The Fear

It’s certainly ramping up now. All kinds of bizarre new diseases, many of which have never been previously heard of, some which are known but rare, some blasts from the past and even the totally imaginary ‘Disease X’ which has not been identified, yet they are developing a vaccine for it. Which is, of course not even remotely possible.

Measles is back, and it’s apparently become deadly since the 1960s when I, and everyone I knew, caught it. Why didn’t we all get vaccinated? That could have something to do with the measles vaccine not being available until 1968, by which time almost all of my age group had already been through it. So we already had immunity.

Measles was unpleasant but I don’t recall anyone dying from it. Nobody went to hospital, we all went through it at home. The adults around us didn’t catch it, most likely because they’d all already had it as children. Same for chicken pox, mumps and all the rest. We were actively encouraged to get mumps well before puberty since getting it after puberty can leave you sterile. That was a very nasty one – but again, I don’t know of anyone who died or ended up in hospital.

Oh and let’s not forget our old stalwart, Covid-19. Yes, it’s still around. Of course it is. So is bird flu, swine flu and the 1918 Spanish flu. All the old flus are still around. They just get weaker over time. Not by some kind of tinfoil hat magic, they do it by a form of natural selection.

They start out nasty, but these kinds of viruses are incredibly unstable and very, very prone to replication errors. Most of those errors result in a virus that can’t infect, or can’t replicate if it does get into a cell. Some will still be nasty, some will produce a milder form of the illness. If you get the nasty one, you’re advised to stay at home and avoid contact with people – well, if you get the nasty version of any of these, you really won’t feel much like getting out of bed. So it won’t spread easily.

If you get the mild version you’ll just get a cold. You can still function and still go out. The mild version will spread far and wide. Here’s the kicker – if you get the mild version, its protein structure is similar enough to the nasty one that your immune system will set up immunity that works against both. You get the mild one, you’re immune to the nasty one. Eventually the nasty one is entirely replaced by the mild one.

So why doesn’t the mild one die out too? Simple. It doesn’t make you very ill for very long so you just put up with it. Maybe take some aspirin or paracetamol and drink plenty of water and that’s it. There’s no big push to eradicate the common cold because a) it’s just an inconvenience and b) so many different respiratory viruses have now reached this stage that it’s not possible for one vaccine to deal with them all. You’d need at least 400 different vaccines, so many holes in your arm that you could rip it off like a stamp. I don’t think many people would put up with that for a cold, so there’d be a mass of vaccine production and very few, if any, customers for it. It won’t happen.

Anyway, moving on. I don’t want to get into lecture mode again.

There is now an mRNA ‘vaccine’ for cancer. Just like vaccines for an imaginary ‘Disease X’, this is just silly. Some cancers are claimed to be caused by infective agents, but many are caused by radiation, chemical exposure, other environmental factors and sometimes just plain bad luck in your metabolism/genetics. How do you vaccinate against non-biological causes of cancer? Your immune system isn’t equipped to deal with radiation or diesel exhaust fumes.

Okay, it’s true that your immune system routinely identifies and kills cells that have gone rogue. It’s always done that. Once in a while it’ll miss some, or it gets overwhelmed – but instead of researching why that happens and why it seems to happen more often these days, the Pharmers have developed something that works through the magic of unicorn tears and pixie pee.

They claim their ‘vaccine’ will train your immune system to deal with cancer cells. Your immune system already knows how to do that. Cancer charities used to claim that 1 in 4 of us will experience cancer in our lifetimes. They didn’t specify which, because cancer ranges from deadly ones like pancreatic cancer, to benign warts. Have a wart? Yep, you’re one of the ‘1 in 4’. Now the claim is that 1 in 2 of us will experience cancer. I don’t have it, so you’re out of luck I’m afraid.

Cancer rates have increased pretty much exponentially since the 1950s and have exploded in recent years. What could be the cause? Smoking? Well that’s declined massively over the same period so while smoking can be blamed for some cancers, a rapidly declining rate in the cause can’t explain a rapidly increasing rate in the effect. The same goes for traffic fumes. While there’s a lot more traffic around, engines have become much cleaner over time and the latest surge in cancers coincided with the rise of electric and hydrogen powered vehicles. Again, the declining cause cannot correlate with a rising effect.

