COVID Is A SCAM

Hundreds of demonstrators across Australia have broken social distancing rules to protest against vaccinations, 5G and the coronavirus pandemic.   

 

Protesters gathered at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne on Saturday and claimed the global COVID-19 health crisis was a 'scam'.

 

There are more than five-million cases of coronavirus cases across the globe and at least 350,000 people have died. Australia has recorded more than 7,000 infections and the death toll sits at 103 following the successful implementation of social distancing restrictions. 

 

Brazen demonstrators also carried signs declaring they were against vaccines and 5G technology.

 

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/coronavirus/covid-19-is-a-scam-no-mandatory-vaccines-and-5g-equals-co...

 

Lol @ the anti-virus shields on the horses

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Re: COVID Is A SCAM


@katistrophik wrote:
Sorry I just photo shopped it as a jpg LOL

Thanks to Dom, I did get it in the picture file! 

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@davewil1964 wrote:

@lalbo-81 wrote:

@katistrophik wrote:

Found it......

pfffttt.jpg


NEATO!  How do I keep it to use,help! 


With a mouse, right-click > save as...

 

And put it somewhere you can find it.

 

When you want to use it, click on the pic of the mountain (next to the chain) at the top of the reply window, find it and upload it.



Cool, thanks Dave!

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@davewil1964 wrote:

It will likely come in handy.

 

Many thanks to katistrophik for this valuable public service


Yes, thank you, Kat! 

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There's big money to be made peddling lies and misinformation about vaccinations. So why isn't the government doing anything about it?

Itโ€™s bracing but perhaps not surprising to see that Donald Trump was fanning the false link between vaccination and autism back in 2014.



Saint Louis University Assistant Professor of Law Ana Santos Rutschman has reported on an increase in anti-vaxxer misinformation from 2014, with some of that rise traced back to automated messaging, or bots, generated from Russia.

In Australia, Christine Baynes, who is part of a loose alliance of โ€œactive skepticsโ€ with an interest in the anti-vax movement, told Inq that 2015 marked the time when anti-vaxxer messaging which had been prevalent for well over a decade became fused with an overarching anti-science and anti-government narrative, eventually linking up with the 5G conspiracy theory which ties the 5G network to the spread of coronavirus and holds that Bill Gates is behind a plan to control the world through vaccination.

Yet despite an explosion in misinformation โ€” in some cases led by high profile social media entrepreneurs โ€” Inqโ€™s investigation shows Australian regulators have failed to stop false medical claims which have a direct impact on public health.

โ€œThe remnants of the Occupy movement in Australia met up with the conspiratorial fringe of the anti-vax movement and changed the landscape significantly,โ€ Baynes explained. โ€œIt was quite a shift.โ€

The Australian offshoot of the Occupy Wall Street movement had attracted a cross-section of established political campaigners, anarchists, Marxists and libertarian economists, united around a core message that the system was broken and the rules were rigged.

According to Baynes, the catalyst for the coming together of the groups was the federal governmentโ€™s โ€œno jab, no payโ€ social security legislation โ€” interpreted by the groups as state overreach in the decisions of private citizens.

โ€œWhat I call the โ€˜irrational anti-scienceโ€™ of the anti-vaccination movement became stupid and extreme,โ€ Baynes said.

The fused movement grew bigger and meaner. It came to stand for freedom in the face of a government apparently controlled by unseen forces. The newly powerful conspiracy movement was carried along by the old anti-vaxxer call to โ€œtrust your own researchโ€ โ€” a call to rise up against the tyranny of the expert.

Inqโ€™s investigation reveals that whatever the ideological motives of some, others have made good money from the misinformation and conspiracy business.

Internationally, British doctor Andrew Wakefield remains the most prominent anti-vaccination activist, more than 20 years after his flawed study linking the MMR vaccine to autism was published โ€” and later withdrawn โ€” by medical journal The Lancet. British journalist Brian Deer disclosed that Wakefield had been paid over ยฃ435,000 through a company owned by his wife as an expert witness in lawsuits alleging vaccine-linked autism.

โ€œUnlike expert witnesses, who give professional advice and opinions,โ€ Deer reported, โ€œWakefield had negotiated an unprecedented contract with [a British solicitor] to conduct clinical and scientific research. The goal was to find evidence of what the two men claimed to be a โ€˜new syndromeโ€™, intended to be the centrepiece of (later failed) litigation on behalf of an eventual 1600 British families.โ€

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Wakefield was separately paid ยฃ55,000 start-up funding for hospital-based research.

As serious questions were raised about his research Wakefield left the UK for the United States, where he has joined forces with the wealthy anti-vaccination proponent Robert F Kennedy Jr, son of Robert Kennedy and nephew of president John F Kennedy.

Kennedy junior was last year revealed to have paid โ€” along with โ€œhealthy lifestyleโ€ advocate Larry Cook โ€” for more than half the anti-vaccination advertisements appearing on Facebook, which itself has profited from the anti-vaxxer/5G conspiracy industry by way of paid ads.

