Yes, it was interesting being well and locked down. Except when you went to WalMart, you just has to wear the bullshit mask, which I hung on the rear view mirror the rest of the time.
Good thing I'm retired, wearing the face-diaper would have not gone well for me.
I'm not retired, and I dared them to do something when I didn't wear the mask. They didn't. My employer didn't, my doctors didn't, the hospital didn't.
Cannot recall how many times I was refused entrance or service threatened by sheriffs if I didn’t exit a store. And mask wearing customers or employees who screamed at me for putting them at danger. So much fear in their eyes.
And then came my refusals to get the shots - another round of battles with ignoramuses.
Typhoid too. Remember Thyphoid Mary? The only thing I had for food poisoning was Promethazine. As a Type 2 I knew Not to get dehydrated, or let my BS get too low, water, green tea, and honey for 3 days. No Humalog.
I would take a well managed composting toilet any day over using fresh water to move poop. Learning how to make one is a life skill never taught in schools.
That World Health Organization has an explanation and solution for everything. Strangely, cholera is also a symptom of the climate change crisis, as well as 💩 poor sanitation. They are also in the process of monitoring and surveillance of its likely. It is also interesting that the World Health Organization uses words on their website to explain all viruses and communicable diseases in accordance to their unapproved emergency and pandemic agreement.
Yeah. I watched the "fauxdemic" with interest, especially when they "Locked" everyone down.
Never in the history of epidemics have they locked down whole cities, and kept the well from working.
It was like everything we've learned in the last 2000 years was just forgotten.
It was especially telling that they used a Prison term to enforce a medical problem.
A lockdown is when you lock someone in a cell twenty-three hour out of the day. It only done when whole pods or wings have caused problems.
Yes, it was interesting being well and locked down. Except when you went to WalMart, you just has to wear the bullshit mask, which I hung on the rear view mirror the rest of the time.
Good thing I'm retired, wearing the face-diaper would have not gone well for me.
I'm not retired, and I dared them to do something when I didn't wear the mask. They didn't. My employer didn't, my doctors didn't, the hospital didn't.
I reminded them that mandates were not laws.
Cannot recall how many times I was refused entrance or service threatened by sheriffs if I didn’t exit a store. And mask wearing customers or employees who screamed at me for putting them at danger. So much fear in their eyes.
And then came my refusals to get the shots - another round of battles with ignoramuses.
It did bring out the drones and npcs, didn't it?
⚔️💖⚔️🙌🏼🎯🎯🎯🎯
Never comply
Never!
and also stop defecating in the water. Your sister. Remember always do not defecate in the water.
Typhoid too. Remember Thyphoid Mary? The only thing I had for food poisoning was Promethazine. As a Type 2 I knew Not to get dehydrated, or let my BS get too low, water, green tea, and honey for 3 days. No Humalog.
I would take a well managed composting toilet any day over using fresh water to move poop. Learning how to make one is a life skill never taught in schools.
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/cholera
That World Health Organization has an explanation and solution for everything. Strangely, cholera is also a symptom of the climate change crisis, as well as 💩 poor sanitation. They are also in the process of monitoring and surveillance of its likely. It is also interesting that the World Health Organization uses words on their website to explain all viruses and communicable diseases in accordance to their unapproved emergency and pandemic agreement.
What? You are telling me that you, or anybody in history, have isolated, let alone seen a virus?😎🤣🖕🫵✡️🇮🇱✡️