Men think in herds; they go mad in herds,
while they only recover their senses slowly,
and one by one.
--Scottish poet, Charles MacKay, from his Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, 1841.
Sometimes you get the feeling that there is a whole industry almost waiting for an epidemic to occur --British Epidemiologist, Tom Jefferson
Scott W. Atlas
Sucharit Bhakdi
Jay Bhattacharya
Sunetra Gupta
Scott Jensen
Martin Kulldorff
Michael Levitt
Paul E. Peterson
Ellen Townsend
Mike Yeadon
At the 13-minutes mark, he cites the criminal action of Canadian physician, Bruce Aylward, who is on the W.H.O.'s leadership team. That should tell you all you need to know about Bruce. "Everybody should copy China's response." Here is a transcript of Nick's presentation.
Where on earth does the story come from? Bruce Aylward will go down in history as a criminal of immense stature. He takes a delegation to China, spends a few days there and returns and says to the world that everybody should copy China’s response. There was no substantive reason for him to say that. The entire basis for saying this was the doctrine of universal susceptibility. It was clear that in China not everybody had died – therefore, lockdowns work. It is so silly. Before covid, this is repeated wherever you look in any country’s pandemic respiratory virus guidelines.
And toward the end, Hudson cites the Great Barrington Declaration, penned by a few from the list above. Read it. Then sign it. Please.