Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Is "Wake Up" really the best call to action?

When do we stop asking people to wake up?  Is that really the best message, particularly when not just the country but the world was, and continues, suffering from mass psychosis?  Are we asking people to break out of the mass psychosis, the one place where they drew comfort from global uncertainty?  And if they were afraid of the mass insanity, surely their personal relationship with their boss couldn't be trampled upon, right, certainly that relationship help as something sacred in trying times, right?  Waking up from what?  From a state of nit knowing?  That is odd indeed coming from the Facebook or Twitter poster who only in the last 5 minutes found a post from a friend that they retweeted, an ever more anemic expression than cut and paste.  So these folks who are calling all of us, and no one in particular, to wake up, they themselves are just learning specifics and are actually blaming and indicting their audience for them not knowing things that they just 5 minutes ago didn't know either.  But this is the world of social media.  Sharp repartee, quick-witted slaps, and acerbic indictments of a lack of insight.  Anyone asking its audience to wake up is also emerging from the stupor of ignorance.  Besides the occasional tweet, ee never learn of their activism, who they're writing to, the content of such letters, or productive responses, if any, that they receive.  The one guy who has pushed on the vaccine mandates is Robert Barnes.  He's been active.  He's gotten traction and he reports on his successes and in-roads on the legality or illegality of the mandates.  So has Peggy Hall.  Of course, we're thankful for all the doctors who've been pushing back in their industry, like Richard Kory, Dr. McCullough, Dr. Robert Malone, Dr. Ryan Cole, the great Houston, Texas doctor whom the establishment loves to hate, the heroic, Dr. Mary Bowden

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