145 Comments
User's avatar
тна Return to thread
Joel Underwood, MD's avatar

Executions are required for justice to be served.

Expand full comment
JViv's avatar

If just one of them received this treatment - this would stop.

We both know they will only receive a sternly worded letter (rebuke implied but not officially stated).

However - as a result - I do not trust my doctor and I will be very skeptical of hospitals from this day forward.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

What pisses me off to no end is that this was THE EASIEST CALL ALL TIME!

Expand full comment
George Wines's avatar

Indeed, Ryan. The first time I saw Fauci step in front of a mic, I thought, "Oh, fuck, here we go." Did no one remember how he completely botched the AIDS crisis in the 80s? It surprised me that that little hobgoblin was still around.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

People have very short memories. If you were alive in the 1970's surely you remember that it was global cooling rather than warming that was going to destroy the earth. And the overpopulation theory was spread far and wide as well. I think the reason this hoax did not fly was the Internet was not in use and the WEF had just been created so Klaus Schawb and his band of demons did not have the money and power they do now.

Expand full comment
Anna Cordelia's avatar

"I think the reason this hoax [overpopulation, global cooling] did not fly was the Internet was not in use..." Good point. We have gotten into this habit of believing the Internet can be our salvation, but in many ways it's part of the problem.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Everything made by man has been used for both good and for evil. Unfortunately, it seems to me, more people than ever are convinced that evil is good. Unless something tragic personally happens to them they don't seem to want to assess what they read or hear as good or bad and if it sounds good or their peers accept it, they do as well.

Expand full comment
Thomas Taylor's avatar

Its not the тАЬinternetтАЭ per se. It is the tech companies whose business model is selling the ability to shape public perception to the highest bidder.

Expand full comment
Dianna FILIPPELLI's avatar

The age of information is actually the age of misrepresentation and deception.

Everyone online is a supposed 'expert'. No one bothers to conduct their own research and even determine the qualifications of the 'fact checkers'.

Succumbing to mass deception is succumbing to self-demise

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

There are many people who do bother to conduct their own research and are skeptical of supposed fact checkers as most are known to be liars. But those are the people who are censored so it seems as though everyone simply believes whatever they read online or hear on a newscast.

Expand full comment
Rikard's avatar

Indeed, it was even in printed and vetted school-books.

Part of the propaganda over here at the time was "Be nice to the negros in Africa, because when the ice comes we will have to move there", as if a 3 mile high sheet of ice would appear overnight.

My favourites though were these classics:

People starve in India, Africa, wherever because /you/ eat too much!

and

All water will run out because people take too many showers and flush the toilet every time they use it.

And this was mainly spread by female teachers in the lower grades.

Expand full comment
The Wiltster's avatar

With respect, Dr. Fauci did not botch the AIDS crisis. He used the same playbook then--almost chapter and verse--as he used now. He promoted treatments that enriched him. He grandstanded in a way that enhanced his position. He was treated like a politician when he spouted BS, but like a shaman when he made the next pronouncement. This was ALL pretty much the same, except with a new "existential threat" that he, and only he, was capable of thwarting on our behalf. What a shameless POS he is. (And you know what? It worked again. I saw him interviewed on TV the other week. Treated like a hallowed protector of life! Many of my friends still respect him, and the CDC. The CDC?)

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

well, exactly, don't forget the elites just awarded themselves a nobel prize for a non-vaxx-vaxx.

they're just mocking us Wiltster.

Expand full comment
The Wiltster's avatar

Exactly, Ryan! Laughing like The Joker, all the way to the bank. Playing chess while we play checkers. Enjoying the fruits of the long game while we fight to not have to wear a mask on the effing bus. I want to be optimistic, I really do, but almost nothing I have witnessed during the Great Covid Dumpster Fire makes me hopeful. They are discussing deploying an mRNA vaccine in animals, IIRC. Moderna has TV spots where they openly state, "this vaccine is not approved by the FDA, but is approved under EUA. Please ask your doctor." Back in May of 2020, when I wrote my first piece about the lunacy of Social Distancing and Lockdowns, I was SURE this BS would be over in a few months. It has been 3+ years and idiotic bureaucrats like Francis Collins are JUST NOW half-admitting partial mistakes? Sorry to vent, but as I have said for a couple years now... #WeAreSoScrewed

Expand full comment
George Wines's avatar

I was discussing the mitigations with Dr. Jerome Adams on Twitter today after he posted Collins' bullshit. Watching that guy double down was kinda fascinating. And yep, they'll do it again.

