by Jon Rappoport
September 25, 2014
Yesterday, I reported on State Farm dropping Rob Schneider from their TV ads because he’s alerted people to vaccine dangers.
Because he has a view about vaccines that departs from the norm.
“Punch a hole in consensus reality and you can’t be a spokesman for our products.”
“Cause a ripple among the sleeping populace and you’re out.”
What’s next?
Well, I’ll tell you what could be next, based on the fact that the
Internet runs via an interlocking system of commercial companies.
Some companies that facilitate emails to large lists, and website
hosts, to say nothing of Facebook, which is already censoring
information, could decide, under pressure, or voluntarily, to close down
“controversial data.”
A soft version of this is simply shunting emails whose subject lines
contain “trigger words” into spam or trash of the recipient.
And what better subject to strangle than vaccination, which the
medical-industrial complex ceaselessly promotes as absolutely necessary
for the “humane” protection of humankind.
Pro-vaccine loons and fanatics of every stripe would welcome this kind of censorship with religious fervor.
For them, “everybody knows” vaccines are a wondrous miracle of modern
science; and in order to shield children (who are already vaccinated
and thus immune, but somehow still vulnerable) from unvaccinated
devil-spawn, the whole of planet Earth must be jabbed.
Alien/ET comes down from his ship, observes, and reports back:
“They appear to have a Church of Injection. The ritual involves sending germs, metals, and toxic chemicals into the blood.
“They believe this wards off disease. The injections change the
body’s response-pattern, so that certain symptoms will henceforth be
stifled. This is called ‘immunity.’ Of course, as a result of the
needle ritual, new symptoms will appear, and they catalog them under
other disease-labels. They fail to see this as a problem. Or perhaps
their high priests want to cause the problem…”
What will happen to Schneider’s career now remains to be seen. Will
he get a modified free pass as an amusing Hollyweird type who, like
Jenny McCarthy and Suzanne Somers, unaccountably “mouths off about
modern medicine?”
Surely, he’ll get his share of: “the science proves he’s a menace to health.”
That’s the party line.
Media outlets are stacked with little loyalists who attach themselves to, and kiss the feet of, lying researchers.
I’m sure Schneider would be willing to engage in a reasonable
discussion of his views on vaccines—but he is pre-judged for having
those views in the first place.
In this war, the combination of a mainstream television news program
and a talking doctor are supposed to produce, automatically, the
ultimate truth.
“Tonight: a doctor says people who oppose vaccination are a danger to the community…”
The word from on high.
Or: “Tonight, a television news program and a staunch medical proponent of vaccines are a danger to the community…”
News corporations have determined that we can’t have both.
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