Since 2018 Wakefield has been in a romantic relationship with Australian one-time supermodel Elle Macpherson, co-founder of natural health business WelleCo, a major player in the international wellness industry. Inq has asked McPherson, through her company, if she endorses Wakefieldโ€™s anti-vaccination position. We have received no reply, though the wellness and natural remedies industry clearly profits from the anti-vax movement.

Corporately, Americaโ€™s biggest business Amazon has been selling anti-vaccination books and videos and only reined in its sales after a feature in Wired magazine exposed that it was selling โ€œautism cureโ€ books that suggest children drink toxic, bleach-like substances.

The doTerra company, based in Utah, sells essential oils using a multi-level marketing model, akin to pyramid selling. The privately-owned company is one of the biggest in the multi-billion essential oils sector. There is evidence that doTerra distributors have used an anti-vax message to sell products and develop distribution chains.

A New Yorker feature reported on one doTerra representative who held an โ€œessential oils 101 classโ€ at a barbecue restaurant in Waco, Texas. There she told her audience that her interest in oils was due to her three-year-old son showing โ€œsymptoms of autism after receiving the measles-mumps-rubella vaccineโ€. Another doTerra representative begins his anti-vax spiel with the words, โ€œI already know Iโ€™m going to catch criticism because Iโ€™m not a doctor or qualified in any type of medicine studyโ€.

Here an American woman called Season Johnson, an โ€œindependent wellness advocateโ€, markets doTerra oils to help โ€œdetoxifyโ€ from a vaccination.

In 2014 the US Federal Drug Administration sent doTerrra an official warning for allowing its distributors to market its products as possible cures for cancer, Ebola and autism. DoTerra Australia failed to respond to Inqโ€™s questions on whether or not the company warned its distributors against making false claims linking vaccination and autism.

In Australia the conspiracy economyโ€™s most prominent figure is television celebrity Pete Evans. While Evans says he is not an anti-vaxxer, his claims have now veered into the lurid territory populated by 5G and QAnon conspiracy theorists.

Evans allegedly spruiked the benefits of a $15,000 device, the โ€œBioChargerโ€, during a Facebook live stream in April to his more than 1.4 million followers, claiming that it could be used in relation to โ€œWuhan coronavirusโ€. The Therapeutic Goods Administration found Evansโ€™ claims had โ€œno apparent foundationโ€, issued two infringement notices and fined Evans $25,200. Evans has denied the claims.

Samoan-Australian influencer Taylor Winterstein, whose husband Frank is a former NRL star, has built a brand called โ€œTayโ€™s Way Movementโ€ based on her rejection of the science of vaccination, which she has linked with Bill Gates and his supposed role in the spread of COVID-19.

โ€œIn order to understand the corruption, conflicts of interest and collateral damage that comes with the 2020 coronavirus PLANdemicโ€ฆ we have to start with BILL GATES,โ€ she wrote on Instagram in April.

Winterstein is selling $200 tickets for her 2020 Australian tour. Alternatively you can pay $1499 (with a payment plan available) to attend an โ€œ8 WEEK ONLINE PROGRAM that will break mainstream consciousness!!!โ€ for people who are โ€œready to say goodbye to a fear-mongering, disempowering system and hello to freedom, to liberationโ€.

Joining Winterstein in the online program is a collection of anti-vaccination figures including a chiropractor, a nutritionist, a naturopath and a midwife.

Another entrepreneur, Therese Kerr, mother of supermodel Miranda Kerr, presents โ€œresearchโ€ questioning MMR, polio and HPV/cervical cancer vaccination, side by side with a link to a โ€œwellness shopโ€ selling everything from detox programs to linen to organic wine.

And underpinning it all are the chiropractors, some of whom profit on a business model which relies on rejecting mainstream medicine and embracing anti-vaccination as a symbol of alternative therapy and way of life. It was, after all, two chiropractors who formed Australiaโ€™s longest running anti-vaccination group, the Australian Vaccination-risks Network, in the early 1990s and which still has a solid foothold in mainstream rejectionist communities in northern NSW.


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Samoan-Australian influencer Taylor Winterstein, whose husband Frank is a former NRL star, has built a brand called โ€œTayโ€™s Way Movementโ€ based on her rejection of the science of vaccination, which she has linked with Bill Gates and his supposed role in the spread of COVID-19.

โ€œIn order to understand the corruption, conflicts of interest and collateral damage that comes with the 2020 coronavirus PLANdemicโ€ฆ we have to start with BILL GATES,โ€ she wrote on Instagram in April.

Winterstein is selling $200 tickets for her 2020 Australian tour. Alternatively you can pay $1499 (with a payment plan available) to attend an โ€œ8 WEEK ONLINE PROGRAM that will break mainstream consciousness!!!โ€ for people who are โ€œready to say goodbye to a fear-mongering, disempowering system and hello to freedom, to liberationโ€.