Expand full comment
The Wiltster's avatar

George, for the love of all that's holy, don't get me talking about Dr. Jerome Adams. That MF was posting videos on Twitter, advising people to wear masks to protect themselves, while he had a full beard. The man is the former Surgeon General of the United States and his understanding of masking led to that kind of wholesale lunacy masquerading as knowledge. I can't even...

Expand full comment
George Wines's avatar

Hahaha. That's why I follow him and some of the others, the lunacy. He's always been respectful toward me, but man, he was pissed this morning.

It amazes me, though, how he can be so wrong so often and never does anything but double down. I think he blocked Gato a long time ago. His loss.

Expand full comment
George Wines's avatar

Btw, he did jokingly call me a computer virus about a month ago when I told him to mask up during a video presentation because computer viruses are the worst. He replied, "Yes - you are." Goofy MF.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Yeah man. It's hard not to be cynical these days.

It's a weird place cuz I'm an optimist at heart, like you.

Expand full comment
Pi Guy's avatar

I kinda think that's evidence that their failures were not accidental.

Expand full comment
Billy Bob's avatar

As Sage says, they didnтАЩt forget how to STEM, they didnтАЩt forget how to science.

Expand full comment
Butternut Saskatoon's avatar

... and blind obedience, willful ignorance, and bulldog malocclusion is NOT a defense!

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Yeah. Butternut Saskatoon we can take solace in the fact that we weren't sheep.

Why?

1. We were not afraid to be wrong. And we were not afraid to call WRONG wrong. We were willing to stand up to social tyranny. In other words; we had balls.

2. Curiosity

3. Empathy

4. We were willing to pay the price. Many, many people feared losing something (job, social relationships, Costco privileges,etc). The fear of losing something is the biggest motivator known to mankind. It will launch a thousand hideous ships of terror.

5. I suspect most accepted how it would end; knowing that resistance was done for your freedom but also that of others...and that there would be no credit and everyone would choose to learn nothing and want to move on and that we would be accused of not moving on.

6. Knowing that the only thing worse than being shamed was to be a coward

7. I also suspect most of us simply could not pretend that nobody else was pretending.

Expand full comment
Phillip Badger's avatar

I'm not afraid to be wrong, but I knew I wasn't wrong in this case. Not one bit. I am still astounded, and I will be till the day I die, that they got away with this because it was SO FREAKIN OBVIOUS it was all a lie. The most disturbing thing to me was not that some people with power lied -- they lie all the freakin time -- but the extent to which the conspirators conspired -- no "conspiracy theory" here but "conspiracy FACT" -- was, and still is, mind blowing and destroyed any illusions I had about the inherent goodness of human beings. Turns out most people are either more than willing to lie on behalf of evil, but are also very happy to accept any stupid lies the powerful people tell them.

It was worse, by orders of magnitude, than the lying that led to the mass murder of the people of Iraq in 2003.

The world of man is even more "fallen" than anything I could have believed even at my most negative and pessimistic.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

I agree. My premise is that we weren't inhibited by the fear of being wrong.

But, yes it was so OBVIOUS. Which made it even the more frustrating when you tried to explain the obvious...and you get mid distance blank stares.

Expand full comment
Phillip Badger's avatar

I am still just .... and I always will be, until I die ... just ... "gobsmacked" is the only word I can think of. Gobsmacked. How did humans actually survive this many eons being so freaking gullible ????

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Totally. I say this all the time, but the most striking aspect of this abomination was that the more obvious something was...the more illusory it became.

Expand full comment
Jimmy Gleeson's avatar

There is that whole cyclical thing about hard times making hard people making softer times and softer people which make for hard times.

