The Question I’m Asking Now


I’m doubtful we’ll ever get a full and clear accounting of the Mega-Crime that was COVID-19. There are simply too many power players – corporations, lobbyists, medical associations, politicians, and the media – involved in producing and promoting this multibillion-dollar scam that will continue to do everything they can to challenge the facts as they surface or simply bury them in the small print of long, boring reports that no one will read.
We know that the virus itself was not just man-made but was produced by labs that were in the business of developing biological warfare. And it never would have existed in the first place – and killed as many as 8.5 million people worldwide – had the US not been actively involved in funding that research.
What we know we do not know is the actual number of deaths from COVID. Because from the very beginning, the way the WHO and many other national health agencies counted the deaths was erratic and completely absurd.
On the economic front, we know that the cost to governments, businesses, and individuals was in the trillions of dollars.
And finally, we know (or should have learned) that the power of our own limited-government US Constitution was not strong enough to persuade a huge percentage of our population to believe a narrative that made no sense when it was first spun at the end of 2019, and only got more absurd as the shutdowns continued.
So the question I’m asking now is: Did we, the people, learn anything from this? Or could it happen to us again next year?
One More Thing: This Just Came Out from the WSJ…
As I was putting this issue to bed, the WSJ published an opinion piece titled “RFK’s Misguided War on mRNA.” The Journal has been promoting every major talking point put out by Big Pharma since the man-made virus appeared six years ago. It’s no surprise that they continue today. I don’t have the time right now to give you a point-by-point refutation of their piece, but I’ll send one to you in the coming days.