All about Covid

evw

Well-known member
I just wonder..... Is Biden really a demented old man, or........ a good actor who deceives everyone 1681719672065.png
 

SusanB

Well-known member
Aside from the COVID debacle, we are seeing the disintegration of trust in all human institutions including government, social services, health, law enforcement and religion. I think Jehovah is exposing it all including the corruption in his own organization. I wanted to post this new video that explains the vaccines generally and particularly how the COVID vaccine is both brilliant and diabolical. The video is a bit technical but I think simplified enough that I could understand it. It runs about 15 minutes and whether you have taken the vaccine or not, I think it explains a lot. The speaker is Bret Weinstein who is a former professor of evolutionary biology and I believe he was fired for sounding the alarm on the vaccine. I apologize for his use of a bit of profanity but I understand that he is very distressed to see people murdered by the vaccine in horrible ways.

 

robins

Well-known member
Aside from the COVID debacle, we are seeing the disintegration of trust in all human institutions including government, social services, health, law enforcement and religion. I think Jehovah is exposing it all including the corruption in his own organization. I wanted to post this new video that explains the vaccines generally and particularly how the COVID vaccine is both brilliant and diabolical. The video is a bit technical but I think simplified enough that I could understand it. It runs about 15 minutes and whether you have taken the vaccine or not, I think it explains a lot. The speaker is Bret Weinstein who is a former professor of evolutionary biology and I believe he was fired for sounding the alarm on the vaccine. I apologize for his use of a bit of profanity but I understand that he is very distressed to see people murdered by the vaccine in horrible ways.

i am a big fan of Dr. Weinstein - he was fired 5+yrs ago over being accused a racist by not acquiescing to demands by students that were never even in his classes. He has gotten a lot of pushback for his scientific analysis of our country's reaction to covid the past few years. his interviews and podcasts are intellectually stimulating
 
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Liv4ever

Guest
I thought the WHO had broken up. I used to listen to them often. I rather liked Knights in White Satin.
The WHO sells out

"Though Townshend had high hopes for the single, it ended up charting lower than most of the group's records up to that time. He wrote the song in 1966, but had held it back as an "ace in the hole", believing it would be the Who's first number-one single: "To me it was the ultimate Who record, yet it didn't sell. I spat on the British record buyer", Townshend later commented."[17](Wikipedia)

 

BARNABY THE DOG.

Well-known member
Who you talkin bout Barn? Oh, THE WHO! That Who! Knights in White Satin was The Moody Blues but I have a feeling you know that already LOL. :LOL:
I may have known that long ago ‘tator, but the Who have gone all the same way as the “What“ and the “Why”. I kid you not! My father had already “educated” me way before all that by bringing home one day a huge wind-up gramophone and a black case of 78rpm recordings of the great composers and singers, such as Caruso. By the time people were “getting on down” to Black Sabbath etc, I was already Swanning it at the opera in black tie and tails. My first recollection of something spinning at 45rpm was The Righteous Brothers, suggesting that I have “Lost that Loving Feeling”, and which for some reason had been imprinted on my mind in much the same way as some kingdom “songs” of the era that come back to haunt me at 3am on a dark winter morning. At those moments, I find myself humming what I felt should have been a kingdom song, and which was Paul Robson sang with such deep emotion; Trees.
 

BARNABY THE DOG.

Well-known member
The WHO sells out

"Though Townshend had high hopes for the single, it ended up charting lower than most of the group's records up to that time. He wrote the song in 1966, but had held it back as an "ace in the hole", believing it would be the Who's first number-one single: "To me it was the ultimate Who record, yet it didn't sell. I spat on the British record buyer", Townshend later commented."[17](Wikipedia)

It was a cultural problem. The English have an aversion to someone singing the same phrase over and over again until it is glued to the brain for eternity, to even be recalled instantly on suggestion alone 60 years or so later. The horror of it forbids me to resurrect it again now by playing your post. Probably why, after being forced to listen to it themselves, the dark secret services in the USA thought to use similar noises as a ”cruel and unusual punishment” as a weapon against criminals such as Manuel Noriega. Townsend’s ditty was certainly an “ace in the hole” as far as were concerned, just not the hole he was thinking of, and neither was it an “ace”, but a “pain” therein. Townsend may have wished to spit on us for not appreciating his penmanship in doggerel, but I can tell you, using a French public toilet holds far more fear for us on holiday than a little spittle from a disgruntled second rate singer with a stunted vocabulary ranting in a childish temper tantrum because we didn’t like his song - didn’t think a lot about his singing either, let alone his behaviour in hotels - or was that some other group.
 
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Liv4ever

Guest
didn’t think a lot about his singing either,
Every dog has his day but...
He wasn't the singer. He played guitar and wrote the songs....NEXT...!

Content is king, but distribution is a close prince. If the BBC doesn't want your music to be heard, it won't be
 
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