Expand full comment
Karlemen's avatar

I just read John Glubb's - The Fate of Empires. Available in downloadable pdf from many locations on the interwebz..

A quick read. Simple, 27 pages, finds a pattern, in a very limited sample of 12 empires over the last almost 3 thousand years.

TLDR: After 250 years, yer toast. Vigorous expansion, growth, blossom, decay, collapse. Over, and over, and over again.

Made sense to my pea-sized in brain, as a kinda framework for a watch tower from which to watch the unraveling.

Expand full comment
Billy Bob's avatar

People have had it too good and too easy for too long. They are insulated from reality.

Expand full comment
Metta Zetty's avatar

THIS was an excellent exchange. Thank you all for your insightful comments.

Expand full comment
MrsS's avatar

I have a good friend who spent much of Covid in Germany. Masks, not allowed to go to stores, etc. she loved it. Thinks itтАЩs why they are still alive. Even when I explain I spent April-October in freedom in Iowa. At water parks, traveling through the red states still open, at stores, all the placesтАжshe looks at me with that blank stare you mention.

ItтАЩs obvious to people with a thinking brain. Sadly, sheтАЩs a teacher.

Expand full comment
I've Got A Special Purpose's avatar

Teachers are selected for the ability to regurgitate that which has been presented to them as factual, not for the ability to use reason to diving any truths themselves.

Expand full comment
MrsS's avatar

100% I know about three teachers who are actual freethinking intelligent people. I donтАЩt have a high opinion of teachers.

Expand full comment
Fast Eddy's avatar

Anyone with real intelligence would be extremely frustrated trying to teach -- and would resign very quickly.

They are not teachers - they are indoctrinators

Expand full comment
Baldmichael's avatar

Yes, my wife was a teacher and it was with some great difficulty and at some personal cost that I manged to persuade her to see sense.

As for Germans I guess as they are Germ-manic we should expect such reactions!

But also they are historically known for following orders.

And they do have a lot of Bad places which might be part of the problem.

https://alphaandomegacloud.wordpress.com/2021/05/19/why-are-so-many-german-cities-bad/

Expand full comment
Jimmy Gleeson's avatar

Yeah. Imagine sitting out in the backyard cookout in May explaining to a PhD why Covid was not the next Spanish Flu.

Expand full comment
Bootsorourke's avatar

Drs killed a lot of people during the Spanish flu epidemic, masks causing pneumonia (Fauci published a paper on that I've heard), all kinds of malpractice, including overdosing on the new drug--aspirin.

Expand full comment
Metta Zetty's avatar

And many believe the start of the "epidemic" was another failed vaccine given to the soldiers going to war in Spain:

> https://workflowy.com/s/beyond-covid-19/SoQPdY75WJteLUYx#/a4bdeadda20b

Expand full comment
Bootsorourke's avatar

ЁЯШ│

Expand full comment
Baldmichael's avatar

Or even that the Spanish 'flu was not Spanish or caused by an invisible microbe.

Expand full comment
Leverage Replaces Strength's avatar

RG, I have found it mostly an impossible task to defend or even declare the self evident.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Man's fallen nature has been and will always be consistent. What held it in check was the fact that most people believed in a higher power than themselves. But as time went on, the evil thinkers gained more influence and people began to reject this belief and transferred their hope to science and technology. And both have been used nefariously to convince people that their happiness depends upon hurting others and taking all power unto themselves because they don't believe there is any life after that upon earth so materialism and selfishness prevail. As more people have lost the ability to see others as worthy human beings, they will do anything to destroy them.

Expand full comment
Tony Porcaro's avatar

Right, lessons not learned from the Garden! Human hubris wanting to be as God instead of fully appreciating the Creator's gift of life; ..."the inner liberation of man begins by living responsibly before God. Only then may stupidity be overcome." (Detrich Bonhoeffer)

Expand full comment
Karlemen's avatar

Yup. And the higher power that we can't almost hardly not even CONCEIVE of not believing in is The State. It draws evil thinkers and doers like shit draws flies.

Expand full comment
Jimmy Gleeson's avatar

I was wrong in that I thought there were enough adults in the room in the "cathedral" to let calmer heads prevail.

