“Some of the effects were direct from the disease, but many of them were indirect by the lockdowns, which were in and of themselves unpredictable because they weren’t part of the plan.”
Chris Whitty at COVID Enquiry.
So speaks the man who was Chief Medical Officer in 2020. Note the “Some” from COVID opposed to the “Many” from lockdowns. And he lies anyway, because even I (a retired non-CMO GP) predicted the tragic outcomes before the lockdowns happened. At the time I didn’t even know that the pandemic plans of everyone up to the WHO excluded lockdowns because their ill effects were entirely predictable. But you don’t get knighthoods for telling the truth – just for covering up your lies in retrospect, and abjectly failing to even think of including a cost-benefit analysis in your “plan.” “Negligently unpredicted because omitted from plan” is very different from “unpredictable,” Dr Whitty.
There was collusion, there was preparation, coordinated across the world to enforce a fabricated narrative. And it continues. And Pawlowski with Robinson supply IMO an irrefutable analysis of the pyramid of megalomaniacs, would be demagogues, grift and malice and corrupted power hungry charlatans who support this evil.
Big enemies with big levers, indeed – though actually few in number, and on the wrong side of God’s history.
Another example (to be found on YouTube) is Andrew Bridgen, suing Matt Hancock for, if I remember, defamation. He could not find a barrister to represent him until he found one outside the system. Shortly after engaging him, another parliamentary conduct inquiry was raised against Bridgen, and simultaneously a Bar Council misconduct investigation was raised against the barrister. It turned out that no less than three such cases were being raised, by a single law firm in London whose boss, it emerges, has coincidentally just been appointed DPP by Keir Starmer. So the Uniparty is once again confirmed (similarly to Pawlowski’s discovery of cross-party collusion in his own persecution).
It doesn’t end there. Bridgen’s wife is also divorcing him (essentially over the political stuff), and Bridgen is totally unable to get a solicitor to represent him in the family court.