Anonymous ID: d46f52 Jan. 14, 2022, 6:05 a.m. No.15372782   🗄️.is 🔗kun

I woke up this statement going through my mind

 

"I AM THE WAY THE TRUTH AND THE LIGHT”

 

But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.

 

Teach me thy way, O LORD; I will walk in thy truth: unite my heart to fear thy name.

 

While ye have light, believe in the light, that ye may be the children of light. These things spake Jesus, and departed, and did hide himself from them.

 

Moreover the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold, as the light of seven days, in the day that the LORD bindeth up the breach of his people, and healeth the stroke of their wound.

Anonymous ID: d46f52 Jan. 14, 2022, 6:20 a.m. No.15372880   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2903

>>15372003, >>15372062 PB Dig, Re: What’s Next for Digital Disinformation? [How to Silence Opposition]

 

Kekkity this sounds like the poster on half chan

 

Reducing engagement with disinformation is complicated for many reasons.

Scaling disinformation is much easier than scaling anti-disinformation (e.g., fact-checking).

Disinformation uses memes and messages that scale quickly and attach to rising key words.

Countering and correcting these tactics requires much more work than disseminating disinformation (e.g., some experts suggesteight to 15 hours of work are needed to fact-check content that may take just five minutes to create).

 

 

Anons, we’ve got to make it harder than 15 hours, we’re too easy on these faggots. Lets get some quotes from unknown philosophers or obscure and ancient texts! Kek

Anonymous ID: d46f52 Jan. 14, 2022, 6:37 a.m. No.15372951   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3000

Woodrow Wilson downplayed the 1918 flu pandemic. Then, he got violently sick.

Even a U.S. president couldn't avoid a pandemic that swept the world and infected millions.

The year: 1919. The president: Woodrow Wilson.

The disease dubbed "The Spanish flu" emerged in 1918 during the last months of World War I.

Initially, the Wilson administration tried to play down the disease even as it spread worldwide.

Presidential historian Tevi Troy, citing the administration's response to the pandemic, calls Wilson the worst U.S. president in terms of handling a disaster.

“The federal response to the influenza outbreak in 1918 can best be described as neglectful. Hundreds of thousands of Americans died without President Wilson saying anything or mobilizing nonmilitary components of the U.S. government to help the civilian population,” Troy writes in "Shall We Wake the President: Two Centuries of Disaster Management from the Oval Office."

He also blames Wilson for contributing to the pandemic by continuing the mobilization of troops “even as World War I was winding to a close.”

In April 1919, however, Wilson himself contracted the illness shortly after arriving in Paris for the Big Four peace talks.

Sarah Fling, a fellow writing for the White House Historical Association, notes that a number of members of the Wilson entourage had caught the flu during a transatlantic voyage in February 1919, including his daughter, Margaret, several members of the Secret Service, Wilson's stenographer, and his chief usher.

News of Wilson's illness was initially hidden from the public, with The Associated Press reporting flatly on April 5 that the president was "not stricken with influenza."

But no one knew better what was unfolding than Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson, personal physician to the president.

Publicly, Grayson said only that the president had caught a cold because of his workload and the "chilly and rainy weather" in Paris.

Privately, however, Grayson told a different story. In a letter that only became public a little over a decade ago, he wrote to a friend on April 14, explaining, “These past two weeks have certainly been strenuous days for me. The President was suddenly taken violently sick with the influenza at a time when the whole of civilization seemed to be in the balance.”

"And without him and his guidance Europe would certainly have turned to Bolshevism and anarchy," he continued in the letter, now held by the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library. "From your side of the water you can not realize on what thin ice European civilization has been skating. I just wish you could spend a day with me behind the scenes here. Some day perhaps I may be able to tell the world what a close call we had."

During the peace talks, Fling writes, the Big Four were were trying to solve larger questions of German reparations, the creation of the League of Nations, and the threat of Bolshevism — "all of which were jeopardized by Wilson’s sickness."

Around the same time, a Washington Post columnist wrote: "The country will be anxious regarding President Wilson until he is again at work … It is a time when an hour lost means the loss of millions of hours to these individuals who are awaiting to begin reconstruction … the allied world hopes for the sake of its material interests that his illness will be light and brief."