Expand full comment
Fast Eddy's avatar

I like being wrong .. and happy to admit I was wrong if the facts dictate a change of mind...

That way I am always right. Always. (unless the facts change again).

I don't understand why most people get angry and lash out when they are proved wrong... and refuse to change their position...

How bizarre.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Because you're a business guy. Not changing course when facts on the ground dictate it is costly

Expand full comment
John Sbrochi's avatar

If our "Leaders" (not our Betters) already understand this about humans, perhaps it's why they have no remorse culling the population!

Expand full comment
Jimmy Gleeson's avatar

I played enough pretend games as a kid.

I recognized it for what it was. I also saw the many things that just didn't make any sense.

Expand full comment
Karlemen's avatar

I'm almost 70. It helped me recast a lot of my life. I thought I was awake & wise all those years!

Expand full comment
Cynthia Ford's avatar

It will launch a thousand hideous ships of terror.

Rich image! Helen as a Gorgon, or maybe the Kraken.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Yes. It's interesting Faustus is similar to Fauci, in name, and they both conjured demons.

Expand full comment
Freedom Fox's avatar

Which is what reveals it to be intentional.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Exactly.

But it also reveals what exceptional people we have here and on other stacks

Expand full comment
WouldHeBearIt's avatar

Have been suspicious of my doctor since the time he entered the examination room in full hazmat gear. That was 2020.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

lol. for a respiratory virus he/she thought they could hide from!

if it wasn't so tragic it'd be hilarious

Expand full comment
Roisin E Dargan-Peel's avatar

That is not a doctor I'd want to be consulting about anything!!

Expand full comment
Metta Zetty's avatar

As Dr. James Thorp pointed out: "The most important question you need to ask your nurse or your doctor, whether it's in a hospital or in an office, is: 'Nurse, Doctor, are you willing to lose your job to save my life?'"

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Ooh that's a good one

Expand full comment
Baldmichael's avatar

It is of great concern when you see a doctor and you realise you understand more about disease than they do.

Expand full comment
Donna O's avatar

How about the dermatologist (here) that did a yearly full body skin cancer check from across the room!

Expand full comment
Katherine's avatar

LMAO! No way, lol. I beg you to say more!

Expand full comment
Donna O's avatar

IтАЩm serious! Happened to a good friend with the dermatologist I used. I changed dermatologist!

Expand full comment
Dr Linda's avatar

That shouldnтАЩt even be billable

Expand full comment
Freedom Fox's avatar

Informs you that skin cancer, detection and treatment, is a lie. Other safer ways to diagnose and treat what they call skin cancer.

Expand full comment
Donna O's avatar

ЁЯдг

Expand full comment
Baldmichael's avatar

Make that all cancer. As I had my own experience with the NHS I have some insider knowledge.

Expand full comment
Lyn's avatar

Before the dreaded Cooooooooovvvvviiiiiidddd, I didn't know that doctors went by the Hypocritical Oath: First, see no patients. Poor health care professionals, having to deal with those icky sick people!

Expand full comment
Dr Linda's avatar

Hypocritical oath: I am using that at my next appointment

Expand full comment
Jimmy Gleeson's avatar

It was when my doctor encouraged me to get the vaccine and had no real good answers for my reasons not to get an experimental injection.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

I had an argument with my rheumatologist when she insisted I get one of the bioweapon jabs and I told her that she needs to find another profession. I will never see her again. BTW, she is Chinese.

Expand full comment
Fast Eddy's avatar

Here's what happened when I went to a GP to try to get Hydroxy (I taped it haha)

https://www.mixcloud.com/fasteddynz/vaccine-injury-discussion/

Expand full comment
RFC's avatar

He's telling you.his opinion but when you try to give yours, it's "I don't want to argue about it" when he doesn't have an answer. The arrogance of doctors knows no bounds.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

This is epic.

Expand full comment
Fast Eddy's avatar

I forgot to mention ... after this ... I printed out a summary of the Nuremburg Code ... then made a list of every doctor in our town (there are a few dozen) and sent that to every single one of them... including Dr Val.