Is the cause microbial? Hygiene, water cleanliness, food standards, have all increased over the same period so there’s no correlation with a rise in infection with a rise in cancers. So what is it? Many other causes have been postulated but as far as I know, none have been tested. I won’t speculate on them now, my tinfoil hat is at the dry cleaners. Maybe another day.

What is notable is that nobody is even looking for a cure for cancer. All the research concentrates on treatments. I don’t believe this lunatic ‘vaccine’ will work either. It’s currently undergoing human trials but how will they test who gets cancer and who doesn’t? There are so many possible causes it’s impossible to know whether that ‘vaccine’ has worked. How will they sell it?

Well, by a remarkable coincidence, King Jug-Ears has been diagnosed with cancer. Yes, he waited 70 years to get the job and then calls in sick. Which kind of cancer, we are not being told. Which is a little strange since the Royal Enlarged Prostate was all over the news recently (enlarged prostate is common in men over 60, nothing suspicious in that). So if it’s okay to discuss the Royal Nether Regions, why so coy about the cancer?

It has been speculated that it’s an excuse for the King to stand down and make way for King Bill. It’s also, rather credibly, been speculated that it’s all a marketing ploy. The King gets the ‘vaccine’, is miraculously ‘cured’ and the plebs all line up for it. Heck, it worked for him, it’ll work for us, right?

Well… only as long as they don’t specify which kind of cancer he was ‘cured’ from. Otherwise people will think ‘it worked on that kind of cancer, it might not work on the kind I have’. The marketing needs to be vague enough to cover all the bases.

There is a lot of profit in fear. Fear of disease, fear of cancer, these are things people are prepared to spend a lot of money to avoid. And yet cures are not on offer. Only treatments, many of which are lifelong treatments.

So what else are we to be afraid of? Well, there’s Putin and his Russian hordes who are imminently going to invade Europe and nuke the USA. To which some of the more astute have responded… why would he? We’re all busy destroying ourselves. All Putin has to do is get the popcorn, crack open a beer and sit back and watch. China is doing the same, while selling us the solar panels and windmills that are destroying our countryside, farmlands and wildlife. We get the unreliable power supply, China build more coal fired power plants and buys everyone else’s coal. We’re in the process of starving and freezing ourselves to death while irrevocably destroying our own culture and sterilising our youth. Why would Russia or China invade? What do we have that they might, in any way, remotely want to take home with them?

There has been talk of conscription. In most western countries, in lockstep. Conscription? Does the military really want an influx of noodle armed man buns with soy lattes and avocado toast, who will burst into tears if the enemy uses the wrong pronouns at them? Somehow I doubt it – although the top brass seem to have been well indoctrinated into the modern lunacy so you never know. Any enemy would be facing an army that can barely lift a gun, never mind fire it, and soldiers who want guns banned altogether.

I have no fear of Russia or China invading. They really don’t need to bother. All they have to do is wait. Give it a couple more years and we’ll welcome them. Just like when the UK government invited William of Orange to invade us because the King we had at the time was so much of a twat we’d rather be under foreign control. History does indeed seem to repeat, except this time it won’t be the government welcoming the invaders.

We are to be scared of global warming (it’s really not happening or all those who bang on about it wouldn’t be buying seafront mansions). We are to be scared of Islam and Zionists and we are supposed to pick a side. I hope they both lose. We are to be scared of the common cold and the common Jew even though we’ve had no issue with either for a very, very long time. Suddenly they are out to kill us. Meanwhile the ones who really are out to kill us, we keep voting for.

Next up, inevitably, are the aliens. Loads of new ‘alien sightings’ lately and much ‘leakage’ of allegedly closely guarded secrets which include surprisingly grainy videos. You’d think an advanced military would have better cameras.

There is much to be scared of, but they are all imaginary hobgoblins. They are there to distract you from the ones you really should be scared of. The ones who are really out to get you – but you don’t seem to be scared of them.

Instead, you vote for them.

43 thoughts on “The Fear

  1. I have neither proof nor a tinfoil hat but have long been of the opinion that some cancers are caused by the endless variations of radio waves to which we are all subjected 24/7. Were cancers less prevalent before, say, 1850? We will probably never know because the medicos of the day didn’t have the analytical technology we have nowadays. Mind you, we all know that Big Pharma are keeping the facts under wraps . . .

