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Bonjour from Paris

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Posts: 10
(@phelps)
Joined: 3 years ago

Dr. Christian PERRONNE, head of infectiology at Garches, and former very big cheese in various international organisations, has an interview today with André BERCOFF on Sud Radio. Once you've listened to it, you will NOT allowed yourself to be vaccinated against a "disease" where the "kill-rate" so to speak, is 0.05% of those (truly) infected. I repeat, 0.05 % - not 5 %, not 50%, 0.05%. He says that residents of old people's homes are going to be used as guinea pigs, since in any event the Government has shewn that it deems their lives "worthless" (Nutzlose Fresser, anyone?) - hundreds, perhaps thousands, were injected with the massive sedative RIVOTRIL in March and April , and denied access to all treatment such as hydroxychloroquine or even Tamiflu. He says that a normal vaccine takes YEARs, not weeks, to produce, that Europe's population will be a vast experimental herd. That even animals are not subjected to such experiments. That most of the new "vaccines" are not actually vaccines, but GENE therapy. And you neither need it, nor want it, for a disease with such a low "kill-rate".

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fcFa2xI6sY

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Posts: 615
 jmc
(@jmc)
Joined: 4 years ago

Very interesting interview. The most interesting bit was when he went into detail about the gene therapy "vaccines" and their side effects. Very nasty.

I was not surprised but still shocked by what was done to the old people back in March. But given that almost 15,000 old people died in France in the 2003 heatwave because it happened in July and the Minster and all senior people in the Ministry of Health was away on vacation so no decisions could be made for almost 3 weeks, hardly surprising given the way France works.

The 0.05% number sounded to me like the general population death risk. Basically the IFR (Infection Fatality Rate) multiple by the probability of getting infected. So a 20% probability would work to give you 0.05%.

Based on the numbers the Professor quoted he is expecting a serious side effect rate of around 1%. Which I suspect may be a very conservation number. So people in good health are trading a risk of a 0.05% of death for a 1% risk of getting seriously ill often with long term health problems. And for people in bad health, according to the studies i have seen on other vaccines, they get little or no immunity from even the most robust vaccines. Which these vaccines most certainly will not be.

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Posts: 79
(@afterall)
Joined: 4 years ago

Just to mention https://www.crashdebug.fr , a much under-used French alt media site that also posted this interview. It's a little bit like zerohedge was before that site became an unusable mess.

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Posts: 243
Topic starter
(@teebs)
Joined: 4 years ago

REBELLION IN THE AIR

For those who thought or feared the traditional spirit of the people of France had been smothered by the state-led hysteria to coronavirus, have no fear, the spirit is alive and well.

Macron thought he had killed off the "gilets jaunes" with the first lockdown and making crowds illegal (no exemption was allowed for protests). But that was back in the early spring, when a lot of people feared there really was a dangerous new infectious disease around.

Fast forward 8 months and for the second weekend in a row the country is in rebellion against the "security" law that basically - in effect - makes it near impossible for the press to report on how the police go about their work, and empowers the police to demand from journalists to hand over and censor any film or recording they make of police at work.

Yesterday, thousands marched in Paris and things turned ugly. Injuries, arrests, fires. Around the country were other demonstrations not marked by Parisian violence, but the message is getting through.

Corona-fear is no longer operable and people are out in defiance of lockdown regulations that are increasingly fading into the background.

The law was rubber-stamped by Macron's massive majority in the National Assembly but, even there and almost unheard of, 10 members of his brand new party rebelled and 33 abstained. The law is now on its way to the second chamber, the Senate, where the government has already conceded that the most controversial part, the notorious clause 24 about filming the police, will be rewritten.

Official restrictions on movement in the country due to the corona-hysteria will officially end on 15 December, to be replaced by a curfew from 9 pm to 7 am (unless you need to go out for work or something "essential" ... like walking the dog). If yesterday is anything to go by, expect the tempo of protest to increase.

Some of us are now hopeful that in the current and increasingly febrile atmosphere, the state will not be able to re-impose any more draconian corona measures as they expire. The security law is due for a face-down around mid-January, while the "state of medical emergency" expires at the end of January. It will probably be renewed, but for how long and in what form?

VACCINES?

Talk about vaccines is more sober here. None of the jubilation of Hancock. The state is talking about rolling out vaccinations in early January. Macron has already ruled out making them compulsory, but that was after Marine Le Pen fired the first shot by saying she would oppose any compulsion.

The split here is a bit more equivocal with people split almost 50:50 on whether they will take the vaccine or not.

With this level of resistance, and people out on the streets, it is really difficult to see the state trying to change its mind or make vaccines compulsory by the back-door through making certain activities conditional on vaccinations.

MAKE MERRY

In the meantime, with the police happily busy dealing with riots and demonstrations against the security law, the state of détente between official rules and real life continues apace.

As has become traditional now, on Saturday night we "break the law" and go for drinks and dinner at a favoured local. (I do so alone a bit more frequently.) Last night was fine sport. I got there a bit early and already there were people there who had obviously been drinking all afternoon. Soon the evening shift started and it was a great atmosphere.

The weather was freezing and I asked for a wee dram to warm me up. The landlord said he had run out by a bunch who had cleaned up the whisky in the afternoon "and were dancing down the pavement afterward" in his words.

Midway through the evening about 4 young men came in to order a big takeaway for a big birthday party they were organising somewhere. Among the spoils they were carrying were four bottles of scotch. They were already pretty happy by the time they arrived.

As the place filled up, the landlord made his apologies and had to run out for 10 minutes to buy more whisky and supplies from the local supermarket.

We got to know a lady in a table behind us who is 80 years old! Would have thought she would be afraid or worried?

"I have lived 80 years, and I am not going to let some minister younger than my oldest child tell me how to live and what risks I can take".

Shades of Maureen from Barnsley there.

I quipped that "hope the Bosch don't come in and shut us down" (using the French term for German occupiers in ww2). She erupted in laughter "I was born during the war but cannot remember any of it" and we concluded that if this lockdown stuff carries on much longer, a new resistance movement will need to organise.

And, given what was happening on the streets of Paris and other cities just a few hours earlier, it looks like it maybe afoot!

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Posts: 1539
(@miahoneybee)
Joined: 4 years ago

Thanks for your post teebs that put a smile on my face. I said before it's always great to hear first hand personal experience from people living in the country and living through it.
There is a seperate post re a petition on masks.
😀

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