Anonymous ID: 6ad2c2 July 17, 2023, 6:38 a.m. No.19194958   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5297 >>5467 >>5539

https://theragingpatriot.org/dr-michael-yeadon-former-pfizer-vp-and-chief-scientist-calls-covid-virus-vaccine-campaign-supranational-operation-to-injure-maim-and-kill-peopl

 

Dr. Michael Yeadon, former Pfizer VP and Chief Scientist, Calls COVID Virus, Vaccine Campaign ‘Supranational Operation’ to ‘Injure, Maim, and Kill People’

Linda Spina

May 11, 2023

 

Dr. Michael Yeadon, former Pfizer vice president and chief scientist for allergy and respiratory, sat for an interview with a reporter from Children’s Health Defense in London.

 

Yeadon was in London for the Truth Be Told Rally which is part of a campaign to “raise awareness about the damage” resulting from the COVID-19 vaccines.

 

The doctor, who spent most of his career working for Big Pharma, explained his position on COVID and the vaccine campaign that resulted. He called the whole thing a “supranational operation” designed “to injure people, to maim and kill deliberately.”

 

More at link.

Anonymous ID: 6ad2c2 July 17, 2023, 7:31 a.m. No.19195185   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19195012

As America is not a Democracy but a Republic.

 

https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/republic-countries

 

Most often, a republic is a single sovereign state. In some cases, however, a republic is a union, often called a federation, of smaller, sub-sovereign states. These states are typically also republican in nature. Each of the U.S. states is guaranteed a “republican form of government” by the United States Constitution. The Soviet Union—formally known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, or U.S.S.R.—was another federation. Its fifteen individual nations were all sub-sovereign republics.

 

History of the republic

Before the 1600s, the term "republic" was used to designate any state that was not an authoritarian regime. Republic could encompass not only democratic states but also oligarchies, aristocracies, and monarchies. French philosopher Jean Bodin wrote a definition of the republic in his Six Books of the Commonwealth in 1576. It read, “the rightly ordered government of a number of families, and of those things which are their common concern, by a sovereign power.” The definition of a republic began to shift during the 17th and 18th centuries, amid growing resistance to absolutist regimes and a series of revolutions. These include the American Revolution and the French Revolution. These events shaped the term "republic" to designate governments in which the leader is periodically appointed under a constitution (as opposed to inherited as it would be in a monarchy), typically by an election.