As the president's illness progressed, aides became alarmed when the normally predictable Wilson began, on at least two occasions, blurting out "unexpected orders," according to A. Scott Berg in his biography, "Wilson."

The president “created a scene over pieces of furniture that had suddenly disappeared,” when in fact it had not been moved. At one point, Berg writes, Wilson was certain that he was surrounded by French spies.

“[W]e could but surmise that something queer was happening in his mind,” Chief Usher Irwin Hoover later recalled, according to John M. Barry in "The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History." “One thing was certain: [H]e was never the same after this little spell of sickness.”

Barry writes that the flu undercut Wilson's stamina, disrupted his concentration, and affected “his mind in other, deeper ways.”

Six months after contracting the flu, Wilson suffered a stroke that left him partially paralyzed and blind and effectively incapacitated as president. He died in February 1924, three years after leaving office.

 

I’d say he knew too much

 

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/10/03/trump-covid-1918-flu-struck-woodrow-wilson-pandemic/3607579001/

Anonymous ID: d46f52 Jan. 14, 2022, 6:46 a.m. No.15373000   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3013 >>3052

>>15372951

As the 1918 Flu Emerged, Cover-Up and Denial Helped It Spread

BECKY LITTLEMAY 26, 2020

 

Nations fighting in World War I were reluctant to report their flu outbreaks.

 

“Spanish flu” has been used to describe the flu pandemic of 1918 and 1919 and the name suggests the outbreak started in Spain. But the term is actually a misnomer and points to a key fact: nations involved in World War I didn’t accurately report their flu outbreaks.

 

Spain remained neutral throughout World War I and its press freely reported its flu cases, including when the Spanish king Alfonso XIII contracted it in the spring of 1918. This led to the misperception that the flu had originated or was at its worst in Spain

 

Historians aren’t actually sure where the 1918 flu strain began, but the first recorded cases were at a U.S. Army camp in Kansas in March 1918. By the end of 1919, it had infected up to a third of the world’s population and killed some 50 million people. It was the worst flu pandemic in recorded history, and it was likely exacerbated by a combination of censorship, skepticism and denial among warring nations.

 

(The story is an army doctor injected them with a vaccine that caused the flu. I’ll find the info but most assuredly this was created in 1917, so that is ptobably why POTUS says 1917 and the Spanish Flu. He was telling us it was made in an Army lab)

 

“The viruses don’t care where they come from, they just love taking advantage of wartime censorship,” says Carol R. Byerly, author of Fever of War: The Influenza Epidemic in the U.S. Army during World War I. “Censorship is very dangerous during a pandemic.”

 

When the flu broke out in 1918, wartime press censorship was more entrenched in European countries because Europe had been fighting since 1914, while the United States had only entered the war in 1917. It’s hard to know the scope of this censorship, since the most effective way to cover something up is to not leave publicly-accessible records of its suppression. Discovering the impact of censorship is also complicated by the fact that when governments pass censorship laws, people often censor themselves out of fear of breaking the law.

 

In Great Britain, which fought for the Allied Powers, “the Defense of the Realm Act was used to a certain extent to suppress…news stories that might be a threat to national morale,” says Catharine Arnold, author of Pandemic 1918: Eyewitness Accounts from the Greatest Medical Holocaust in Modern History. “The government can slam what’s called a D-Notice on [a news story]—‘D’ for Defense—and it means it can’t be published because it’s not in the national interest.”

 

Both newspapers and public officials claimed during the flu’s first wave in the spring and early summer of 1918 that it wasn’t a serious threat. The Illustrated London News wrote that the 1918 flu was “so mild as to show that the original virus is becoming attenuated by frequent transmission.” Sir Arthur Newsholme, chief medical officer of theBritish Local Government Board, suggested it was unpatriotic to be concerned with the flu rather than the war, Arnold says….

