by Martin Geddes at Future of Communications
I don’t normally share my personal and private life or matters related to my own children. You won’t find a single mention of their names anywhere on the Internet that comes from me, nor a single identifiable picture. Their privacy is important to me.
That said, I am fighting right now against the unacceptable “pro vax” policies of my younger daughter’s school. I am divorced, but agree with her mother (who is regrettably jabbed) that my daughter should not be injected with this obviously unhealthy potion.
We differ in that I am adamant that no child should be exposed to such risk of harm; every school that recommends the slaughter of the innocent should close. Her mother wishes her to attend school no matter how unethical or unlawful their conduct. For her to admit she has been played, despite a doctorate in a relevant discipline, is too hard at this point.
There are three points of order on which I see us fighting back against this immoral insanity:
- The giving of blanket medical advice with no regard to individual health need or circumstance.
- The absence of health and safety studies for the policies of face masks, which bear significant risks.
- The lack of liability insurance for the consequences of these policies and actions.
It is the last one of these that I have used to hold my daughter’s school to account: the headmistress consistently refuses to tell me their insurance company name and policy number. That says all you need to know: as a father I have a right to determine if she is telling the truth that there is a public liability policy in force for my daughter’s circumstances.
These authoritarians are all cowards — and as one friend says they “fold faster than a cocaine-fuelled worker in a Chinese laundry” when challenged. As order followers they fear being held to account for breaking rules, and our job is to make breaking our chosen rules more scary than the alternative. It is when the new outlandish scamdemic rules clash with established rules that we have the opportunity to be (paradoxically) the greater sticklers for adherence to rules. Arguing directly against the medical tyranny and its pseudoreality is pointless.
Finally, I have learned to be balanced and offer a “loving kindness” face saving option. Be humble, say we all stray from the path of goodness, and remind people that repentance and redemption are always on offer. The cycle of scapegoating and human sacrifice has to end; indeed, it already has, just we’re still figuring out the endgame.
I hope this letter (which I have edited and abbreviated for family privacy) is of value to others as a template for how to speak and act.
Dear SCHOOL HEAD,…
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