    Canada points the way to the coming western dystopian future. Any surviving middle-class with bank accounts will have assets frozen or fines imposed if one’s social credit score drops below set amounts. For example, a fall from 600 to 500 for bad mouthing the PM will cost 10,000 Loonies.

    The craziness is spreading across all five-eye nations. The only way I can explain it is that the western democracies were terminated. The Blob, a couple thousand oligarchs and their overseers, reign in a neo-feudal corporate/state — a 21st century version of Mussolini’s fascist organization. Except, no one dares admit it. The only way out is a general strike and the restoration of democracy. The tragedy is that there is election process to do this system restoration peacefully but the western ruling cult will never agree to it voluntarily and they have wealth and power.

    #101701
    WES
    Participant

    I see Canada’s federal justice minister said if you are a Canadian Trump supporter, I would be worried. Obviously, the liberals don’t want to waste a good crisis.

    So now we know Trudeau is going to use the war measures act to also go after Trump supporters and seize their bank accounts too!

    So this is really purely no-holds political operation against conservative Canadians.

    It has nothing to do with public health, or safety, or the vaccines!

    #101702
    oxymoron
    Participant

    Bosco na I didn’t communicate clearly. I’ve never been slighted here and you came down hard on me once and it was hugely beneficial.

    #101703
    Tim Groves
    Participant

    @Boogaloo

    “No, it’s not the kimchee. No, it’s not the sweet and sour pork. No, it is not the sushi. No, it’s not even the chili crab. It’s the masks.”

    Really? Don’t you think the green tea, the seaweed, and the ginseng have something to do with it? Or the relatively low consumption levels of various legal and illegal drugs in East Asia? And more importantly, don’t you think the hugely lower rates of obesity in East Asia and the co-related hugely lower rates of diabetes, heart disease and cancer relative to the West have anything to do with it?

    Don’t you think that food choices and dietary habits have any effect on obesity levels?

    Here in Japan, people were masks all the time, including paper ones that a bumblebee could enter from above on the left side of the nose and exit on the right side, and cute homemade cloth ones fashioned out from recycled kitchen or bathroom towel materials that are nowhere near adequate to prevent viral transmission but that demonstrate the wearer’s community spirit.

    Very often, Japanese people will put on a mask to walk through the door into a café or restaurant, then take it off when they sit down, so they spend twenty of thirty minutes unmasked in a room that may be filled with a dozen or more unmasked strangers.

    But amazingly, these masks work to prevent Corona-chan from spreading, even when they are not being worn?

    Possibly they do, but there are a lot of other factors that need to be taken into account before coming to that conclusion. For instance, it is possible that the higher population densities in East Asia ensure that most people’s immune systems get more practice fighting off germs of all kinds, which keeps them in good condition. But at the same time, you are what you eat, and the standard American “Walmart” and fast food diet is producing a lot of obese people, contributing to poor health and lowering life expectancy. Why shouldn’t it also be playing a role in producing poor Covid-19 outcomes and poor Covid 19 vaccine-related outcomes?

    Just checking the statistics, life expectancy for Japanese in 2021 was 84.79 years, a 0.14% increase from 2020, when it was 84.67 years, a 0.14% increase from 2019. The South Koreans are only a year below the Japanese and the Taiwanese are also living beyond 80 on the average. Meanwhile, life expectancy for people in the U.S. in 2020 was 77.0 years, a decrease of 1.8 years from 2019. So the Japanese are now living a full 10% longer than the Americans. Even the mainland Chinese have caught up with the Americans, living almost 77 years on the average in 2019—despite starting from a very low base half a century ago and living with the pollution that pervades the country and the oppression and coercion that pervades the society.

    Can we put these life expectancy statistics down solely or mainly or even substantially down to mask wearing, or are they the result of a complex interplay of many other factors? And if the later, then why can’t this same complex interplay be resulting in poor outcomes from Covid-19?

    #101704
    WES
    Participant

    VietnamVet:

    I think Russia forgot to invade today! The CIA and State department must be pretty upset about this!

    I agree, the 5 eyes are being co-ordinated by one power. The trucker protest has clearly revealed this aspect, for all to see. Unfortunately most Canadians do not want to see. They prefer to remain brainwashed.

    7

    #101705
    chooch
    Participant

    From my favorite (well funded) vaccinator, Mr. Topol. Montefiori just became a person of interest.

