The Final Countdown
A dignified life, or dehumanized technocracy -- which would you prefer for your children?
Anyone who knows me well, knows I'm a huge fan of the San Antonio Spurs basketball team. Likewise, if you know basketball at all, you know that Tim Duncan was the cornerstone of the Spurs during the most successful years of the franchise, leading them to 5 championships. (It would have been 6 were it not for the most heartbreaking 20 seconds in the history of organized sports.) Tim Duncan, number 21, is objectively one of the greatest players in NBA history and his nickname is — The Big Fundamental.
In this article, I'm going to discuss the fundamentals. Not the fundamentals of basketball, but rather the fundamental principles that were violated and broken during the Covid regime — which is not over. As much as I would like to sit back and reflect on the majesty of the Spurs, I will save the pleasure of writing such an article for a later occasion, sometime after a series of medical freedom victories have been recorded.
As you may have noticed, I do enjoy lists. I suppose they appeal to my sense of order. The following is a list of fundamental principles that were strangely, as if by hypnosis, abdicated during the Convid Scamdemic. I hope you enjoy, as do I, the novelty (at least for this Substack) of presenting this particular list in countdown format!
8. Do Not Trust the Government — how anyone could not understand this principle by now is beyond me. You don't need to refer to ancient history to reach this conclusion. You don't even need to have read Machiavelli (although I highly recommend you do). Just look at recent history and you will be provided with numerous examples indicating that no private citizen should ever trust the government.
The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment was even invoked by some of the poison pushers during Covid in patronizing efforts to assuage vaccine hesitancy. It was mentioned dismissively as though it were something that happened a million years ago and would never happen again. Yet every thinking person should take stock of this nightmarish event. It was medical torture that transpired over the course of 40 years and was presided over by the CDC. Yes — the same CDC.
Politically, since the turn of the new millennium, we have been treated to a continuous barrage of psyops and wars, wars and psyops. The dubious nature of the 2000 election, the unanswered questions surrounding 9/11, the lies about WMDs that resulted in catastrophic war in Iraq, the total bailout of the banks in 2008 with not as much as a life-raft for the people, the Flint Michigan water crisis, the annihilation of Libya — we could go on and on and on in reciting examples of negligence, malfeasance and heinous actions carried out by our government irrespective of which political party held the presidency at the time. (I insist they are one party pretending to be two.)
How could one claim to have observed history and then fail to notice that virtually every major government project done in opposition to an enemy whether literal or abstract, from all the senseless catastrophic wars against regimes to the fruitless and counterproductive "War on Drugs" and then "War on Terror", have been entirely negative in both nature and results?
Whenever the government announces (or doesn't announce) it is embarking on some grand new endeavor, usually something catastrophic is underway.
During Covid, I didn't just see people fail to be suspicious of a government that had thoroughly earned our distrust, I had the even more harrowing experience of witnessing people I had known previously to be "critical thinkers" suddenly devolve into people incapable of any critical thought whatsoever.
7. Don't Trust Major Corporations, Especially Big Pharma aka Big Harma — what is a corporation? It is an instrument designed to maximize profit in the marketplace. In capitalism ruthlessness, relentlessness and an amoral approach are all considered admirable traits.
The willingness of a corporation to poison, pollute, injure or even kill is requisite to compete in the upper echelons of the market place. Major corporations do not have a track record of admitting fault or confessing guilt. They do not have the tendency of "taking things down a notch" for the sake of the environment, or human dignity or being reasonable. The ends absolutely justify the means and therefore, nothing is off-limits in the pursuit of maximizing profits. If there is collateral damage, or if a few fines need to be paid along the way — so be it. That will all be neatly filed and tucked away under the label of "the cost of doing business." This description shouldn't shock anyone — I am merely describing the spirit of capitalism and the spirit of corporatism.
Big industry from the military industrial complex to Big-Agra is thoroughly out of hand, but there's something particularly disturbing about the corruption of the pharmaceutical industry as it pertains immediately to our health, the health of our children and the health of our families and communities. We should all be more than concerned that the oath stating, "first do no harm" has been jettisoned entirely.
Giving legal indemnity to corporations (especially ones with felony backgrounds) is a recipe for guaranteed disaster. There should be a law against making such laws. The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 which gives liability protection to vaccine manufacturers needs to be overturned immediately and put in its historical place as an anathema to the proper drafting and passing of laws.
6. The Right to Question — the right to question should be unquestionable. We claim to value education and up until recently intellectual curiosity was considered a good attribute. When Covid came along all the sudden "doing your own research" aka reading was suddenly being demonized. Who has ever heard of such a thing? And how can the people discouraging critical inquiry consider themselves to be the intelligent ones? It's adjacent to the question, "when were the censors the good guys in history?"
Questioning is good. Robust dialogue is good. The notion of sterilizing mistakes or incorrect ideas out of discourse is totalitarian. In fact, clarifying and the correcting of mistakes usually offers a great opportunity for education and enlightenment. Moreover, to attempt to gain an understanding even to venture into the taxonomy of an unfamiliar field or discipline does not mean that the inquirers suddenly become professionals in that field — no reasonable person would suggest that. It is simply to have gained some understanding in a new area. This is a good process and not a negative one.
As my friend Ryan Cristian of Last American Vagabond ( TheLastAmericanVagabond.com ) says at the end of every program, "Question everything."
