Some thoughts on forgiveness, pandemic amnesty, and the path forward.
It’s now been four years since the International Committee on Taxonomy
of Viruses met in February of 2020 and adopted the official name "severe
acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2" (SARS‑CoV‑2).
The sane masses now agree that there was nothing
particularly severe about the Wuhan sniffles, but at this point four years ago,
we were witnessing the the beginning of a viral avalanche that was set to wreak
havoc upon human civilization.
While it was initially advertised as the “pandemic
of the century,” it quickly became clear to level-headed observers that there
wasn’t in fact anything to worry about.
The issue, of course, is that those of us in the
level-headed camp were in a tiny minority, especially early on in 2020.
Everyone else was Freaking. The. Heck. Out.
Protest in Canada
If you’re a subscriber to The Dossier, you can
probably relate to the feeling of isolation in this time of derangement.
When everyone else was hiding in their homes,
begging some degenerate politician to protect them via authoritarian
“protective measures,” we were laughing at the stupidity of it all while
simultaneously infuriated by the idiocy and naïveté.
Statistically speaking, it was indeed just another
Flu season, but it was accompanied by endless streams of fearmongering
propaganda, infused with purposeful mayhem.
While we can debate whether the crisis was
manufactured or organic, the people in charge decided to heed Rahm Emmanuel’s
famous words: “never let a crisis go to waste.” The global ruling class
weaponized “the pandemic” to loot their respective treasuries and to launch the
fastest roll up of power in human history. Hundreds of millions of lives and
livelihoods were destroyed, and a virus had nothing to do with it.
This brings us to the continuing question of
“pandemic amnesty.” How are we supposed to deal with the people and
institutions that, just a couple of years ago, were demanding the removal of
our rights (and sometimes succeeding in these efforts) for failing to fall in
line with the Covid regime?
This morning, I found myself looking into the
Substack and X archives of the early years of “pandemic” commentary. I highly
recommend you take a trip down memory lane. Not to reminisce, but to remember
what the people in charge did to us, and to remember how our colleagues,
acquaintances, neighbors, friends, and even family members acted in this time
of manufactured and/or organic crises.
It’s also a good time to remember that courage is
a unique trait that separates the man from the mob. I will always
appreciate those who stood with us in these dark times, as we waged a moral and
intellectual campaign to defend our freedoms in the face of Covid tyranny.
·
14 MAART 2023
The Covid era was when many revealed their true
selves, their true principles, and their true nature. It reminds me of when
George W. Bush said in 2008, after bailing out Wall Street, that he had to
“abandon free-market principles to save the free-market system.” In other
words, when push came to shove, he didn’t really believe in the principles he
claimed to uphold. There were many, many such cases of ideological malfeasance
during the Covid era.
And sadly, it wasn’t just the politicians that
failed the humanity test. In my case, having not yet departed the Washington,
D.C. swamp until late 2020, it was, for quite some time, EVERYONE around me.
So how exactly do we tackle the issue of pandemic
amnesty?
Some have suggested that an amnesty could be
granted for the first several weeks and months, imposing a specific timeline
for criminal, political, and moral forgiveness.
I still haven’t decided how to fully approach that
topic and its weighty moral foundations. Nonetheless, the one thing we might be
able to agree on is the need to never forget.
We can never forget what they did, and we must
continue to archive the era that forced everyone to flip over their true cards.
Source: https://www.dossier.today/p/4-years-later-never-forget-what-they