It's now becoming widely known that those who got the jabs could be facing serious health issues or even sudden death.
A lot of people took the jab with the best of intentions, or were coerced into getting them for whatever reason.
If you are one of those people who think 'so what, serves them right' then that's an understandable reaction, but I want to ask you to think for a moment what it would be like to be in their shoes.
Imagine you are a care-worker, looking after the elderly, and you were forced to take the jab or you would be out of work. You have a small child and lots of bills to pay and no time to read the news or deep dive medical papers etc. and have no reason to mistrust the medical profession.
So you get the jab, and maybe you got some side effects, but because you have other health issues it's not immediately obvious it was down to the jab. Fast forward two years and you've had two miscarriages which the Dr's put down to your blood pressure issues (which you thought you had recovered from).
Then you start to hear wild stories about the jab causing injuries. You've never heard this before but now the people you meet on the school-run or at work are mentioning it. So far it's nothing but 'conspiracy theories' - you haven't got time for that sort of stuff, so you carry on about your life.
Now the information is starting to make it into the mainstream and people are getting worried, those that are brave enough to even mention it. You are frightened, you don't want to deal with it because you don't want it to be true.
Because if it were true then the implications are immense. You could die at any moment, leaving your child an orphan. Your loved ones could die at any moment, you have no idea. You don't have enough information to fully understand what's going on, and you're scared to look because you get anxiety attacks when you start to think of what might happen.
This is real fear. This person is not evil, nor are they someone who told others what to do, they simply wanted to get on with their lives and trusted people who everyone else also seemed to trust.
Spare a thought for what most people are going through right now as they start their journey of understanding and realization. It's going to be hell for them, and I think we are here to help them, point them in the right direction, because we were given something by God that allowed us to avoid this situation and be ready.
I'm not telling anyone what to do, but I feel it is the best path for all of us. After all, #wwg1wga
I have a similar situation with my mother. She even rang my wife (whom she rarely talks to) to ask me to stop sending her stuff because it was frightening her. She also didn't want me going round one Christmas (even at a distance in the garden) because of her fear.
My mother took the jabs because she likes to travel a lot.
I'd like to be clear here, it's not people like my mother I am advocating for. She made her choices and I have to respect that. I can feel sad that she made that choice, but she made it clear it's none of my business.
I understand completely, it was the same with the people I mentioned. The only item I will mention is when these people get sick, they look for us to help them. Or when they shed and get other people sick like my family members did. It’s not that they refuse to listen which gets me kind of pissed off, it’s the aftermath of when they do get sick, or should pass away, its what is left behind, thats the issue I get pissed off at. If you turn your back your a bad person, when its family you are almost forced to help them. Like telling someone not to play Russian roulette, them playing and becoming paralyzed because they shoot themselves in the head. Or worse dying and leaving behind small kids, that become the responsibility of family members. That is what gets me pissed off. To me it’s selfish, just my opinion.
I don't think you're wrong, I've had similar thoughts.
We respect that they have a right to make a choice -- good, bad, or otherwise -- but we are under no moral obligation to respect the actual choice they make.
If we can say with certainty that it was a poor choice, we should not respect it.
It's not my job to tell other people they are wrong, they need to work that out for themselves.