The Madness of 2020 and Beyond
This is my own personal opinion about the tyranny that happened from March 2020 onwards: lockdowns, restrictions, masks and the coercive, divisive jab campaign.
People I had formerly liked and trusted went mad. Truly mad. Insane. They believed that this virus, with its thankfully low infection fatality rate, was going to kill them. They believed that the useless and humiliating masks would keep them safe and pretended they were wearing them to save other people. The germ-ridden masks turned shops, supermarkets, and other businesses into a zombie apocalypse scene. Vile and dehumanising. Imagine how people with hearing problems, who needed to lip read, suffered. Imagine how children felt, seeing such an unsettling sight.
The restrictions were nonsensical. No more than six people in your garden. Why? Is the seventh person going to harm you? Go to the pub, but eat a ‘substantial meal’? There were politicians debating about whether a scotch egg constituted a meal. It was ludicrous. The whole thing was incredibly damaging: to children, to the disabled, to the elderly, to mental and physical health, to the economy, to jobs.
It's like throwing a stone into a lake – the ripples go on and on. The collateral damage of all those things with be felt for many years to come and our children and grandchildren will be picking up the bill.
At first when the country went into lockdown (meltdown!) I wasn’t sure what was happening, but by the time it became obvious that it was NOT three weeks to flatten the curve, I knew something nefarious was being perpetrated. The Nightingale hospitals weren’t used. Unsurprising to me. And the ventilators? Why on earth would the NHS want to use them? Look up the facts and see how many people they kill, or who never come off them.
The average age of a Covid death was eighty-two. The average age of death from all other causes in Britain is eighty-one. Boris Johnson even joked to a colleague “Get Covid, live longer”. And don’t get me started on Midazolam…
Three times in the UK, we were put under lockdown. That term originated in prisons, by the way. Millions of healthy people were quarantined and forbidden to see loved ones who lived in a different household. Most were stopped from going out to work – although if you worked in a supermarket, you were allowed to be in close proximity to lots of people each time you attended work. No staff in my local supermarket seemed any the worse for it.
And the absolute worst thing that happened? The rollout of the Covid jabs. Surely people haven’t forgotten that originally they were ‘offered’ to the most vulnerable? “Fifteen Million Jabs to Freedom” was one newspaper headline. Then they expanded the scope and entreated progressively younger and younger healthy folk to go and get jabbed. Then the language became evermore sinister. Then they sacked thousands of care workers, who only wished to decide for themselves what substances were injected into their bodies.
Next, they came for the frontline NHS employees and I will be forever grateful to the paramedics in Northwest England who set up NHS 100K. I went on a march and met some of the most wonderful men and women I have ever come across. One lady was in a wheelchair. Her husband was blind and hadn’t attended the protest, but she borrowed his white stick, stuck it inside her boot and attached a Do Not Comply poster to the top. She was marvellous and I shall never forget her.
I shall also never forget that most of the population complied with this nonsense and this enabled around two years of madness and destruction.
It is my belief that the Covid ‘vaccines’ have caused all manner of adverse reactions, including death. I know many who have suffered various ailments of varying severity, since 2021. Some of the fatalities have made the news and some of the relatives have been awarded £120,000 compensation from the UK Government. It will never compensate for the loss of their loved ones. How could it?
I pray that if and when (alas, likely when) authorities try something similar again, the benefit of hindsight will mean that those who complied previously, will be much less likely to do so. I am not overly hopeful however…