Part of the Russian vax regime. Flu vax for children over six months? That was a disaster for some kids in Australia a decade ago.
I'm sorry it hit you so hard.But today an over whelming sadness hit me... just felt it come in like a wave and sit there in the pit of my stomach ..
Where can I get these at? I'm asking for a friend....Well, just to lighten the load a little, an Aussie larakin in Sydney decided to replace the social distancing marks on the floors of businesses and govt departments with his own little creation.
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Where can I get these at? I'm asking for a friend....
A great idea. My friend has been thinking of doing something to the aisle signs that say "wrong way" and such.Apparently he was just printing them out on his computer and taking a bit of sticky tape with him when he was out and about.
Very sad to hear of this development and how it hit you like a ton of bricks. For sure, keeping an even keel through this over-the-top freakin' insanity is more than challenging. Even though we've been prepped as to the engineered chaos and particularly, "the programming is complete", it's still so hard to believe that things have gotten so bad so quickly and the gullible are worst than sheep! It's all so infuriating on so many levels and it's understandable that you attempted to keep yourself above the fray. But, as the Cs said (paraphrasing), 'It'll find you no matter where you go'. So, like it or not, we still have to pay attention right and left which means having to endure the nauseating fearporn which seems to be intensifying by the day. What may help is to think how much everything changed between March and now - about four and a half months. Who's to say how much more things can change in another four and a half months? We can already observe that push-back is starting to erupt.and low and behold it seems my neighborhood has fully committed itself today to the full Monty madness
Needless to say, Buckeye Nation is not taking this sitting down.Big Ten football to cancel its season
[Excerpt]
With the Big Ten voting to cancel fall sports, college football is a matter of days from being cancelled or postponed at a minimum.
Students are returning to campus and COVID cases are still high in the United States. It isn’t a good recipe for a college football season unfortunately.
According to the Detroit Free Press, the Big Ten has elected to cancel fall sports including the beloved college football season.
It’s a sad day for college football fans. It is only a matter of time until another conference joins the Big Ten. The Big Ten is joining the MAC in cancelling the fall football season.The Big Ten has voted to cancel the 2020 college football season in a historic move that stems from concerns related to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, multiple people with knowledge of the decision confirmed to the Free Press.
The sources requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the decision. A formal announcement is expected to Tuesday, the sources said. [Somebody leaked it]
The presidents voted, 12-2, Sunday to end the fall sports in the conference.
The SEC is anticipated to be most resistant to cancelling the season.
Report: Big Ten football may cancel its season, CFB in doubt
[jwplayer cygDE8Mp-er0jUifI] Georgia Bulldogs football may be in jeopardy of losing the 2020 college football season due to cancellation. With the Big Ten voting to cancel fall sports, college foot…ugawire.usatoday.com
New Ohio State president said to be in favor of delaying, but not yet canceling, Big Ten football seasonDon’t cancel football season, Ohio State coach Ryan Day pleads
Ohio State football coach Ryan Day considers himself an advocate for his players.
With the college season seemingly on life support, Day said it would be premature to cancel the season.
“I would say we cannot cancel the season right now,” Day said on Monday on ESPN2. “We have to at the very (most) postpone it and allow us a little bit of time to keep reevaluating everything that’s going on.”
Because the Big Ten released its conference-only schedule just last week, Day said he was surprised by the reports that conference presidents and chancellors were on the verge of calling off the season because of health concerns from the COVID-19 pandemic.
“The schedule was designed to have some flexibility,” Day said, “and our job is to create the safest environment possible for these young men and then present it to them and allow the players and their parents and their coaches to then decide if it’s safe enough.”
Nebraska coach Scott Frost said on Monday that he’d be willing to play even if the Big Ten cancels its season. Day also seems willing to do that.
“We need to look at every option,” he said, “and if that’s the only option at the time, we need to explore it and see if that’s something that we can possibly do. Because if it is, and that’s what’s best for our kids, then certainly we need to look at that and do it.”
Day said he understands that before a season can be played, several issues related to the coronavirus need to be resolved. How the virus affects younger people is still not clear. Testing and contact tracing are still being refined.
“By pushing back the season, we can still figure out some of those issues,” Day said. “And whether we can play the season or not, that’s up to the players and their parents or their coaches, in my opinion.
“But we have to figure out what the safest environment possible is, and then present it to them. For them not to at least get presented exactly what those things are, I think would be (a mistake).”
Asked if he’d had conversations with athletic director Gene Smith and incoming OSU president Kristina Johnson, Day said he’s had constant dialogue with them. Johnson favors delaying but not canceling the season, a university source told The Dispatch.
“It’s every day,” he said. “It’s multiple phone calls. But for this to happen so abruptly after last week, it did catch me off guard.”
A presidents meeting is not scheduled for Monday night, but the league’s athletic directors are expected to talk.
Training camp started last week for Ohio State, which is scheduled to play Illinois on Sept. 3. Day said that his team has rebounded from some tough days when the Woody Hayes Athletic Center was closed and players had to train on their own.
He said they looked and acted ragged when they first returned.
“I was worried about some of their mental health,” Day said. “Now that they’ve been able to come and practice together and get back together on the field, they look healthy again. They look great, and they really want a chance to play.
“They want to have a voice. They want to choose. That’s all the information they’ve been giving me. So I think it’s my job as the head coach to advocate for them.”
Day said he believes players are safer working under the strict protocol they’ve committed to than they would be if the season is canceled and they’d lack the same incentive. On Big Ten coaches calls, Day added, all the coaches say they want to have a season.
“If we need to take a deep breath, let’s take a deep breath,” Day said. “But let’s do everything we can (to preserve the season). We owe it to these kids to exhaust every single option we possibly can, and then we go from there. But (canceling) right now, to me, would be abrupt.”
Thanks for that link. I plan to share it with some Theosophists that I know.Arwenn posted this article in another thread and I find it to be a good reminder of what we're up against not outside but inside of us thus turning this global madness into a personal growth factor.
Dispelling Wetiko: Breaking the Curse of Evil
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We defeat evil not by fighting against it (in which case, by playing its game, we've already lost) but by getting in touch with the part of us that is invulnerable to its effects. Grasping the multifaceted ways that the wetiko virus distorts the psyche enables us to discover and experience the part of ourselves that is incorruptible, which is the place from which we can bring real and lasting change to our world. It is as though the evil of the wetiko virus is itself the instrument of a higher intelligence designed to connect us to a sacred, creative source within ourselves.Testers of humanity, these nonlocal vampiric forces are guardians of the threshold of our conscious evolution.
Thus, although it is the source of humanity's inhumanity to itself, wetiko is at the same time the greatest catalytic force of evolution ever known (as well as not known) to humanity, as it is the impetus for us to awaken to the dreamlike nature of the universe. While a typical virus mutates so as to become resistant to our attempts to heal from it, the mercurial wetiko virus forces us to mutate—and evolve—relative to it. In a paradoxical sense, we don't cure wetiko; wetiko cures us. How amazing—the very thing that is potentially destroying us is at the same time waking us up! Wetiko is a true conjunction of opposites: it is at the same time the deadliest poison and the most healing medicine. Will wetiko kill us? Or will it awaken us? Everything depends upon our recognizing what it is revealing to us. The prognosis for the wetiko epidemic depends upon how we dream it.
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