05/09/2024 11:57:22 AM PDT
· 121 of 143 9YearLurker
to Jane Long; Brian Griffin; ransomnote; grey_whiskers
Yep, you’ve got it right, Jane.
From withholding simple antibiotics from those with garden-variety bacterial pneumonia, to massively incentivizing the healthcare system to spin up “Covid” diagnoses, to blasting lungs with forced oxygen before moving them on to the vents and Remdesivir, to paying the funeral expenses for any family that permit Covid to be slipped onto a death certificate, to all the crap pulled in NYC for those few weeks (e.g., not treating anyone with a heart attack who called an ambulance), that was a completely made up number of “Covid deaths”.
Those who have tracked excess deaths around the world before and after the claimed “pandemic” and jabs (e.g., Denis Rancourt) have well established that there was never a new, deadly pathogen spreading at all.
While thankfully restoring to peace to those remaining as their fellow Americans can no longer as economically hire a bunch of guys to crank the noise while blowing leaves onto whatever neighbor’s property, week after week after week.
Forty million expelled at this point would be a massive boon to their home countries—and all of a sudden let the Zoomers and Millennials afford home ownership while being well employed—even if with marginal skills.
“Trump SoHo New York[14] is a $450 million hotel condominium. In February 2011, several prospective buyers of condominiums in the building, including French soccer star Olivier Dacourt, sued the developers in federal court, claiming that they had been tricked into buying the condos by the “deceptive” sales figures, and that the number of apartments sold at Trump Soho had been “fraudulently misrepresented.” The plaintiffs were represented by Bailey. The suit was settled with plaintiffs recovering 90 per cent of their deposits.[15][16] Several years later, the case was described as “a watershed case in the world of condo litigation ... [C]ondo attorneys said that developers are now far more reluctant to disclose sales information to buyers’ attorneys, for fear of legal repercussions if they turn out to be wrong.”[17]”