This post has always intrigued me. It's frequently interpreted as people having mental breakdowns after learning the truth, but if that was the case, why didn't Q say it would put 99% of people in a mental institution? To me, that distinction is important.
When do people go to the hospital? When it's something they can handle at home? No - We go to the hospital when it's outside of our ability to understand what is wrong and/or to fix it. In other words, we'd be going to the hospital to find out if we have something, to learn how it affects us and/or to remove it from our bodies - it's something physical, not mental.
Good question - but I think that's what it is. Nano-particles? Poisons? Biological-warfare disease? Undisclosed long-term effects of early vaccinations? Chips implanted without our knowledge via necessary surgeries/dental work? Your guess is as good as mine - but I believe it's something physical.
And, if I had to guess (and, believe me, I really am guessing,) if it's some kind of nano/implant, they'll attempt placation by saying that the communication mechanism has been interrupted/destroyed. If its something like long-term effects related to vaccinations, that will remain covered up because, due to legal immunity granted to big pharma, there's no solution, other than to stop it from happening again.
The complete picture would put 99% of Americans (the World) in a hospital.
Etymology
During the Middle Ages, hospitals served different functions from modern institutions in that they were almshouses for the poor, hostels for pilgrims, or hospital schools. The word "hospital" comes from the Latin hospes, signifying a stranger or foreigner, hence a guest.
So this way of looking at it is not as some kind of sickness or mental breakdown, but as utter destitution worldwide.
Another way of looking at it is that the complete picture involves most people in the world being born in a hospital, and all that goes along with it: the birth certificate, the legal fiction, the vaccines, the trauma.
This post has always intrigued me. It's frequently interpreted as people having mental breakdowns after learning the truth, but if that was the case, why didn't Q say it would put 99% of people in a mental institution? To me, that distinction is important.
When do people go to the hospital? When it's something they can handle at home? No - We go to the hospital when it's outside of our ability to understand what is wrong and/or to fix it. In other words, we'd be going to the hospital to find out if we have something, to learn how it affects us and/or to remove it from our bodies - it's something physical, not mental.
Good question - but I think that's what it is. Nano-particles? Poisons? Biological-warfare disease? Undisclosed long-term effects of early vaccinations? Chips implanted without our knowledge via necessary surgeries/dental work? Your guess is as good as mine - but I believe it's something physical.
And, if I had to guess (and, believe me, I really am guessing,) if it's some kind of nano/implant, they'll attempt placation by saying that the communication mechanism has been interrupted/destroyed. If its something like long-term effects related to vaccinations, that will remain covered up because, due to legal immunity granted to big pharma, there's no solution, other than to stop it from happening again.
True
Fluoride, for starters.
During the Middle Ages, hospitals served different functions from modern institutions in that they were almshouses for the poor, hostels for pilgrims, or hospital schools. The word "hospital" comes from the Latin hospes, signifying a stranger or foreigner, hence a guest.
So this way of looking at it is not as some kind of sickness or mental breakdown, but as utter destitution worldwide.
Another way of looking at it is that the complete picture involves most people in the world being born in a hospital, and all that goes along with it: the birth certificate, the legal fiction, the vaccines, the trauma.
Interesting.
Which would also echo the 99% - as in only 1%, the ruling class, would not be "hospitalized"
Definitely something to consider. Thanks.