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I had lung cancer 13 yrs ago, only had surgery and fine for 12 years. Came back a year ago and has now spread a bit. I was offered immunotherapy, I was wary about this and really looked into it and spoke to people who had it and family members. The side effects can be so horrific, and a friend who started it recently seems to have lost her mind as it’s affected her brain and body. I have decided against it, I prefer quality to quantity! I know how it works in theory but the risk is far too high. I will take my chances and am reasonably ok at present.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Please investigate noninvasive radio surgery. It targets only the tumor(s) is done in four 10 minute sessions, has no to limited side effects and actually works to kill the cancer.

      Liked by 2 people

      • Thank you, I will look into this, I was originally offered stereostatic radiotherapy, is this the same? then a PET scan showed a spread when I was told radiotherapy would not be suitable and immunotherapy was recommended. My gut instinct said no and the more I looked into it the less I liked the idea. The side effects can be so bad even if you stop after one infusion it can stay in your body for six months. It seems to work for some people and some cancers if you can tolerate the side effects, it can even kill or permanently damage health. It was just too big a gamble for me, maybe if I was younger I might have risked it.

        Liked by 1 person

        • yes, what they called radiotherapy is likely radiosurgery of which there are several kinds but all work on the same principle—pinpoint targeting tumors and killing them. Even tho its success is well established, the medical establishment prefers to sell surgery or the other stuff, so perhaps you should try to get a second opinion on its utility for you from a radiologist who performs it. I can only attest that a friend with a stage 1 lung cancer was completely cured (and it’s now 8 years later) and a cousin with a metastasized cancer lived longer and with less pain because it at least shrunk some of the tumors. So ot’s at least worth investigating. Good luck.

          Liked by 1 person

    • Try a high protein diet with no sugar at all. It may or may not help, but at least you’ll eat well.

      It is worth noting that carnivore diets are known to put early stage Diabetes II into remission. Indeed, health advice prior to the 1960’s used to recommend it. There is also anecdotal evidence that such a lifestyle has other beneficial effects.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Thank you. Very well said.
    Yesterday was strange. Suddenly total UK msm, all sections, “realised” that Sleepy Joe is not the full shilling. All in concert!
    What a coincidence.
    Hoi poloi revolting in Canada, Ireland, Netherlands, France, Germany. No. Nothing. False rumours. Nothing to see here.
    Look, The Ginger Duke has extracted some money from Mirror Group.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. That’s pretty well rounded everything up, and yes everything is bollocks.

    Tucker Carlson interviewed Putin, over 2 hours worth, well worth watching, you’ll get the full monty of it on Twitter, they’ll be out to get Tucker now.

    I’m far more worried about our bought and paid for politicians and media chums doing the bidding of the WEFUNWHO mobs than i am about Putin…who seems a bloody sight more sane and knowledgeable than almost every bugger supposedly in charge of the west as it disappears round the U bend.

    Liked by 2 people

  5. A mate who volunteered with McMillans trust years ago was told that deaths by cancer, found during autopsy, in the early 1900s, was 1 in 25.
    I believe the increase in rates of cancer is due to pushing of Pharma drugs over the last 50 years, statins especially, also drugs for high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes.

    Liked by 2 people

    • They tried to get me on statins a few months ago because apparently cholesterol is borderline, they got same NO as they got for all their recent so called vaccine drug pushing.

      Liked by 2 people

        • Much obliged to my learned friend and no i didn’t know that before, as they say every day is a schoolday.
          Like most of us who have observed with growing horror the events of the last few years the very last place we want to visit for health treatment/advice is our NHS, blessed be its name…they’re still pestering us for flu etc jabs despite having had nothing to do with their death shots or whatever muck they’re offering presently.

          Liked by 2 people

  6. Well, I agree with most of this, except I don’t think that you have got any idea of what really displaced James II, ridiculously and hilariously misdefined by you as a “twat”. There’s a long history in England of pig-ignorant anti-Catholicism, which was spread amongst the population in EXACTLY the same way as the sort of “fears” that you point to … it’s perfectly possible that the template for inducing the mass-hysteria you condemn was worked out in the 16th century, by an ultra-Protestant cabal. The antipapist agitators generated and exploited “threats” in JUST the same way as our modern politicians and planners. The spirit of Titus Oates still haunts the country – and stalks through the chambers of your brain too: this is a great misfortune for you, for if you wrote with a bit more historical research your blog would be INVALUABLE !

