Many people took the jab to save their job, some did it for travel, but was that worth it? What is the true cost? I had friends, spouses of friends almost cry in front of me because they felt like they had NO choice. But they did. Why they felt the need to justify/ rationalize it to me is proof that it was a choice. THIS is the Great Awakening. To discover they always had a choice. Yes, not easy; choice is not easy. "Choice" can come with short term repercussions, but in the end history and conscience will judge one's choice and determine if it was the correct one.
I'm sorry but I hate this argument. People on this board and other places act like "It's just a job, just quit!"
Do you know how many people struggled just to get the job they had/have? So, so many people live paycheck to paycheck (which is, of course, by design), so there are no savings to fall back on. Meanwhile the cost of everything is skyrocketing and who the hell wants to lose the house they've been only paying interest on for years when they know that these days they'll probably never be able to get another one?
What about the huge amount of people that have pets? Do you know how hard it is to find affordable, pet friendly apartments?
It's not just a job. It's your job, possibly benefits, your home, your groceries, your pets.
And all of this leaves out the fact that tons of people were and still are totally brainwashed and manipulated into believing it's safe. It's not their faults at all.
Stupid people not understanding that when inflation is rising so rapidly that the same groceries you bought a couple years ago now cost 1.5-2x that price, gas is up $4+ in some places, taxes are high as hell and healthcare is already absurdly priced, the ones living paycheck to paycheck cannot afford to "just quit", and "just quitting" is shitty for your resume to begin with if they want to pursue your prior work history.
If you can afford to sacrifice and not fuck your family over, great! But not having compassion for those who can't while you shit on leftists for their stance on abortion is sheer insanity.
Imagine wanting children to suffer because their parents quit their job or got fired for a cause you don't understand or care about, and they are forced to live on the streets or be taken away from their parents by the government that has a terrible track record caring for them.
It's bullshit behavior and it's not compassionate, and the ones who advocate for this shit better not call themselves God fearing folk, because it's not Biblically proper behavior to advocate for the suffering of literally billions.
When does one say "no"? When does it end? Compliance never ends the tyranny, it only emboldens it. This ends when the people decide it ends, not when a company CEO or politician decides... people. Listen I get your point and its not the people's fault we are here, but it is the people's fault we are still here. The world will never go back to the way it was. The sooner the population comes to grip with that the sooner we can end this, heal and move forward. The choice is ours.
Nuremberg code supersedes national law last I checked, adherence is irrelevant, it is a law that is put to governments not one they can choose to join, unless I'm wrong, need to see where it says I'm wrong
Incorrect. The U.S. is a signatory to the Code, which means (I expect) that it was ratified as a treaty. As such, it becomes part of the supreme law of the land, at par with the Constitution. (This is why some people attempt to re-write the Constitution by passing treaties, but changing the Constitution can only be done through amendment.)
I think you hit a nerve on our end of the hive mind with this post. If there was this much energy pushing back against the jab in the first place we wouldn't be having this conversation. A job is a job is a job. The companies cannot exist without customers and employees. This ends when the people decides it will end. That is "choice".
Many people took the jab to save their job, some did it for travel, but was that worth it? What is the true cost? I had friends, spouses of friends almost cry in front of me because they felt like they had NO choice. But they did. Why they felt the need to justify/ rationalize it to me is proof that it was a choice. THIS is the Great Awakening. To discover they always had a choice. Yes, not easy; choice is not easy. "Choice" can come with short term repercussions, but in the end history and conscience will judge one's choice and determine if it was the correct one.
I'm sorry but I hate this argument. People on this board and other places act like "It's just a job, just quit!"
Do you know how many people struggled just to get the job they had/have? So, so many people live paycheck to paycheck (which is, of course, by design), so there are no savings to fall back on. Meanwhile the cost of everything is skyrocketing and who the hell wants to lose the house they've been only paying interest on for years when they know that these days they'll probably never be able to get another one?
What about the huge amount of people that have pets? Do you know how hard it is to find affordable, pet friendly apartments?
It's not just a job. It's your job, possibly benefits, your home, your groceries, your pets.
And all of this leaves out the fact that tons of people were and still are totally brainwashed and manipulated into believing it's safe. It's not their faults at all.
Stupid people not understanding that when inflation is rising so rapidly that the same groceries you bought a couple years ago now cost 1.5-2x that price, gas is up $4+ in some places, taxes are high as hell and healthcare is already absurdly priced, the ones living paycheck to paycheck cannot afford to "just quit", and "just quitting" is shitty for your resume to begin with if they want to pursue your prior work history.
If you can afford to sacrifice and not fuck your family over, great! But not having compassion for those who can't while you shit on leftists for their stance on abortion is sheer insanity.
Imagine wanting children to suffer because their parents quit their job or got fired for a cause you don't understand or care about, and they are forced to live on the streets or be taken away from their parents by the government that has a terrible track record caring for them.
It's bullshit behavior and it's not compassionate, and the ones who advocate for this shit better not call themselves God fearing folk, because it's not Biblically proper behavior to advocate for the suffering of literally billions.
When does one say "no"? When does it end? Compliance never ends the tyranny, it only emboldens it. This ends when the people decide it ends, not when a company CEO or politician decides... people. Listen I get your point and its not the people's fault we are here, but it is the people's fault we are still here. The world will never go back to the way it was. The sooner the population comes to grip with that the sooner we can end this, heal and move forward. The choice is ours.
Nuremberg code supersedes national law last I checked, adherence is irrelevant, it is a law that is put to governments not one they can choose to join, unless I'm wrong, need to see where it says I'm wrong
Incorrect. The U.S. is a signatory to the Code, which means (I expect) that it was ratified as a treaty. As such, it becomes part of the supreme law of the land, at par with the Constitution. (This is why some people attempt to re-write the Constitution by passing treaties, but changing the Constitution can only be done through amendment.)
Basically right conclusion, wrong premise from me i suppose
I think you hit a nerve on our end of the hive mind with this post. If there was this much energy pushing back against the jab in the first place we wouldn't be having this conversation. A job is a job is a job. The companies cannot exist without customers and employees. This ends when the people decides it will end. That is "choice".