China is the most accomplished dictatorship ever.*
India is the kingdom of idolatry.
Asia & Africa account to 83.7% of humanity's future.
In the 'West', one in two children is born outside wedlock.
And so on ... Do your math's !
U.S. Life Expectancy Continues to Plummet
Ed Dowd: COVID Shots Are Causing Youth Democide
Quiet-Quitting: Are You Doing Only What's Necessary at Work and No More ?
Buchanan: How, When, or Will We Ever Come Together Again ?
We Are Not the First Civilization to Collapse, But We Will Probably Be the
Last
SELF-DESTRUCTION IS YOUR PATRIOTIC DUTY
* China Goes Full 1984, Using Drones with Cameras and Loudspeakers to
Assert Compliance !
"This community is in total lockdown now ! Stay in your room !"
On Sept. 1, Chengdu City put 21 million residents under lockdown, and ordered mass nucleic acid testing when the authorities extended the lockdown three days later.
On Sept. 4, a video showing a Chengdu mother mourning the loss of her son over the week-long went viral. The forced isolation meant the boy missed a critical treatment for his heart disease.
On Sept. 5, a magnitude 6.8 earthquake struck Luding County, causing
local water and power outages. The Chinese admitted 74 were killed and 253
injured.
While major cities, such as, Chengdu and Chongqing, also felt the quake, despite the aftershocks that continued to rattle the area and severe damage to houses and roads, the authorities insisted on enforcing the zero-COVID policy—residents were locked inside their homes, and people still queued for PCR testing.
Netizens revealed that during the earthquake, residents remained
confined to their apartments or residential complexes. They could not escape
because the lobby doors were locked. Many were simply ordered to go back
upstairs by the pandemic prevention workers at the residential complexes.
Locals’ Sadness
Online videos showed residents trying to break the locked doors, or arguing with the community staff in hopes of leaving the epicenter, but the community staff allegedly responded, “Has the building collapsed?”
Many local residents expressed their sadness online while enduring the
catastrophe.
Netizen, “The boundary-less Internet Zhao,” wrote: “Numbed. Is Chengdu cursed or what ? It was so hot that people turned on the air conditioners. But, the power shortage made everyone go out to cool down by splashing [in] water. Then the flash flood pushed everyone back to the indoor swimming pool. Suddenly, the flare-ups of the pandemic forced Chengdu under silent management. When everyone was forced to stay at home, the earth quaked. Is this an extinction ?
It’s a pity that I’m still alive.”
Some netizen responses to the COVID curbs on top of the natural
disasters best describe the irony of the policy.
One netizen wrote, “Please follow the strict measures: Only one person
per family can leave, with a 2-hour limit each time.”
Another said, “Don’t run when there’s an earthquake, the body
temperature will get too high when you run; and you’ll not be able to get back
in the apartment with a high body temperature!”
A netizen stated, “When the earthquake struck, my first reaction was not
to run or hide, but to protect my cell phone subconsciously. Maybe I was afraid
that the house would collapse and I would be buried alive; and when the rescue
workers came, they would refuse to dig me out because I could not show them my
green QR code and PCR test result.”
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