    Liked by 1 person

    • I’m a microbiologist, not a historian.
      That said, I did a lot of research on Charles I and the English civil war for a book called ‘Jessica’s Trap’, It’s fiction, it’s not actually about the civil war but it’s set at that time, so I wanted the background to be accurate. The incident with James II and William of Orange being invited to invade was later, I had some peripheral knowledge about it but no real detail. It happened quite some time after the setting for the novel.

      If I ever set a story around that time, I’ll certainly research it, but as I said, I’m not a historian.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Thanks! The great Whig historians have a lot to answer for: but, as Belloc pointed out, much of English patriotism depends on their distorted statements.
        A propos of Belloc, and your statements on modern disease, the old boy wrote this, over a century ago:
        “Of old, when folk lay sick and sorely tried,
        The doctors gave them physic, and they died:
        But here’s a happier age: for now we know
        Both how to make folk sick, and keep them so”

        Liked by 3 people

  7. How about more cancer now because people are living longer and long enough for cell reproduction to get sloppy? As for measles, btw, as a kid I had both kinds—regular measles and something then called the German (aka Three Day) Measles.

    Liked by 1 person

    • I don’t remember getting the German measles, if I did it certainly didn’t burn itself into my memory like the others.

      It’s true that the longer we live, the more chance we have of getting some malfunction that leads to cancer. A corrupted gene or a very long term exposure to something nasty, perhaps. I still don’t think there can be a vaccine against it though.

      Liked by 1 person

    • There’s likely a lot more cancer now simply because the old killers like lung silicosis, coal miners’ lung, accidental death and death from sheer over-work and poor nutrition are a lot rarer these days. Similarly bacterial diseases are much more readily curable, as are a slew of other disease.

      We see more cancer because the other killers aren’t any more.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Re “disease X”

    Of course, anyone who’s truly awake knows that “disease x” will be another possibly upcoming fabricated staged criminal psyop event (https://www.globalresearch.ca/covid-having-failed-do-job-bill-gates-making-second-run-culling-population/5847109 & https://www.globalresearch.ca/world-health-organisation-head-global-compliance-needed-next-pandemic/5847006 & https://www.thelastamericanvagabond.com/disease-x-pandemic-agreement) by the ruling mobster gang of psychopaths like Covid was (https://www.rolf-hefti.com/covid-19-coronavirus.html).

    “Amazing that these geniuses can’t find any real covid virus yet they can accurately predict when the next fake virus will appear.” — Tom

    If you have been injected with Covid jabs/bioweapons and are concerned, then verify what batch number you were injected with at https://tinyurl.com/ytthwrwm

    “Disease X is nothing. It’s a promo for a movie that hasn’t been released. … Naturally, all the virus addicts (both mainstream and alternative) are drooling with anticipation. “Yeah, a majestic killer virus. What lab are they producing it in? Porton Down? Wuhan? NOW we’ll see thousands of people keeling over in the street. I can’t wait.” Here’s a clue. Almost anyone with resources and assets can make people keel over in the street. … THEN they can also say: “It’s a virus.” At that point, every uninformed and ignorant and clueless person will automatically buy the virus story. …. In all these fake pandemics, the toxic vaccines and drugs are the crushing hammers. But the big picture is: eliminate all traces of Nationalism and substituting Global Governance. Under the rubric of “cooperative and uniform medical measures.” Enveloping all nations. That’s what these fake viruses are FOR. That’s what Disease X is FOR.” — Jon Rappoport, investigative journalist, Jan 2024 (https://archive.ph/S882j)

    Liked by 1 person

  9. One thing you neglect to mention with influenza is that it isn’t just one viral disease of humans. It is a partial zoonotic as well, and human influenza gets genes from pig influenza and (by way of pigs, mostly Chinese farmed pigs) from bird flu in wild bird populations.

    Bird flu is a gut disease of mostly waterfowl, and is adapted to birds and their higher body temperatures. It sometimes gets into flocks of tame ducks in China where ducks are extensively but not very hygienically farmed, and from the ducks to the pigs that these farms also normally have.

    That lack of hygiene also contributes to the pig flu occasionally jumping species to pig farmers, and via the live animal markets of China to other humans as well. From there the general population of influenza viruses tend to get their genes topped up with weird and wonderful new genes every so often.