Here's the thing... if Kirsch etc were not false actors... they would be organizing grass roots stuff like that mail out... In addition to suggesting Kirsch offer Dover 1M for an interview (got banned for that) I also suggested he have PI determine if she alive... and I suggested he organize the printing of small stickers with messages like Covid Vaccines Destroy Your Heart .... Cause Blood Clots etc... then put them online and allow folks to order packs of 100 cost + shipping... and invite them to stick them in washrooms stalls and other places where there are no cameras ...

But nope. Nothing. Instead he leads the A Vaxxers round and round in circles ensuring they take no real action

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Oh man. Badass. I gotta have a cocktail with you at some point....we'd stir up some shit...

Expand full comment
Dena's avatar

Yes- my first visit back ( & last as it turned out) to my doctor for my annual checkup was in 6/2021. Of course masks were required & the recommendations were to get Covid, tetanus, shingles & pneumonia vaccines. I said all at once? He said sure. Never went back.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Western medicine is only about two things-pharmaceuticals and surgery.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

That's it. Succinct

Expand full comment
Bootsorourke's avatar

ЁЯТе yes!

Expand full comment
Roc Findlay's avatar

Punt your Doctor.

Expand full comment
Bootsorourke's avatar

He did!? Your dr? Why is he still your dr?

Expand full comment
Bootsorourke's avatar

I get it. I'm still trying out dentists to find a replacement. But still, your health.

Expand full comment
Donna O's avatar

I changed after my friend told me about her visit.

Expand full comment
Fast Eddy's avatar

You should have taken a photo!!!

He is a TFI (Total F789ing Idiot)

Expand full comment
Sue Hilda's avatar

The vast majority of doctors are employed serfs, people pleasing subservient drudges who have lost the capacity to think or plan independently, they're held by the short hairs because the state holds their license to practice. Do what the state says, you earn. Disobey the state, you will be de-licensed and starving. It happened even to the state MD state senator from Minnesota (read the statist Minnesota press rag on this--- https://minnesotareformer.com/2022/07/14/scott-jensen-should-lose-his-minnesota-medical-license/) who questioned the psychosis early on. I'm not apologizing for them, just clarifying the why's. Read about the enemy's assessment of Simone Gold MD...https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/09/14/1035915598/doctors-covid-misinformation-medical-license.

Expand full comment
Kay's avatar

ThereтАЩs a lot of licensing that shouldnтАЩt be a thing. The licensed electrician that I had to hire for a house addition was terrible. I couldnтАЩt use my contractor, who was an excellent electrician, because he wasnтАЩt licensed in my city. ItтАЩs all about money.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Then, you need a state inspector to come out after electrical work is done. They are as worthless as the license.

Expand full comment
TAM's avatar

I would agree--except, there needs to be some way of knowing whether the person you hired to do the job is competent. Just because someone says that they know how to do electrical work, plumbing, or any other similar repair work doesn't necessarily mean that they actually do know how to do that kind of work. At least with a licensed professional you do have some kind of recourse should they mess up. The unlicensed guy down the street who is buddies with your neighbor, good luck. I've seen too many friends get burned by going that route. They thought they'd save a few bucks and hassle and ended up hiring a more expensive professional to clean up the mess that their cheaper, unlicensed "friend" made.

Expand full comment
Freedom Fox's avatar

Your answer is in your comment. Word of mouth. References. Like people relied on for eternity before the 20th century credentialism took hold. Caveat empor. Always do your own research. Licensing is about money, not quality or competence.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Just because one has a license doesn't mean they are competent. Your have fraudulent state inspectors. I had an outside water faucet leak and called a licensed plumber. He told me I'd have to tear out one of my bathroom walls to fix it. I told him he was nuts. His assistant called me aside and told me he was quitting this company because they are crooked. I had a friend look at the faucet and he said all it needed was a gasket and he replaced it for me. I have had no further leaks.

Expand full comment
Sue Hilda's avatar

but unfortunately it's now as entrenched as a tick in your dog's paw.

