A day that will live in infamy

March 11, 2020.

That was the day it was announced that we had a global pandemic on our hands.

Four days later, some of the darkest days in our history began with a lock down to “slow the spread”.

5 years later, we are still feeling the effects and it seems doubtful that we will ever regain all that our country and the world lost in those dark days.

Millions dead because safe, affordable and effective treatments were withheld and black balled so that a sketchy “vaccine” could be forced into use and into the arms of anyone buying the hype and willing to stand still for them.

Elderly people forced to die alone as nursing facilties were jammed full of positive cases and families were barred from ever being able to visit.

Children locked out of schools and forced to attend classes on screens, many times with parents forbidden to provide any kind of oversight. This negatively impacted their learning, their socialization and their immune systems as they were isolated for months.

Small businesses forced to close their doors, thousands closing permanently as their owners could could not sustain viability with no customers.

Landlords forced to keep non-paying tenents, due to business closures that shoved people out of work and into unemployment – even months after lockdowns had supposedly ended. This resulted in thousands of foreclosures, as the owners of those buildings could no longer keep up with the mortgage payments.

And perhaps the worst of all – thousands having to decide if they were willing to risk the potential side effects of experimental “vaccines” and keep their jobs, or refuse the jabs and be pushed into loss of their jobs.

This latter group included all manner of public sector employees, as well as our military, law enforcement and health care workers.

It is estimated that about 15% of these workers refused the jab – several million probably, though it’s difficult to determine exact numbers.

Perhaps the biggest loss we suffered was a sense of trust.

We used to trust various people who had the job of overseeing our well-being. Doctors, medical workers, teachers, people in the government, the public safety sector.

If you ask about trusting those segments now, the numbers of people who trust them are shockingly low. We don’t trust anyone any more.

We number ourselves with those who don’t think any of this was accidental OR incidental.

Which is why this date will live in infamy.

Published by Uncompliant

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