Cowardly Act

Cowardly Act

Hadn’t looked at it like that before but it matches my experience. Only those  with a higher confront level can face any fact, no matter how unpalatable.

Say NO! To Vaccine Passports!

Yeahhh….
 
So that’s the Mike Yeadon ex Chief Scientist and President of Pfizer. The company with the most massive level of fines ever. The company who’s poison so many have already taken. Don’t listen to me! But if you want to argue I’d speak to Dr Yeadon.
 
#SAYNOTOVACCINEPASSPORTS Just keep pushing back!
 
“It’s far better for mental health & personal resilience if we just face up to the fact that this isn’t under the control of our government.
 
All governments suffered a technocratic coup d’etat at the same time last spring.
 
It probably didn’t feel like a coup, but it was, when each country’s equivalent of SAGE said “look: you need to follow the science or we will all be doomed”.
 
Since March 2020, I’ve seen nothing from almost anywhere that discords with the idea that unelected, unaccountable individuals are driving the bulk of the important events, almost everywhere.
 
In light of that possibility, there’s no point in lobbying government. They don’t have the freeboard to do other than follow their script (the power over them might be threats, or bribes, or even beliefs, but they’re no longer autonomous in important ways).
 
So they’ll continue pushing dangerous vaccines.
 
Lockdowns are inevitable.
 
More fear porn, censorship.
 
Vaccine passports will be introduced.
 
That is the moment where our entire civilisation chooses.
 
If we comply, and permit VaxPass to regulate access to food, we are under totalitarian tyranny from which no escape is possible.
To disengage afterwards means starvation.
 
If you’re skeptical, run the thought experiment. “
 
Mike Yeadon

Kurt Vonnegut On Activities

Kurt Vonnegut At Typewriter

“When I was 15, I spent a month working on an archeological dig. I was talking to one of the archeologists one day during our lunch break and he asked those kinds of “getting to know you” questions you ask young people: Do you play sports? What’s your favorite subject? And I told him, no I don’t play any sports. I do theater, I’m in choir, I play the violin and piano, I used to take art classes.

And he went, “WOW. That’s amazing!” And I said, “Oh no, but I’m not any good at ANY of them.”

And he said something then that I will never forget and which absolutely blew my mind because no one had ever said anything like it to me before: “I don’t think being good at things is the point of doing them. I think you’ve got all these wonderful experiences with different skills, and that all teaches you things and makes you an interesting person, no matter how well you do them.”

And that honestly changed my life. Because I went from a failure, someone who hadn’t been talented enough at anything to excel, to someone who did things because I enjoyed them. I had been raised in such an achievement-oriented environment, so inundated with the myth of Talent, that I thought it was only worth doing things if you could “Win” at them.” – Kurt Vonnegut

(Tom: While there is merit solely in having a wide range of fields in which you have experience and I have no argument with doing things for the simple pleasure of doing them, there is also significant value in the exigencies required to excel in a field to a professional standard. Not necessarily to be in competition with anyone but the necessary observation, discipline and learning that comes from the requirement to excel breeds a causative mindset.)