It's a chilling tale as old as time, though the nuances of the execution change with every era. The story of power and its insidious dance with control, annihilation, and the precious commodity known as life. It's a grim narrative that winds through history with pharaohs, emperors, tsars, and dictators, a thread that binds Idi Amin, Mao Tse-tungs, Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, and countless other despotic rulers. What ties these historical figures to contemporary America isn't merely the act of killing, but the disturbingly deceptive and selective nature of elimination.
The Invisible Executioner
History books and philosophical treatises alike have carved out clear distinctions between war, murders, and genocides. But the lines blur when the executioner dons a white coat and the theater of operations shifts to a hospital.
Herein lies the deception of modern America – a nation that whispers "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" while its hands administer lethal cocktails of fentanyl, midazolam, propofol, remdesivir, vaccines and more. This is no longer just a battle overseas or a criminal act in a back alley; the silent slaughter shadows the lights of our very society.
The Deception of Democracy
In America's politically charged climate, the silence of our leaders amidst this genocide is not merely deafening; it's a ear-shattering testament to the deceptive facade democracy has become. Healthcare, a beacon of warmth and support, now harbors the chill of an assembly line, where lives are deemed expendable, costs to be contained, and profits to be pocketed.
Worse yet is the deceptive dialogue used to veil these atrocities, "manageable risk", "standard procedure", "public health concerns". Words that obfuscate the fundamental betrayal they carry. The very institutions meant to protect life – hospitals, doctors, nurses – are repurposed to quiet the voices of the condemned as their spirits are surreptitiously carried away under the guise of care.
The Silent Witnesses
The silence of the public to these crimes is equally damning. We've become a witness to this systemic slaughter, a spectator in a theater of annihilation. The question that hangs heavy in the air is: Why the silence? Have we become so desensitized, so apathetic, that we are willing to cloak our eyes and minds from the horrors unfolding in our backyards, our hospitals, our streets?
The ethos of "business as usual" has a new grim manifestation. It's as if our society, our nation, has collectively shrouded itself in a cloak of indifference and turned a collective blind eye to the atrocities committed in the name of progress, health, and law.
The Unspoken Agenda
Money, that ancient motivator, is an unspoken character in this modern-day tragedy. A grotesque puppeteer orchestrating the seemingly disparate players – the pharmaceutical companies, the policymakers, the hospitals – in a puppet show where the strings are no longer attached to limbs, but rather to livelihoods, to lives. The silence of our leaders is complex; it is the silence of compliance, of complicity, of the contracts signed in dollars and cents, not in blood.
Power dynamics have shifted; the genocide of today is sanitized, concealed, and legal. The perpetrators of today go by the names of hospitals, corporations and institutions, their methods cloaked in legality, the white coat assassins hands washed in the language of healthcare, economy, and public welfare.
Demanding Justice, Before The American Tombs Stone Goes Up.
The only reasonable response to such a sinister tale is anger. But anger, too, must find its predecessor in understanding. We must peel back the layers, dissect the deception, and condemn the genocide for what it is – the conscious, systematic extermination of a populace. We must question the silence, the complicity, and demand accountability from our elected officials, from our institutions, from our democracy.
It is a call to awaken from the slumber of indifference, to shake off the cloak of silent complicity. It is a plea to demand transparency, justice, and change. For if we do not, we will find that the historical thread, once faint, has strengthened and entwined itself in the fabric of our very existence. Our silence today is an echo of the silence that reverberated through the chambers of Auschwitz, the streets of Nanjing, and the hinterlands of Uganda. The question remains – how loud must the silence be before we are roused from our slumber?
A Cry for Action
This is my call to action, to you, to anyone who will listen. We must demand more than words, more than fleeting notoriety for the wrongs that have been committed. Our insistence should not wane with the fading headlines, but arrest the very passage of time until those responsible for the atrocities of the pandemic are brought into the unyielding light of justice. We must hold our leaders to a standard that is not only legalistic but fundamentally moral.
My question to you, the silent champion of your own outrage, is this – how long will you allow the larceny of a nation's suffering go unanswered? How long will it be until we rise as a collective, adamant in our resolve to rewrite the narrative of the pandemic as one not merely of loss, but of the ultimate triumph of justice? The time for action is now. Let us heed the call and demand that justice is served, not just as an afterthought, but as a fundamental tenet of our humanity. Together, we can make this happen. So let us unite and fight for what is right. Our future and the future generations deserve nothing less than a world where justice prevails above all else
In Memoriam
In memory of those who perished needlessly, and in honor of those who continue to fight for their memory and their right to justice, may these words serve as a beacon—a beacon that pierces the veil of silence and shines a light on the path we must walk, the path of resistance, resilience, and hope for a brighter, fairer future. For the martyrs of the pandemic, our fight is your legacy.
Rebecca Charles, Danielle’s mom
www.deathbyhospitalprotocol.com
https://www.givesendgo.com/JusticeforDanielle
Why the silence?
I wish to answer your important rhetorical question: The USA used to be a moral nation; Christian in its bent. The pulpit was the guiding force for good - and a bellweather that swayed every presidential campaign vote.
That all went away with the 20th century Faustian deal struck between the 'state and the church' - whose separation Jefferson had believed critical to the soundness of the nacent nation, totally lost by the contract called the IRS 501c3. In the interest of a tax break - the church switched overseers from Jesus to the state - whose humanist - even satanic precepts became the governing law.
Truth became hogtied, though prosperity preaching was not just allowed - but encouraged; like a bread & circus - keep the people happy, and busy accumulating wealth and stuff - and they won't pay the least mind to the horrors outside of their gated communities. Wealth - the very thing that Moses said would lead Israel away from God - comfort and wealth - led America away from God - never to return.
We have become a nation of insouciant aggressors - just as you put in no uncertain terms. Therefore as our down fall was for the Church's perfidy, the only way back, is for the Churches to declare their independence from the State - cancel their 501c3 contract, break the shackles off and as the Book says - put the TRUMPET to their mouths.
Yes, Rebecca, the time is now.