If you have any dough left over after that scam, perhaps you should consider buying your friends an "I'm With Stupid" t-shirt.
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@myoclon1cjerk wrote:
Samoan-Australian influencer Taylor Winterstein, whose husband Frank is a former NRL star, has built a brand called โ€œTayโ€™s Way Movementโ€ based on her rejection of the science of vaccination, which she has linked with Bill Gates and his supposed role in the spread of COVID-19.

โ€œIn order to understand the corruption, conflicts of interest and collateral damage that comes with the 2020 coronavirus PLANdemicโ€ฆ we have to start with BILL GATES,โ€ she wrote on Instagram in April.

Winterstein is selling $200 tickets for her 2020 Australian tour. Alternatively you can pay $1499 (with a payment plan available) to attend an โ€œ8 WEEK ONLINE PROGRAM that will break mainstream consciousness!!!โ€ for people who are โ€œready to say goodbye to a fear-mongering, disempowering system and hello to freedom, to liberationโ€.

If you have any dough left over after that scam, perhaps you should consider buying your friends an "I'm With Stupid" t-shirt.

And a good 5000 feet of tin foil..

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@myoclon1cjerk wrote:

Samoan-Australian influencer Taylor Winterstein, whose husband Frank is a former NRL star, has built a brand called โ€œTayโ€™s Way Movementโ€ based on her rejection of the science of vaccination, which she has linked with Bill Gates and his supposed role in the spread of COVID-19.

โ€œIn order to understand the corruption, conflicts of interest and collateral damage that comes with the 2020 coronavirus PLANdemicโ€ฆ we have to start with BILL GATES,โ€ she wrote on Instagram in April.

Winterstein is selling $200 tickets for her 2020 Australian tour. Alternatively you can pay $1499 (with a payment plan available) to attend an โ€œ8 WEEK ONLINE PROGRAM that will break mainstream consciousness!!!โ€ for people who are โ€œready to say goodbye to a fear-mongering, disempowering system and hello to freedom, to liberationโ€.

If you have any dough left over after that scam, perhaps you should consider buying your friends an "I'm With Stupid" t-shirt.

Gates is not a savoury character so I have been told. There are many credible people that do not trust him.  Anyway, my reply isn't about him,. It is about Mrs Winterstein. I personally don't see any scam in what she has been doing. None of it is illegal.

Yes, one seminar was too high priced. I certainly wouldn't pay that much.

 

Anyway, just a thought here. What would be worse? Denying a proven effective early stage treatment in favour of pushing out a multi-billion dollar spinning vaccine with treatable people dying in the interim or someone running an expensive health seminar which has some good points?

 

The below was originally posted by rogespeed





Re: coronavirus vaccine, who should get it first?

in reply to 4channel

on โ€Ž11-29-2020 08:34 PM

 

@rogespeed wrote:

@4channel wrote:
Well, best to look at promoting good health and well-being before considering a rush vaccine pushed out by a greed-driven Big Pharma.

for those that do not need immediate hospitalisation

 

โ€˜Only a one in 17 billion chance hydroxychloroquine doesnโ€™t workโ€™: medical professor (msn.com)

 

https://community.ebay.com.au/t5/Community-Spirit/coronavirus-vaccine-who-should-get-it-first/m-p/23...

 


A better link for the same clip is below

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WdsAVTkSDhM

 


So isn't this a whole lot worse.? LIves could have been saved.

 

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I take Plaquenil for an incurable  auotimmune "tropical" disease, while it has limited desired effects it has also affected (permanently) my eyesight and my liver function.

 

I only take it when i need to. I need full eye examinations every 3 months and weekly blood tests. If levels get too high I get a phone call to stop the medication immediately....very safe that hydroxychloroquine......  Smiley Indifferent

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TELL ME AND I WILL FORGET, SHOW ME AND I MAY REMEMBER,, INVOLVE ME AND I WILL UNDERSTAND Confucius 450bc
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As with everything, moderation is the key.

Administered in safe doses, and only when needed, it can be effective in the treatment of COVID if detected in the early stages.
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@icyfroth wrote:
As with everything, moderation is the key.

Administered in safe doses, and only when needed, it can be effective in the treatment of COVID if detected in the early stages.

Absolutely icyfroth! Taken correctly hydroxochlorquine works well. The selected-to-demonise reports by the managed media concentrate on the negative aspect where people are overdosing. We have to keep in mind that hydroxochlorqquiine is quite cheap to make. Not a big money spinner for Big Pharma like psychotropic drugs, chemotherapy and vaccines are.

 

People experiencing good health. well being etc. are of no interest to Big Pharma in the profit sense. The same can be said for countries that are experiencing stability and good relations with their neighbours. They are of no interest to weapons manufacturers.

Ahhh, but they are if the well being and stability can be compromised. Then they are of great interest!

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