 

https://www.history.com/news/1918-pandemic-spanish-flu-censorship

Anonymous ID: d46f52 Jan. 14, 2022, 6:59 a.m. No.15373052   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3093 >>3107 >>3131 >>3247

>>15373000

THE TRUTH REVEALED ABOUT THE DEADLY 1918 SPANISH FLU: IT WAS ACTUALLY BACTERIAL PNEUMONIA

MAY 23, 2021

WWI in April 1917, the fledglingpharmaceutical industry had something they had never had before: a large supply of human test subjects. During the war years of 1918 to 1919, the U.S. Army ballooned to 6 million men, of which 2 million were sent overseas. The Rockefeller Institute for MedicalResearch took advantage of this new pool of human guinea pigsto conduct vaccine experiments.

In January 1918, vaccines were administered to soldiers at Ft. Riley, Kansas. Shortly afterward, the vaccine was offered by the Division Surgeon to the camp at large. The vaccine used was made in the laboratory of The Rockefeller Institute. Between Jan. 21 and June 4 of 1918, Dr. Frederick L. Gates reported an experiment in which soldiers were given three doses of a bacterial meningitis vaccine. The vaccines were spitball dosages of a vaccine serum derived from horses.

The details are available in a report by Dr. Gates: “Antimeningitis Vaccination and Observation on Agglutinins in the Blood of Chronic Meningococcus Carriers.”

Gates wrote that men in the experiment showed flu-like symptoms, including cough, vomiting and diarrhea, after receiving the vaccine. These symptoms are a disaster for men living in barracks, travelling on trains to the Atlantic Coast, sailing to Europe and living and fighting in trenches.

Then, shortly before breakfast on Monday, March 11, came the commencement of the first wave of the 1918 so-called influenza. By noon, camp surgeon Edward R. Schreiner had over 100 sick men on his hands, all apparently “suffering from the same malady.”

From Dr. Gates’ report:

Reactions … Several cases of looseness of the bowels or transient diarrhea were noted. This symptom had not been encountered before. Careful inquiry in individual cases often elicited the information that men who complained of the effects of vaccination were suffering from mild coryza, bronchitis, etc., at the time of injection.

According to Gates, they injected random dosages of an experimental bacterial meningitis vaccine into soldiers. Afterward, some of the soldiers had symptoms that were characterized as “simulated” meningitis, but Dr. Gates advances the fantastical claim that it wasn’t actual meningitis.

In 1918, “influenza” or flu was a catchall term for a disease of unknown origin. The misdirection term “Spanish Flu” has never been corrected. Whodathunk? It helped disguise the origin of the pandemic. If there were any real justice in this world, it would be called the “Rockefeller pandemic.”

By some strange coinkydink, even modern technology has not been able to pinpoint the killer influenza strain from this pandemic. The “Spanish flu” attacked healthy people in their prime. Bacterial pneumonia attacks people in their prime. Flu attacks the young, old and immuno-compromised.

In actuality bacterial pneumonia was the real killer — and thousands of autopsies confirm this fact.

Researchers looked at more than 9,000 autopsies, and “there were no negative (bacterial) lung culture results.”

The Institute said it distributed the bacterial serum to England, France, Belgium, Italy and other countries during WWI. Ultimately, these Rockefeller Institute quacks killed 50 to 100 million people via bacterial lung infections from 1918 to 1919.

An article from 2008 on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s website describes how sick WWI soldiers could pass along the bacteria to others by becoming “cloud adults.”

“Finally, for brief periods and to varying degrees, affected hosts became “cloud adults” who increased the aerosolization of colonizing strains of bacteria, particularly pneumococci, hemolytic streptococci, H. influenzae, and S. aureus.

Dr. Carol Byerly describeshow the “influenza” traveled like wildfire through the U.S. military. This is why they are injecting military today(Substitute “bacteria” for Dr. Byerly’s “influenza” or “virus.”):

Fourteen of the largest training camps had reported influenza outbreaks in March, April, or May, and recovered infected troops carried the virus with them aboard ships to France. As soldiers in the trenches became sick, the military evacuated them from the front lines and replaced them with healthy men. This process continuously brought the virus into contact with new hosts—young, healthy soldiers in which it could adapt, reproduce, and become extremely virulent without danger of burning out.

 

So they havd been trying to depopulate the world many times before

 

https://dannyboylimerick.wordpress.com/2021/05/23/the-truth-revealed-about-the-deadly-1918-spanish-flu-it-was-actually-bacterial-pneumonia/