    It was cross-species gene transfer like this which gave the world the 1918 flu epidemic, which was likely spread by the huge amount of human travel that was happening in the wake of the First World War. That was a nasty bugger; caused cytokine storms when it infected people which hurt those with the most healthy immune systems the most, so young children and elderly people were actually mostly spared whereas the healthy died from it.

    That’s why people try to guesstimate a new flu vaccine every year, and generally get the mix about half right.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Just to play devil’s advocate about chemo…..

    My wife was diagnosed with cancer about 7 years ago now. They knew it was a blood cancer, but not the exact type, so she went through numerous tests before they finally narrowed the cancer down to a very rare non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. By the time all the tests had been done she was at stage 4!

    She received chemo for it, an experimental type that was not yet approved by our god old NHS, so funding was sought from one of the cancer charities, (I know not which one, but am extremely grateful to them). Four doses of this toxic muck and she has been cancer free ever since. For blood cancers like this probably the best analogy is that they simply switched off and rebooted her blood cell production.

    Now to the concoction that they pumped into her, and which made her exceptionally sick at the time. It is based on the mustard gas that was used to such horrific effect in the WW1 trenches! The person delivering it to the ward came in something approaching a full hazmat suit, complete with helmet and visor, which was a little off putting, since my poor wife was then going to get this stuff pumped into her veins. Apparently, this cure came from behind the iron curtain, had been used in Czechoslovakia for years, but only got approval here after the usual extensive testing, hence the reason for the delay in the communist block opening up in the 1990’s, and this stuff still being experimental in 2007. Certainly some pharma was making a profit out this process, but given the result, I don’t care. It works.

    In all probability my poor wife will not live to be 100, but really, how many of us do?

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Just to play devil’s advocate about chemo…..

    My wife was diagnosed with cancer about 7 years ago now. They knew it was a blood cancer, but not the exact type, so she went through numerous tests before they finally narrowed the cancer down to a very rare non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. By the time all the tests had been done she was at stage 4!

    She received chemo for it, an experimental type that was not yet approved by our god old NHS, so funding was sought from one of the cancer charities, (I know not which one, but am extremely grateful to them). Four doses of this toxic muck and she has been cancer free ever since. For blood cancers like this probably the best analogy is that they simply switched off and rebooted her blood cell production.

    Now to the concoction that they pumped into her, and which made her exceptionally sick at the time. It is based on the mustard gas that was used to such horrific effect in the WW1 trenches! The person delivering it to the ward came in something approaching a full hazmat suit, complete with helmet and visor, which was a little off putting, since my poor wife was then going to get this stuff pumped into her veins. Apparently, this cure came from behind the iron curtain, had been used in Czechoslovakia for years, but only got approval here after the usual extensive testing, hence the reason for the delay in the communist block opening up in the 1990’s, and this stuff still being experimental in 2007. Certainly some pharma was making a profit out this process, but given the result, I don’t care. It works.

    In all probability my poor wife will not live to be 100, but really, how many of us do?

    Liked by 1 person

  12. I worked in Medical Admissions (sort of a direct entry A&E for medical conditions) and we ‘tracked’ certain data. One of the things that was made patently obvious was the “hot-spots” for cancer admissions.

    These would be (depending on ‘type’) around high diesel exposure areas (like junctions), high EMF areas (under HT transmission lines or by transformer sub-stations – long known for ‘causing’ Leukaemias), or of course in certain families. Throw in the (long known) association of certain virus’ (e.g. Coxsackie B) and almost without exception you could predict that every patient with a cancer diagnosis had ‘one or more of those criteria’ as a history. [It’s precisely why ‘they’ had to invent the mythical “second-hand smoking” idiocy, to explain not just why rates of cancer and heart-disease were the same in smoking/non-smoking, but that the majority of diagnoses (adjusted for population) were non/never-smokers. I worked oncology too, and finding a smoking/smoked patient was the rarest of exceptions – fact!].

    As to the rest, I agree … well except about the aliens. The simple fact is any vaguely sapient alien will be avoiding us like the plague (think Friday night in a sinkhole diverse estate in the inner city – would ‘you’ go there voluntarily?) after witnessing what ‘our betters’ get up to. Personally I’m not even vaguely ‘terrified’ of the idea of them arriving, I’d (like that meme circulating recently) cheer on our new overlords, because nothing they could do would be worse than is being done to us already.

    Liked by 1 person

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