The Apologies for Mandates Begin; will you forgive?
(igorchudov.substack.com)
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We are going to be seeing a lot more of these in the near future. We are going to have to make personal and moral decisions about how to handle these. This may very well be the hardest moral decision we will have to make in our own lives. Some of the officials are going to be sincere, others are going to be “face saving” and yet some will be an attempt to save their own lives. We are going to have to take a moral position.
For myself, I’m torn between to perspectives: Forgiveness and Guilt/Punishment. I am not any special person, yet early on I knew these jabs were pure evil. They violated almost everything I can think of. They violated the Nuremburg codes, medical ethics, legal standards, the Constitution, Religious beliefs, personal preferences, personal safety, parent/child bonds and security and so much more. Yet, these officials still demanded and required people to get injected, and usually against their will. The officials threatened jobs, family, religion, safety and so much more to push an agenda. Lives were ruined or in many cases, lost. “I was just doing my job” is NOT A DEFENSE. Those are such wise words. Now, it is a FACT that these jabs were intentionally designed to kill millions of people. So, how do we respond to an apology?
The Spirit says to forgive yet “no punishment” is NOT scriptural, fair, nor appropriate. George S. Patton once said, ”May God have mercy on their souls because I sure as hell won’t.” Somehow, that sounds reasonable. Those who pushed the jab made a conscience decision to push something that they themselves did not research. If I was able to research and discover the evil in the jab, they could have done the same, but they chose not to. They chose to “follow orders.” This seems to be where my sympathy ends.
I can’t just ignore the damage that was inflicted on innocent people. Whether doctor, nurse, elected official, employer or whatever, they had a responsibility that innocent people relied on. Responsibility was their job. To me, it is their responsibility to make sure they “Do no Harm.” To me, this is where they failed. I might be wrong, but this position seems reasonable to me.
A mistake is dropping a birthday cake. I can forgive a mistake. Genocide is not a mistake, it’s a crime. One does not accidently commit genocide. It requires deliberate forethought and planning. The perpetrators can have remorse and apologize, but a premeditated crime requires punishment. These officials made an individual choice to commit their part of this crime.