Expand full comment
Pi Guy's avatar

Prohibition breeds Black Markets.

At some point, it's just not feasible to play by the rules.

Expand full comment
WouldHeBearIt's avatar

Licensing - when government steals your right to do something, then sells it back to you.

https://safechat.com/post/3178401551985849313

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

oh, they're just practicing The Senescience

Expand full comment
Bird's Brain's avatar

Not trusting your doctor and being skeptical of hospitals is a win that came out of the whole thing for many people. In other words, eyes were opened to the truth: doctors and hospitals are for emergency use only. It's never been a good idea to trust them with your health. That's what food is for. Despite many being caring and well intentioned people, doctors are ensconced in a system that doesn't have our best interests at heart. And we saw clearly how, as individuals, they're more interested in preserving their lifestyle than in helping patients make good decisions.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

My eyes opened up about the medical community back in 2005 when I read an article entitled "Change the number, create a disease". The article was about the change in values for "normal" blood pressure, cholesterol levels and osteoporosis lowering them all which informed doctors that they needed to begin prescribing drugs for millions more people while creating a brand new category called osteopenia, or pre-osteoporosis so people would get more tests sooner rather than later. What I realized is this was all about money for the drug companies and those doing the tests for osteoporosis and a method of creating fear. Since then I have avoided doctors and any and all things the CDC has recommended.

Expand full comment
Bird's Brain's avatar

It's great you had that awakening!

For me it was 2013. I developed several chronic conditions. When nothing showed up in my blood work and specialists were of no help, I was offered antidepressants and made to feel like it was all in my head though I wasn't depressed. I never went back.

That started me on a journey towards genuinely good health through diet that has changed my life in every way.

Now I'm grateful for the advanced warning that the system has no understanding of what creates health.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Yeah. For sure.

One of the few "silver linings" out of this global species level fail.

Expand full comment
I've Got A Special Purpose's avatar

Rebuke? Not quite. This was from this spring:

Anthony Fauci was awarded the Frank A. Calderone Prize, the most prestigious honor in public health, at an April 27 ceremony in Alumni Auditorium on the Columbia University Irving Medical Center campus.

https://www.publichealth.columbia.edu/news/anthony-fauci-receives-public-healths-highest-honor

This is what they do. They don't just wreck everything and then disclaim responsibility. They rub our noses in it by giving each other rewards.

Just watch. In a few months, Claudine Gay will be feted for her bravery in facing down the scurrilous attacks she has faced in the wake of her Hamas fecklessness and plagiarism scandal.

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Of course they have to honor and reward one of their own. That is how they stay in business.

Expand full comment
Tony Porcaro's avatar

Exactly right! What you so accurately describe is nothing less than their utter contempt and hatred for humanity as a whole, including the ones showering rewards on them; they are evil players in a game they control on many levels and find never-ending satisfaction in OPENLY carrying out their nefarious deeds to feed insatiable egos and psychopathy.

Expand full comment
Sharon Campbell's avatar

I agree with you!

Expand full comment
Elaine's avatar

Most doctors are beholden to the CDC and the FDA as they are the only "valid" purveyor's of "health care" that is acceptable and if any doctor dared to go outside of their rules, they would face a malpractice suit or be fired and that is why most of them were afraid to tell the truth. Their careers are more important than their patients.

Expand full comment
Dutch's avatar

Where's the waterboarding folks when you need them?

Expand full comment
Brena M.'s avatar

They did it right out in the open, spitting in our faces. That is how stupid they think we are. Unfortunately, 2/3rds went right along.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

gosh, it seemed closer to 95%

Expand full comment
AndyinBC's avatar

That's closer to what my math, (and observations), indicated!

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Shit. 95% might be to low.

I saw nearly 100%.

Expand full comment
Pi Guy's avatar

It's hard to stand one's own. EGM expressed this yesterday (and on other occasions; it seems relevant to understanding the abrogations of our liberties [I think I used that word correctly; let me know pls -Pi]) with the Abiline Paradox https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abilene_paradox.

People will agree even when they're pretty confident that it's the wrong thing to do.

Expand full comment
Steenroid's avatar

And thatтАЩs the problem not enough people rebelled.

