Goes to show: satanic society arises fm prosperity/success/victory which then raises up masses of inferiors/weaklings--now to be exterminated

Apollonian

Guest Columnist

Trained like DOGS: Britons will readily comply with future lockdowns and mask mandates, “Nudge Unit” chief says​

JULY 10, 20230

Link: http://www.yourdestinationnow.com/2023/07/trained-like-dogs-britons-will-readily.html

According to a British government adviser, since the United Kingdom has already been "brainwashed" to learn a new behavior, British people would quickly obey future pandemic lockdowns.

"In principle, you can just switch it [behavior] back on," Professor David Halpern, head of the Behavioral Insights Team (BIT), which was spun out from the cabinet office, told the Daily Telegraph.

He pointed out that since the country had "practiced the drill" of the pandemic's restrictive government mandates like wearing facemasks as well as following other health protocols such as social distancing and working from home, it would be easy to "redo it" in a future crisis because people are now "conditioned to do what they are told." Thanks to the engineered globalists' pandemic.

Speaking on the "Lockdown Files" podcast, Halpern pointed out that generally, messaging based on fearmongering is ineffective. He defended its use in extreme circumstances, choosing not to reference the mass protests built across the country after the restrictions began in March 2020. "There are times when you do need to cut through… particularly if you think people are wrongly calibrated," he said.

The Nudge Unit chief also stressed how powerful messages on posters are. These were used throughout pandemic restrictions and could enforce visual prompts so that when people go into a shop or somewhere else, it reminds them, automatically cues and triggers the "learned behavior."

The people got so used to the restrictions and mandates that they find it hard to "unlearn them." He cited mask-wearing as an example. Though the threat of the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) transmission has lessened to almost no longer risky and studies have proven that facial coverings "never really mitigated the spread of the virus, it actually even caused more harm for increased inhalation of carbon dioxide, people would still feel something is missing or naked when not wearing masks.

"Put it this way," he said. "You would feel like, 'Oh my God, I haven't got my mask.' You feel naked, right?” This is because, once the public has learned a new behavior or habit, it would be easier to switch it back on. It is already in your system even though plenty of Britons refused to comply and give up their freedoms in the first place.

"Major disasters leave this enduring trace on society," the professor further explained. As well as knowing the drill, this "quasi-evolutionary" impact is a strong indicator of future behavior, he claimed.

Comments flocked to the Breitbart article that featured this topic. One user named Bonce commented: "He may be in for a rude awakening, " referring to Halpern. "A lot of people realize they were taken for mugs during 'Convid.' Reimposing draconian measures again wouldn't be met with mass compliance. The government lost what little bit of credibility it had left with 'convid.'"

Meanwhile, another one with the monicker "Feeding the World" expressed his exasperation with the government policies and said, "Masks don't work, the jab doesn't work, the government doesn't work."

The IRONY of UK strict lockdowns and Boris' Partygate scandal​

In 2021, former Prime Minister Boris Johnson threatened that if Britons did not follow coronavirus rules he would impose stricter measures. Johnson was reported to have said back then that the government would have to enforce harsher measures, including banning Britons from leaving the house more than once a week, they will.

"We need to enforce the rules in supermarkets. When people are getting takeaway drinks, in cafes, they need to avoid spreading the disease there, avoid mingling too much," he said. Reiterating the point that the government will crack down harder on people's freedoms if they are perceived not to be abiding by lockdown rules, he further said, "If we feel that things are not being properly observed then we may have to do more."

Johnson stepped down from his seat in Parliament because he was alleged to have broken his own rules during the same year he was enforcing them. He deliberately lied to members of parliament about COVID-19 lockdown-breaking parties and would have been suspended for 90 days had he not quit as a lawmaker, a parliamentary committee ruled on July 6.

The House of Commons Privileges Committee, which examines breaches of parliamentary rules, concluded that he was guilty of "repeated contempt [of parliament] and... seeking to undermine the parliamentary process." However, the former PM insisted that his attendance at the Downing Street parties in question was "lawful, and required" by his job.

