And they're succeeding. Yes, cattle bleat a lot - how much has actually happened?
Around here, not a lot has happened. Not vaccine passport needed for anything. No masks worn anywhere -- mask mandates are banned in schools (though some schools have tried to illegally require them anyways).
So I agree more with OP that that control is more local.
So, for example there are no false flag shortages of various goods and services all allegedly because of a holocoof?
I haven't seen serious goods shortages. There's toilet paper, food, bottled water, etc. Maybe not exactly the item you're looking for all the time? Shelves are still full. There is a worker shortage at most businesses, seems to be the worst of it.
What we're seeing is not them "flailing around", it's mass psychological manipulation and they've done it successfully many times before.
They first put the idea out there, and of course most people viscerally hate it. But the intent isn't to put the idea into practice right then and there. They immediately back off the idea or claim that it's a "conspiracy theory".
By virtue of the door-in-the-face technique, people are now psychologically primed to accept lesser tyrannies because well at least it isn't as bad as a vaccine passport. The government getting private companies to force vaccination on their employees is bad, after all, but people can always go work for another company, right? It's not like the government is forcing it on everyone.
Soon enough the idea of vaccine passports doesn't seem all that outlandish to the average person. It's been mentioned for months on end. Even the average person who opposes them can't work up the level of zeal about the issue they used to have.
And it's at that point that vaccine passports get introduced.
You likely live in an area that isn't one of their first targets for the rollout. I bet mask usage was also slower on the uptake there, but has increased over time.
They don't need to impose it globally overnight. They'll get a foothold with it, then slowly expand it as they get the opportunity. It's already in place in several countries around the world, and cities in the US. It's certainly possible that their efforts fail, but they know the strategy they need to use to make them succeed, and they're on that path.
I know their plans may work in places like New York City
That's all they need.
If it takes over in just one major area they can slowly encroach it into other aspects of life and into other areas.
They're playing a game a hundred years long. What care have they for the bleatings of misbegotten virtues that will once more be misplaced within a few weeks time?
I've been trying to figure it out myself. About 600 years ago, there was a lot more trade going on than 500 years ago. That sounds great, but this was the entire world, not one small, or even large area. It's unknown what happened, but nations closed their borders down and squabbled with their neighbors. Hawaii for example was doing trade with Fiji and others, and then just stopped. Tongans and Samoans knew about them, and at times a boat would arrive, but not the same amount.
For some reason, in the 1970's, tons of cultures that had previously closed down began to expand again. We can claim globalization or something, but it was often without any connection to each other.
What I think is happening is another great contraction. Someone in Reddit on fullKiA mentioned how money was losing its value and things like bit torrent was winning. I don't know about bit torrent, but based on all the actions, it's as if the power of the world was losing its money. The ability to do trade and enforce that trade is disappearing. We are fairly more observant now, but it appears us talking on the internet means a lot of that power is lost. We can do trade or sail the Caribbean without need of that power. What we can get is growing, which means all of that power and influence of being the middle man is being lost. Uber has taxis, but not the bureaucracy that makes sure the drivers and cars are ready.
This new trade destroys jobs, and also reasons for power.
If you had power, prestige, and all the money, how would you respond if it was slowly turning to dust in front of you? It's why online schooling sucks. The teachers made laws so it wouldn't work. Even when they have to do it, they make the rules impossible so we complain and want to go back to the old days. It's all tricks to regain that power.
We are watching global government control and global connections fight each other.
Around here, not a lot has happened. Not vaccine passport needed for anything. No masks worn anywhere -- mask mandates are banned in schools (though some schools have tried to illegally require them anyways).
So I agree more with OP that that control is more local.
I haven't seen serious goods shortages. There's toilet paper, food, bottled water, etc. Maybe not exactly the item you're looking for all the time? Shelves are still full. There is a worker shortage at most businesses, seems to be the worst of it.
They thought they had all wrapped up with Hillary in 2016. It was the end of history…instead it went all Jihad vs. McWorld.
What we're seeing is not them "flailing around", it's mass psychological manipulation and they've done it successfully many times before.
They first put the idea out there, and of course most people viscerally hate it. But the intent isn't to put the idea into practice right then and there. They immediately back off the idea or claim that it's a "conspiracy theory".
By virtue of the door-in-the-face technique, people are now psychologically primed to accept lesser tyrannies because well at least it isn't as bad as a vaccine passport. The government getting private companies to force vaccination on their employees is bad, after all, but people can always go work for another company, right? It's not like the government is forcing it on everyone.
Soon enough the idea of vaccine passports doesn't seem all that outlandish to the average person. It's been mentioned for months on end. Even the average person who opposes them can't work up the level of zeal about the issue they used to have.
And it's at that point that vaccine passports get introduced.
You likely live in an area that isn't one of their first targets for the rollout. I bet mask usage was also slower on the uptake there, but has increased over time.
They don't need to impose it globally overnight. They'll get a foothold with it, then slowly expand it as they get the opportunity. It's already in place in several countries around the world, and cities in the US. It's certainly possible that their efforts fail, but they know the strategy they need to use to make them succeed, and they're on that path.
Well, the "elite" are all near death.
So are the old radical feminists, most of which are dead already.
Regardless of who you think is pushing the vaccine, the one thing they all have in common is they won't make it to 2030.
That's all they need.
If it takes over in just one major area they can slowly encroach it into other aspects of life and into other areas.
They're playing a game a hundred years long. What care have they for the bleatings of misbegotten virtues that will once more be misplaced within a few weeks time?
Totalitarianism is its own reward. There may be noisy pushback, but it isn't actually repealing any mandates.
because they can
I've been trying to figure it out myself. About 600 years ago, there was a lot more trade going on than 500 years ago. That sounds great, but this was the entire world, not one small, or even large area. It's unknown what happened, but nations closed their borders down and squabbled with their neighbors. Hawaii for example was doing trade with Fiji and others, and then just stopped. Tongans and Samoans knew about them, and at times a boat would arrive, but not the same amount.
For some reason, in the 1970's, tons of cultures that had previously closed down began to expand again. We can claim globalization or something, but it was often without any connection to each other.
What I think is happening is another great contraction. Someone in Reddit on fullKiA mentioned how money was losing its value and things like bit torrent was winning. I don't know about bit torrent, but based on all the actions, it's as if the power of the world was losing its money. The ability to do trade and enforce that trade is disappearing. We are fairly more observant now, but it appears us talking on the internet means a lot of that power is lost. We can do trade or sail the Caribbean without need of that power. What we can get is growing, which means all of that power and influence of being the middle man is being lost. Uber has taxis, but not the bureaucracy that makes sure the drivers and cars are ready.
This new trade destroys jobs, and also reasons for power.
If you had power, prestige, and all the money, how would you respond if it was slowly turning to dust in front of you? It's why online schooling sucks. The teachers made laws so it wouldn't work. Even when they have to do it, they make the rules impossible so we complain and want to go back to the old days. It's all tricks to regain that power.
We are watching global government control and global connections fight each other.