Expand full comment
Pannacur's avatar

"they had to be vaxxed to waterboard" Sarcasm...

Expand full comment
Agent 1-4-9's avatar

All public officials should have to submit to waterboarding by their constituents if they wish to be reelected. ЁЯШБЁЯШБЁЯШБ

Expand full comment
Mandi Ballard's avatar

they, like politicians, should have to fight, physically, to get and hold their position. The top jobs should be fight to the death! It would make for really good entertainment and people would be more thoughtful about who they ask to run.

Expand full comment
Edward's avatar

Agree! iтАЩm against capital punishment--but for any semblance of justice and accountability, this piece of shit along with his sidekick Runt Fauci must be face capital punishment! Francis is diabolical--тАЬstarting with his leading the underlying foundational scam the genesis of the тАЬhuman genome project!тАЭ

Expand full comment
WouldHeBearIt's avatar

There are cases where the death penalty is warranted. Mass murder is one. Pedophilia is another.

Expand full comment
Aaron Ferguson's avatar

Hello random internet friend;) I agree but...why no capital punishment for a single murder? WhatтАЩs the rationale?

Expand full comment
Carl Herman's avatar

Yes, because under Crimes Against Humanity/Murder laws, the facts and evidence are abundant these "leaders" KNEW (or should have known if they choose to argue stupidity) these were lies KNOWN TO BE FALSE AS THEY WERE TOLD. Documentation sufficient for any reasonable person to withdraw consent and demand arrests: https://carlbherman.blogspot.com/2021/09/essay-to-100-teacher-colleagues-for-red.html

Expand full comment
Dena's avatar

And mistakes were NOT made. They knew what they were doing. And enough useless idiots went along.

Expand full comment
Brother John's avatar

Persons who were forced to watch their friends and family die in isolation should have their names entered in a lottery.

Winners will have the opportunity to, as those responsible for this catastrophe (Cuomos, Fauxi, hundreds more) struggle and dance at the end of the rope, have at the bodies with golf clubs, machetes, baseball bats, or whatever implements will yield the greatest entertainment value.

Expand full comment
Pi Guy's avatar

тАЬDans ce pays-ci il est bon de tuer de temps en temps un amiral pour encourager les autres."

("In this country England it is thought well to kill an admiral from time to time to encourage the others.")

- from Candide by Voltaire https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candide

Expand full comment
NotFromTexas's avatar

Public, prolonged torture to precede hanging.

The gallows ought to tour the US with a different staffer hanged in each locality until they are no more.

Finish in the PNW so that it can be re-purposed for the antifa and BLM terrorists who will undoubtedly riot - give the police carte blanche to subdue the individual without killing him/her, then a public hanging for each one ala the Sioux indians in Mankato, Minnesota in 1862.

Expand full comment
Pi Guy's avatar

"Public, prolonged torture to precede hanging."

Endorsed

Expand full comment
Dan's avatar

Execution is a little harsh but hard time is reasonable punishment.

Expand full comment
Brother John's avatar

Then with respect I submit that you have yet to reflect with sufficient depth and humility on how completely fractured our society has been by these events.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

Yeah I agree. This can not be forgiven in that way.

But have no doubt they will not even get a slap on the hand.

If that's the case; I don't plan to forgive these monsters unless they understand they escaped crimes punishable by execution. And should expect no forgiveness...only scorn.

There's less chance of that happening then them receiving justice.

So I accept that I will never forgive them. I'm fine with that because those bastards aren't worthy of letting unforgiveness affect us.

They don't deserve it. That's just.

Expand full comment
Peace's avatar

"Vengeance is mine," says the Lord. I trust He will apply the proper dose at the appointed time.

Expand full comment
Jimmy Gleeson's avatar

My wish fulfillment thinking is making them the prime adherents.

Expand full comment
Ryan Gardner's avatar

You monster!...lol

Expand full comment
Mark Tebor's avatar

I often wonder if the jabs they are taking is different from the ones the general public gets

Expand full comment
American Dissident's avatar

Bring out the guillotines

Expand full comment