    Why would an updated Omicron specific jab provide no additional benefit vs original? Many comments in this thread but no good answer.

    “What we’re seeing coming out of these preclinical studies in animal models is that a boost with a variant vaccine doesn’t really do any better than a boost with the current vaccine,” says David Montefiori, director of the Laboratory for AIDS Vaccine Research and Development at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina, who has been studying COVID-19 vaccines.

    #101706
    chooch
    Participant

    Hi Tim,

    Is the monitoring of CO2 levels in buildings common in Japan?

    #101707
    Doc Robinson
    Participant

    WES: “I will post a photo…”

    I should have mentioned (in my earlier instructions) to not use those free hosting services for any photos that have commercial value or privacy issues. I think the terms and conditions stipulate something about the hosting service getting the rights to use the images for whatever.

    #101708
    WES
    Participant

    Tim Groves:

    Very good comment!
    But you forgot we have to contend with dr fauci and his evil gang running (ruining) our health.
    They easily knock 5 years off our life expectancy.

    #101709
    WES
    Participant

    Thanks, Doc Robinson, for the warning!

    #101710
    those darned kids
    Participant

    “Corona-chan”

    uh, that’s properly called “baric’s baby”.

    i do like “fauci’s ouchie”, too.

    “daszak’s ballsack” is a little too creepy.

    #101711
    ctbarnum
    Participant

    Just tired today, so apologies for my limited soliloquy. That said, seems more and more like Trudeau is just Hillary Clinton with a penis.

    #101712
    WES
    Participant

    Ctbarnum:

    Trudeau has already said he has no intentions of apologizing!
    He is not one who ever says he is sorry for what he did.
    He is never sorry.

    #101713
    those darned kids
    Participant
    #101714
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    @ctbarnum lamented, “Just tired today, so apologies for my limited soliloquy. That said, seems more and more like Trudeau is just Hillary Clinton with a penis.”

    Justin Trudeau has a penis ?!

    #101715
    Figmund Sreud
    Participant

    @those-darned-kids #101685
    ______________________

    Re Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s non-financial Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister, … here is all the dirt on her and her background:

    http://johnhelmer.net/?s=Chrystia+Freeland

    … fwiw

    F.S.

    #101716
    Tim Groves
    Participant

    @Chooch

    “Is the monitoring of CO2 levels in buildings common in Japan?”

    I’m not sure if it is common, as I haven’t been going very far afield for the past couple of years, but as it happens, I adopted a Siamese cat (who suffers from bladder stones and slurry due to metabolic issues) and I’ve been taking him the only veterinarian I knew of who was competent to the surgery required to allow him to keep urinating. Fun fact: According to the vet, the urethra of male domestic cats has a diameter of around 6mm but it tapers to as narrow as 1mm at the tip of the penis!

    In the waiting room of this vet, where I have spent quite a few happy hours, I noticed that there was a device that simultaneously displays the temperature, barometric pressure, humidity level, and CO2 level on a small gray/black LCD. I’ve seen the CO2 level vary from about 500 ppm when there are only two or three people present, to as high as 1,400 ppm when the waiting room gets crowded. Also, the staff will open some windows when the level goes up, as this usually coincides with the room feeling stuffy.

    #101717
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    @TimGroves

    I agree that co-morbidities are certainly relevant to disease outcomes. But I have not seen any data suggesting that co-morbidities have any effect on infection rates.

    Quite the contrary, from my understanding, we are all going to catch this sooner or later: young and old, rich and poor, fat and thin, healthy and unhealthy, vaccinated and unvaccinated. The co-morbidities become a factor in whether a person is likely to have a severe case.

    I agree that obesity is one of the most important co-morbidities, and obesity is more prevalent in Western countries. Diet may be generally better in Asia, but Asia has its own co-morbidities, particularly Vitamin D deficiency, which is also closely linked to bad Covid outcomes. Another issue in Asia is air pollution, and which is terrible in Seoul — maybe not so bad in Tokyo.

    #101718
    ₿oogaloo
    Participant

    I’ve lived here through 2 military coups and wouldn’t have known if I hadn’t read the news…

    That might be the antidote to all the madness. My Korean is good enough to get by, but not good enough to follow Korean politics. As Cypher says in The Matrix: “Ignorance is bliss.”

    I follow all that is happening in the US and overseas, but the only reason I can cope is that it is happening thousands of miles away.

    I

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