5. Freedom to Associate — the government has no right whatsoever to prevent us from seeing our families or friends when we are not engaged in criminal actions and are not meeting to engage in criminal conspiracies. Lockdowns (which varied in severity from country to country and county to county) were a flagrant violation of our natural rights. Just as the government cannot protect us from any act of God — the notion that they can protect us from a respiratory ailment by restricting our movements is not only blatant overreach, it's medically and scientifically without merit.
The falsehood of the "asymptomatic carrier" was the fraudulent basis for movement restricting policies. It should be accepted, however, that policy makers have no influence, no sway whatsoever in regard to the virome. Even if they did, a declared emergency should not be grounds for the suspension or removal of our rights. Yet what transpired during Covid and the lack of resistance from the public that went along with it, has set the stage for future abuses.
4. Freedom of Religion — I feel an enormous spiritual feeling but I do not identify with any particular religion or religious text. My beliefs, however, as well as the beliefs or non-beliefs of every individual are irrelevant — our country, like every free society, allows for freedom of religion. It is not the job of the mayor, governor, president or any appointed or elected official to arbitrarily suspend the fundamental right to worship and practice one's religion.
It makes no sense to impose policies to protect a religious person from illness, when most religions are rooted in the concept of preparing the practitioner for death. For most religious people their religious practices are part of their well being. It is not up to power brokers to determine when devout persons can practice their religions or when congregations can congregate.
Allowing liquor stores to remain open while churches and mosques were ordered closed, highlights the perfectly baseless and arbitrary nature of lockdown policies. (I cringe when I use the word "allow" because We The People should have never "allowed" the state to have as much as an impression that they could impose any of this unfounded rubbish.)
Just prior to Covid, religious exemptions for vaccines required to attend school were overturned in New York and California. (Looking back, that was a red flag and helped set the stage for the bio security State that was about to emerge.) How is that possible? How can the government arbitrarily decide that their rule is more powerful than your religious belief and conviction to God Almighty? Who do they think they are? Religious exemptions should never be overturnable.
3. Haste Makes Waste — Haste makes waste is a truism. It is well known that it is better to be well prepared than rushed. It's a principle also known as the 6 P's — proper preparation prevents piss poor performance.
It's better to be a well-rehearsed band than an under-rehearsed band. It's better to be a well practiced basketball team (like the Spurs) than a team that hasn't practiced enough. It's better to be a well-prepared actor than an unprepared actor. It is better to have an experienced surgeon and not a medical student. Everyone knows that haste makes waste, yet somehow this axiomatic principle was disregarded in the case of "Operation Warp Speed."
"Warp speed" implies mistakes. It implies lack of regulation and oversight. More than imply, it means — no long term safety data. It means rushed-to-market. It means "safe and effective" is inherently a lie because they didn't have sufficient time to confirm its safety or effectiveness.
It's mind numbing that not only did supposedly intelligent people insist that such a massive undertaking (Operation Warp Speed) could be executed without any noticeable reduction in quality, but then proceeded to aggressively insult and gaslight those who raised this most obvious concern.
Despite the notion that anyone who refused the experimental injections was doing so based on elaborate conspiracy theories, I spoke to many people who told me firsthand that their hesitancy or outright refusal was based on the simple fact that the whole thing was done too damn fast.
2. Body Sovereignty — sovereignty over one's own body is the most fundamental of fundamental rights. It is the right from which all other rights emanate. If your body sovereignty is compromised, you are a compromised individual and you are not a free person. You may aspire to freedom, but you are not free.
Mandating Covid "vaccines" (products falsely marketed as such) was a violation of the Constitution†, the Nuremberg Code†† and first and foremost natural law. No person should be forced to eat anything, watch anything, participate in anything — least of all an invasive medical procedure — against their will. It's incredibly sad that this has to be discussed or debated whatsoever in the United States or any modern society for that matter.
1. No means No — I have most certainly emphasized this in previous articles. I will exercise here the literary technique known as sufficient redundancy and reiterate that — No is the most important word in the dictionary. No is sacrosanct.
We teach our children, and rightfully so, that they always have the right to say No. If something doesn't feel right — No. If you don't feel safe — No. If you are being asked to compromise your dignity — No. The word — No — by itself, is a complete sentence. This principle, of always having the right to say No, does not have an expiration date. It's not just for children. It is fundamental to human dignity.
It is an abomination, that the right to say No was violated across the whole of society. What a terrible example for our children, and if we don't change things now — what a terrible inheritance for them as well.
*https://www.tuskegee.edu/about-us/centers-of-excellence/bioethics-center/about-the-usphs-syphilis-study
†First Amendment
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
††https://research.unc.edu/human-research-ethics/resources/ccm3_019064/
Another great, well-thought-out post, Jeremiah. I especially liked this sentence: "We claim to value education and up until recently intellectual curiosity was considered a good attribute". And the totalitarian lockdowns that you cited particularly hurt our vulnerable people, like the elderly in "nursing homes", where in-person visitation was usually eliminated. You are truly a medical freedom fighter. I look forward to your NYC Medical Freedom Alliance presentation on Sunday, September 29th at 1:30pm at 122 EAST 83rd Street in Manhattan. For those who don't know about it, and are interested in hearing Jeremiah speak, I'm Linking below for more details: https://mfany.org/jeremiah-hoseas-host-of-the-bassline-special-presentation-on-september-29-2024-at-130pm-at-mfa/
Dear Jeremiah Hosea, This is very well said indeed and the only thing more I have to say is, AMEN x 8.