Further explaining the Grand Princess saga, which apparently marked a pivotal turn in "public health" policy, Latypova notes, "So [HHS] said, not only do we have jurisdiction to arrest these people [or] 'detain them'—they didn't say arrest, but what I'm describing is arrest without due process, so they're violating our constitutional rights—but they're saying, 'Well...we can, because it's a deadly disease.' And they took them into the military detention facility [Travis Air Force Base], held them there, of which 10 people died, and were promptly disposed of, because it's a 'deadly, deadly virus,' and it was labeled COVID."
My guess is that the 10 people who died died of fear and anxiety at being herded.
"[D]uring [the] COVID mass murder exercise, they have tested this process of throwing anybody they don't like into jail and killing them and calling it Disease X...that was practiced by our HHS...[on the] Diamond Princess and Grand Princess [passengers]..."
— Sense Receptor (@SenseReceptor) May 19, 2024
Retired pharma R&D… pic.twitter.com/nufY1bB1Q0
If we think that you are in a pre-communicable stage of a communicable disease that has the potential for a pandemic . . . No evidence of this needs to be provided whatsoever. No scientific evidence because as I said they do their own pseudoscience. So they don't have to provide ANY evidence of this.
They housed the passengers at Travis Air Force Base in the Bay area near Vacaville and Fairfield. March 10, 2020.
Interesting to watch how the news media treats violation of civil rights as just another step in the fight against COVID.from Ballotpedia News.
Texas and Oklahoma filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas on January 18, 2023, arguing that an Obama-era federal regulation issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) granting the World Health Organization (WHO) authority to define what constitutes a public health emergency infringes on national and state sovereignty.
Fifteen states in July 2022 filed a petition asking HHS to repeal the rule. The Biden administration denied the petition in October 2022. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R), joined by Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond (R), filed suit, arguing in part that the HHS rule infringes on U.S. and state sovereignty by unlawfully delegating power to a foreign entity. Paxton argued in a press release, “Absolutely no foreign power should have the ability to exert police powers over Texas or any other state, and that is especially true for a foreign entity with as troubled of a history as the WHO.”
HHS had not responded to the lawsuit as of January 25, 2023. The agency did not respond to the July 2022 petition but stated at the time that it “will continue to make its own independent decisions” and asserted that it is “important to include references to WHO in the definition of ‘public health emergency’ to inform the public of the circumstances that HHS/CDC may consider.”
The date for oral argument in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas had not been set as of January 25, 2023.
Sense Receptor reminds us that,
Latypova has previously brought to light the fact that ~48 states "have...laws...by which your government can declare you a potential carrier of [a] deadly pathogen...throw you into a quarantine camp, or imprison you in your home, or imprison you in a hospital..."
Here is the full interview with Sasha Latypova, released on May 19, 2024.