Tuesday, August 6, 2024

JOHN BEAUDOIN: "The CARES Act, like I said, [was about] behavior modification. It was never intended to save anybody...In fact, the CARES Act was written in 2018...It was finalized in 2019."

"The CARES Act, like I said, [was about] behavior modification. It was never intended to save anybody...In fact, the CARES Act was written in 2018...It was finalized in 2019." Electrical engineer and independent investigator John Beaudoin, Sr. () describes for Debi Evans of UK Column () how the CARES Act— a $2.2 trillion economic stimulus bill passed by the 116th U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump on March 27, 2020—was all about "behavior modification" and "never intended to save anybody." In fact, Beaudoin notes that the bill was written in 2018, and then finalized in 2019. Partial transcription of clip: "The CARES Act, like I said, is a behavior modification. It was never intended to save anybody. Nothing in there has anything to save anybody or to give money to the states so that the states could save anybody. Everything in there is a modification of behavior of hospital administrators to kill people for money, to use ventilators, to prescribe remdesivir, to make sure that ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine are not used.  
"So, yeah, the laws that [were] put in place were never intended to save anybody. In fact, the CARES Act was written in 2018. Twenty-eighteen. They changed a few variables. It was finalized in 2019. And when COVID hit, they changed a few variables in March of 2020. So the intent was never to save a lot of people." 

Full video:

DR. JANE RUBY: Everyone's finally figuring out that you're in a permanent kill box, a mass genocide operation being run by the United States Department of Defense…

Yeah, local does seem like the answer, and it sounds good, but some of us still need restitution from the international invasion of sinister forces from outside who've been left damaged.  But local government sure has the "go local" wrapped up too from years, decades of federal funding that has turned quiet rural and suburban roads into streamlined boulevards with all the major national chain eateries--Subway, Taco Bell, Carl's Jr., Starbucks, 7-11s, nail salons, and pet stores-- and grocers, not to mention how they've converted the lighting with glaring yellow light poles every 40 feet that double as video and audio surveillance on what were locally maintained quiet streets.   Now streets and city services are local counties and city restrictions to Blackrock, State Street, et al controlling companies via DEI.  So the instruction may be to go local, but feds have already set up shop.  And the courts are owned.  You won't find justice anywhere, which explains all the street violence.  And you won't find a lawyer worth his salt.  Who can you trust in a low-trust society?  Not to mention the added level of surveillance, Facebook groups created by high-octane Karens and Kens and the immigrant population who actually took Janet Napolitano's "If you see something, say something" as their mission statement in the service of a virtuous actor.  

CO2 is an 800-year lag on global warming. CO2 does not cause warming; the relationship is precisely inversed

Full documentary: 

CHAOS IS NOT AN ACCIDENT, IT’S THE GOAL

Some introductory essays into Strauss' work are What is Liberal Education?, 1959, and The Three Waves of Modernity, 1975. 

Paul Krause explains that,

Strauss is responsible for two notable ideas in the history of Western political philosophy: The contest between Athens (Greek Rationalism) and Jerusalem (Abrahamic revelation) which was synthesized by Christianity as the thesis that underlay classical Western civilization; and the rupture (or break) in political philosophy between classics and moderns.  His essay “The Three Waves of Modernity” is his most famous essay and is generally anthologized in most textbooks that examine the history of Western political philosophy.  His most famous book, Natural Right and History (1953), deals with this subject in greater detail.  (Other important texts of his include: The City and ManOn Tyranny: An Interpretation of Xenophon’s Hiero, and Socrates and Aristophanes, and On Plato’s Symposium.)  

The German Chief of Police admits there are no "refugees" coming to Germany, "they're all soldiers" whose sole purpose in Europa is destruction