The sinking ship that the Covid-crazy rats are fleeing

There’s a particular sinking ship from which the rats are ostentatiously fleeing; the “keep schools closed” ship.

Now before I get lectured to, let me note: I couldn’t possibly be a bigger opponent of soul-crushing schools that teach kids propaganda.

But I promise you: that’s not the reason all the blue checks have urged us to keep schools closed.

It was all fact-free hysteria, and I’m just flat-out against that no matter what the cause is.

I would never say: “Dr. Fauci is my ally because I don’t like the public school system and he favors closing it.” Dr. Fauci is never my ally, ever.

And the blue checks are reversing themselves on this faster than you can believe.

When the teachers’ unions have lost the blue checks, the polling on keeping schools closed must be horrendous.

I am no fan of Eric Adams, the new mayor of New York, since he favors the evil and useless vaccine passport system, which can never be excused.

But I find it politically interesting that he’s been saying things like this:

“I was a cook. I was a dishwasher. If nobody came to my restaurant when I was in college, I wouldn’t have been able to survive. When you talk about closing down our city, you’re talking about putting low-wage workers out of a job. I’m not letting that happen.”

And about schools specifically, in defiance of the teacher’s unions:

“We want to be extremely clear. The safest place for our children is in a school building. And we are going to keep our schools open….

“We’re not sending an unclear message of what is going to happen day to day. I’m going to tell you what’s going to happen day to day. We are staying open….

“I know there’s questions about staffing, I know there’s questions about testing — there’s a lot of questions. But we’re going to turn those question marks into an exclamation point. We are staying open.”

Let’s also take a look at Ashish Jha, who’s currently at Brown University. He’s been downright nasty through this whole ordeal — compare his conduct to that of the decent and civilized Jay Bhattacharya of Stanford, for instance — and has placed impossible obstacles in the way of school reopening: tying it to rates of “community spread,” demanding onerous measures to ensure “physical safety,” even while mountains of evidence piled up that schools were not unsafe places.

(Sweden’s 1.8 million children all managed to avoid death, and their teachers did better than other professions, while having open schools without masking.)

Then Jha demanded the masking of students, and even told Congress: “No expert that I know of doesn’t believe masking is helpful for kids.”

Sure, Ashish. I’m sure you’ve never, ever encountered an expert who advises against masking kids — even though I myself, not even a member of the medical community, can somehow name you a whole slate of them.

And now, just this week, watch the pivot.

Here’s Jha on Twitter on January 4:

At every turn during this pandemic we have deprioritized children and their well-being. The educational losses and mental health tolls will be felt for their lifetimes. Great @DLeonhardt thread on how American kids are in a crisis and many don’t fully grasp how bad it is

It’s one thing to offer a sincere and profound apology for your errors in the past. It’s quite another all of a sudden to claim to care about the well-being of children when you yourself have been part of the dystopia that has targeted them.

Now, this has been altogether too much discussion of schools without at least a nod to homeschooling, so let me say this:

The wackos are in charge, imposing crazy and useless so-called safety measures, and (as usual) teaching wacko propaganda.

But homeschooling seems too hard. I completely understand that.

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Comments (2)

  • Avatar

    Wisenox

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    They want your kids back in school to separate them from family influence and to test them for a fake virus using tests that, by their own admission, are incapable of telling them that they have a virus in the first place.
    Why test at all then? Because every test has this phrase in its Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers:

    “risks to the patient could include the following: a recommendation for the isolation of the patient, monitoring of household or other close contacts.”

    That’s camps and/or sensors, but that’s not the only catch. Once deemed a public health risk, household and other close contacts lose their rights and protections. So, they test the kids and all of a sudden have an excuse to round up family and friends, and they gave themselves protection from international laws by removing rights and protections from the victims.
    If you consider that “close contacts” are “presumed” positive, which they are despite inaccurate tests, and that every kid in school is essentially each other’s “close contact”, then you can see how they are gaming the legality of forcing injections (at camps and schools).
    If they don’t tell you the risks of the test, then they should be held responsible. The testing personnel are given the test documentation and should know the risks. Additionally, kids aren’t capable of understanding the ramifications of the tests, and therefore should not be tested without parental consent.
    Ask your schools for the Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers if they plan to test. Ask them why they aren’t explaining the risks.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Barry

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    Do they really think after two years we will suddenly have memory loss? The health minister in Quebec quit yesterday siting difference of opinion handling of virus but he will be on our list anyway. We will see more and more early retirements from health ministers and politicians then claiming they didn’t have anything to do with it.

    Reply

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