Not dystopian, but definitely applicable: Camus' "The Plauge" is going on my reread list
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Ha, I'm sure there are a bunch of people that will be interested. I for one, am tired of anything pandemic related, fiction or otherwise.For those interested in pandemic fiction, there's a whole new crop coming out this year!
Well I have done a TON of research. Maybe a congressional testimony will help explain.That’s a new one. Please don’t make statements like that without facts from a credible source to back it up. And Bitchute, Natural News, Epoch Times, Fakebook and War Room are not credible sources.
So-called "expert" testimony to lawmakers is not always credible. Take this example:Well I have done a TON of research. Maybe a congressional testimony will help explain.
https://rumble.com/vloa7j-must-watc...ndatory-vaccination-and-medical-coercion.html
There is a lot of research coming out demonstrating that the use of Ivermectin prescribed by a doctor has had the effect of lessening the complications of Covid. I know of several cases but, again, this is something you should discuss with your doctor and not KarynVA.Well I have done a TON of research. Maybe a congressional testimony will help explain.
https://rumble.com/vloa7j-must-watc...ndatory-vaccination-and-medical-coercion.html
Yes, indeed, evergreen advice: find a doctor you can trust and ask them before trying any medication.There is a lot of research coming out demonstrating that the use of Ivermectin prescribed by a doctor has had the effect of lessening the complications of Covid. I know of several cases but, again, this is something you should discuss with your doctor and not KarynVA.
Yup the 5G "theory" did the rounds here.So-called "expert" testimony to lawmakers is not always credible. Take this example:
In a packed hearing room at the Ohio Statehouse, Republican lawmakers gave the microphone to a known conspiracy theorist who has spread misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines.
Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, a physician licensed in Ohio and author of "Saying No to Vaccines," shared her views, promoted her credentials and fielded questions for more than 45 minutes during a House Health Committee hearing on House Bill 248.
"I'm sure you've seen the pictures all over the internet of people who have had these shots and now they're magnetized," Tenpenny, of Middleburg Heights in Cuyahoga County, said. "You can put a key on their forehead, it sticks. You can put spoons and forks all over and they can stick because now we think there is a metal piece to that."
Tenpenny also mentioned the false claim that the vaccine contains particles that can connect with 5G wireless technology.
"There's been people who have long suspected that there is some sort of an interface, yet to be defined interface, between what's being injected into these shots and all of the 5G towers," she said.
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IKR. God this and Allah that makes its rounds around here, but is generally considered bad taste to mock them.Yup the 5G "theory" did the rounds here.
Driving home from my daughters first vaccination apptmt, she says "I'm disappointed". "Why?" I asked. She looks at me.. and says.. "the theorists said if I got the vaccine I'd get 5G .. and I didn't.. I'm disappointed.. I still only have 4G".
Was a giggle-worthy moment![]()