One way to determine whether a suggestion is worth following is
to look at the evidence presented to support it. If the evidence makes
sense and smells real, then perhaps the programme you are asked to sign
up for is worthy of consideration. However, if the whole scheme is sold
on fallacies that a child could poke a stick through, and its chief
proponents cannot possibly believe their own rhetoric, then only a fool
would go much further. This is obvious – you don’t buy a used car on a
salesman’s insistence that there is no other way to get from your
kitchen to your bathroom.
Delegates at the coming World Health
Assembly in Geneva are faced with such a choice. In this case, the car
salesman is the World Health Organisation (WHO), an organisation still
commanding considerable global respect based on a legacy of sane and
solid work some decades ago. It also benefits from a persistent
misunderstanding that large international organisations would not
intentionally lie (they increasingly do, as noted below). The delegates
will be voting on the recently completed text of the Pandemic Agreement,
part of a broad effort to extract large profits and salaries from an
intrinsic human fear of rare causes of death. Fear and confusion
distract human minds from rational behaviour....<<<Read More>>>...
Welcome to "A Light In The Darkness" - a realm that explores the mysterious and the occult; the paranormal and the supernatural; the unexplained and the controversial; and, not forgetting, of course, the conspiracy theories; including Artificial Intelligence; Chemtrails and Geo-engineering; 5G and EMR Hazards; The Net Zero lie ; Trans-Humanism and Trans-Genderism; The Covid-19 and mRNA vaccine issues; The Ukraine Deception ... and a whole lot more.