IF I THOUGHT that we were winning the battle by constantly presenting evidence of the harm from vaccines, I fear I was wrong. A few days ago I was staying with friends, and tentatively brought up my views on covid vaccines, lockdowns, masks, climate change and other issues which TCW has exposed. They looked at me as though I was mad and even said that I had ‘always had strange ideas’.
I have known these friends for very many years and was at school with the female half of the couple. As I made my leave, she informed me that she was going to have a vaccination that afternoon. ‘What for?’ I asked. ‘Measles.’ Measles? ‘I thought it was only children who had the measles jab,’ I said, and she told me that measles was on the rise and that she certainly didn’t want to get it at her advanced age. When I demurred, she said she had every vaccination going. She thinks I am crazy to be so sceptical about them and holds to the belief that they have been miracle lifesavers for 200 or more years. ‘What about polio?’ she asked. This is always, always brought up by pro-vaxxers, none of whom has read Dr Suzanne Humphries’s book Dissolving Illusions: Disease, Vaccines and the Forgotten History, which amasses convincing evidence that a vaccine could never have eradicated polio. But vaccination enthusiasts prefer not to have their illusions dissolved, it seems.
Was it significant that in my bedroom at my friends’ house there was a copy of How to Avoid a Climate Disaster by Bill Gates? And was it equally significant that, although there were thousands of books in their home, there was a grand total of none by covid, vax and climate dissidents? I have a shelf full of these books and am always adding to my collection. Nor had my friends ever read TCW, the Daily Sceptic, Miri AF or even heard of these sites.
Now I am very fond of my old schoolfriend, whom I have known since we were 14. We worked in Fleet Street together and have both been through many ups and downs in our lives. But if I thought she and her husband might at least hear me out, I was sadly mistaken. Yet my friend is not at all well. She has a serious heart condition and can hardly walk. She says she does not feel confident to go to London by herself any more, as she worries that she might have one of her ‘turns’. She said: ‘I don’t know what else to call them, but I fear that I might pass out or just collapse without warning.’ She is on a lot of medication and there were pills and covid testing kits all over the house.
Of course, I cannot say whether her health problems have been caused or exacerbated by all the vaccinations she has had, but ever more evidence is coming to light that the mRNA jab is implicated in many heart conditions. Much of this has been researched by cardiologist Dr Peter McCullough, who for his groundbreaking work is described on Wikipedia as ‘promoting misinformation about Covid-19, its treatments and mRNA vaccines’.
And then in his column in Saturday’s Times, Giles Coren wrote: ‘Remember the swivel-eyed loons who wouldn’t have the Covid jab? Oh, how we scorned and mocked and raged at them. Why were they literally choosing to die? Same with the “MMR causes autism” wackos, the people who say the flu jab was invented by Bill Gates to turn us into computer batteries . . . Polite society has no time for them.’
All I can say is that I am proud to be one of your swivel-eyed loons, Giles, although I am not at all sure that it is a polite way to describe somebody who has had the courage to see through to the truth. In a later paragraph in the same column, Giles reminds us that he has cancer. He has been diagnosed with prostate cancer at the early age of 55.
What these people don’t seem to appreciate or take on board is that we swivel-eyed loons have generally remained perfectly well, while the normies, as they are known, are racked with all kinds of illnesses. Rather than choosing to die, we chose life and health by not succumbing to the jabs and boosters. We have done the research while they, in the main, haven’t.
Last month the leading oncologist Angus Dalgleish wrote here that he had just attended the funeral of a friend who had a covid booster and developed raging cancer. Professor Dalgleish has seen and reported on many cases of ‘turbo-cancers’ in people who have had the jab. And yet the likes of Giles Coren take no heed of this distinguished cancer specialist’s findings. Do they believe that he is one of the swivel-eyed loons?
What can we do? Another friend, this time ‘one of us’, reckons that such people are totally brainwashed into believing that modern medical science has their best interests and health at heart, as do governments. So it is simply not worth trying to persuade them or pointing them in the direction of the compelling and ever-increasing evidence of harm from the jabs.
We just have to hope that, in time, the proof becomes so overwhelming that we naysayers can no longer be dismissed and belittled, even by the Giles Corens of this world. Meanwhile, we fight on, refusing to be crushed by sneering ignoramuses.