COVID 19: Control, Corruption and the Collapse of Truth
Since taking the COVID vaccine, I’ve noticed a decline in my physical energy and overall well-being. Looking back, I have mixed feelings about having taken it. At the time, vaccination was heavily promoted and even required for air travel, leaving many people with little choice.
As time has passed, I’ve grown increasingly sceptical about this fake pandemic. To me, it sometimes seemed like more than just a global health emergency. It appeared to be a carefully coordinated effort, possibly driven by certain groups or industries with vested interests, such as pharmaceutical companies, elements of the media, and some professionals across sectors.
Some of the possible motivations behind this could include:
- Creating widespread confusion and division among individuals, families, communities, and even entire nations, in the name of competition, control, or influence.
- Isolating large numbers of people, especially the elderly, who often struggle the most with such conditions, can have devastating consequences, even leading to premature deaths. It's deeply troubling to consider that some individuals might have used the pandemic, whether through misinformation or manipulation, as a means to reduce the global population. If true, this would reflect a disturbing level of arrogance and moral detachment from those who see themselves as exceptionally skilled or superior.
- Generating enormous profits through the rapid development and global sale of vaccines, often backed by strict travel and lifestyle restrictions imposed on ordinary people.
- Shifting workplace dynamics, such as normalizing remote work, side-lining experienced professionals, or discouraging those with strong academic or professional backgrounds in favour of newer, often less traditional qualifications. There appeared to be a shift aimed at removing experienced individuals over forty from traditional roles and creating opportunities for others who may not have previously had access. In that process, the quality of work, customer service, and software applications seems to have declined noticeably.
- There is often a tendency to establish professional superiority and prioritize services based on factors such as one’s career position, profession, social connections and networks, salary level, and perceived workload. These criteria can shape how individuals are treated and the opportunities they receive, often reinforcing existing hierarchies within society and the workplace.
- Forcing individuals to perform the same repetitive tasks day after day can slowly drain their energy, diminish their motivation, and erode their sense of purpose. Over time, this can lead to financial hardship and a loss of independence. Sadly, such conditions can make people more vulnerable to manipulation and control, especially when orchestrated by those driven by unhealthy desires for power and dominance.
- Disrupting economic balance, where price hikes for essential goods and services became the norm under the justification of COVID-related impacts.
- Driving wage inflation and status competition among certain professionals, leading to inequality in how different groups were valued.
- Promoting particular social agendas, such as restructuring traditional family roles or supporting select ideologies, while sometimes ignoring broader impacts on society.
- Suppressing dissent and alternative viewpoints, by limiting freedom of speech and fostering a climate where questioning the mainstream narrative was discouraged.
- Interfering with fair immigration processes, where legitimate applications were delayed while questionable or expedited cases seemed to benefit from backdoor channels or influence. Meanwhile, fraudulent activity and data breaches have become more common, and immigration systems in Europe, North America, and Canada have struggled. Many with genuine visa applications faced long delays, while others appeared to be fast-tracked, often raising questions about transparency, fairness, and political motivations.
- Undermining established systems and values by portraying previous generations as corrupt or outdated, possibly to justify current actions or agendas.
For many, the pandemic seemed to bring more harm than help. Government pay-outs kept people home, but they also fuelled economic instability, enabled certain individuals to exploit the system, and side-lined services for the elderly and disabled. It also led to rising costs across sectors, growing income disparity, and an apparent shift in power dynamics, economically, socially, and even within households.
Some believe there was never a genuine viral threat, but rather a manufactured crisis, comparable to market manipulation tactics, used to generate chaos and profit from it. Whether or not that’s the full truth, it’s clear that the consequences of COVID-19 go far beyond health, leaving many feeling disillusioned and financially strained.
It’s disheartening to see how certain systems seem designed to drain people’s energy and motivation, particularly among those who are qualified and experienced. A clear example is the repetitive nature of tasks like filling out electronic forms or applying for the same job multiple times, only to be met with the same rejection, despite already having a detailed CV stored in the organisation’s database. These repetitive processes often feel unnecessarily burdensome and demoralising.
Sadly, it appears that some individuals in positions of influence have made it increasingly difficult for skilled professionals to earn a living, whether through traditional employment or entrepreneurship. Meanwhile, the same systems often seem to favour those with less experience or limited capabilities, creating an environment where merit and experience are undervalued.
This discouraging atmosphere has pushed many capable individuals into relying on minimal government support, not out of choice but as a means of survival. It’s as though a deliberate effort was made to side-line knowledgeable professionals, under the misguided notion of creating fairness, when in reality, it bred further inequality.
What’s more concerning is that some of these changes seem to have been justified under the banner of COVID, a period marked by misinformation, confusion, and manipulation. Certain narrow-minded individuals used this time to spread disinformation through social media and online platforms, instilling fear in the name of public health, religion, or so-called moral leadership.
This kind of control-driven, intolerant mindset, fuelled by arrogance and a desire to dominate, has done significant damage. Instead of fostering fairness, it undermined truth, discouraged integrity, and promoted shortcuts and deception, all while using the label of a global crisis to justify such actions.
All of this has left many people, including myself, questioning not just the public health response but the deeper implications on our lives, societies, and freedoms. Whether or not one agrees with these views, I believe it's important that such discussions are allowed and not dismissed outright, so we can learn, reflect, and ensure transparency and accountability in the future.
You are right. Corona Virus is a lie and deception of the century. Culprits should be accountable for this deception.
ReplyDeleteI also agree that COVID is a total lie and deception by some crook and narrow minded people who knows nothing but spreading lies.
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