Reports indicated Johnson, 58 years old, has avoided having to face his peers and the humiliation of potentially having to run for reelection in his constituency by resigning as an MP last week.
 

Four in 10 Brown University students claim they’re LGBTQ, confirming massive leftist social contagion and brainwashing​

Link: http://www.domigood.com/2023/07/four-in-10-brown-university-students.html

When the "LGBTQ" movement began in earnest a few years ago, the globalist left ensured that it infected every corner of Western civilization and society, and now, their effort to tear away huge chunks of traditional values has proven successful.

This is especially true on college and university campuses, where fads like this become all the rage and infect entire student bodies.

"New survey data from Brown University’s student newspaper provides further evidence that the increase in LGBT identification is driven by social pressures," the Washington Examiner's Restoring America site noted.

Recent data reveals a significant increase in LGBTQ+ identification within Brown's student body, nearly tripling between 2010 and 2023. Back in 2010, only 14 percent of students at Brown identified as non-heterosexual, whereas the figure has now risen to 38 percent.

"The Herald’s Spring 2023 poll found that 38% of students do not identify as straight — over five times the national rate," The Brown Daily Herald reported. "Over the past decade, LGBTQ+ identification has increased across the nation, with especially sharp growth at Brown."

There have also been huge increases in the number of students who identify in a variety of sexual orientations. "Since Fall 2010, Brown’s LGBTQ+ population has expanded considerably. The gay or lesbian population has increased by 26% and the percentage of students identifying as bisexual has increased by 232%," the student newspaper reported. "Students identifying as other sexual orientations within the LGBTQ+ community have increased by 793%."


The concept of considering LGBT identification as a social contagion remains a subject of criticism among scholars. One notable instance involved the editor-in-chief of an academic journal who faced a cancellation attempt after publishing a paper supporting the theory of Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria. Additionally, a professor from Northwestern University, who authored the paper, also became a target of cancellation efforts.

So in other words, leftists are doing what they always do: They refuse to debate topics or accept any scholarly research that does not support their worldview, so they try to intimidate opposing viewpoints into silence.

Restoring American noted further:

Coincidentally, Dr. Lisa Littman, who popularized the idea of Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria, once taught at Brown University before being forced out over the controversy.

Dr. Littman argued that some girls who identified as transgender were doing so due to peer pressure from within their social circles. The 38% identification tracks with research from the Center for the Study of Partisanship and Ideology, which found similar levels among elite colleges. The researcher on that project, Eric Kaufmann, noted in comments to the College Fix that his research has found sexual behavior has not kept pace with the identification. In other words, bisexual identification outstrips bisexual sexual activity.


"If this was about people feeling able to come out, then we should have seen these two trends rise together," he told the College Fix. "What we find instead is that identity is rising much faster than behavior, indicating that people with occasional rather than sustained feelings of attraction to the opposite sex are increasingly identifying as LGBT."

Expressing one's non-heterosexuality is seen as fashionable and garners social approval. However, the controversy surrounding the influence of social pressure on LGBTQ+ identification stems primarily from the protected status of the group.

Nonetheless, the recognition of peer pressure's impact on our behaviors and lifestyles is acknowledged in other areas that are less contentious. Consequently, if teenagers can influence each other to engage in certain actions, it is plausible that they can also exert influence to encourage LGBTQ+ identification, Restoring America noted.

For instance, the American Lung Association highlights that marketing, peer influence, and witnessing parental smoking can contribute to increased rates of smoking. Similarly, "peer relationships" have been associated with alcohol abuse and drug use. On a positive note, peer support groups have shown effectiveness in weight loss and debt reduction endeavors.

"Social pressure is encouraging at least some people to identify as gay, bisexual, or transgender and the Brown University survey is further evidence of that theory," the outlet added.

Our society is sick and it doesn't look much like things are going to change anytime soon as long as leftists retain even a modicum of power in our societies.
 

Survey: Almost Half of Millennials Think Misgendering Trans Person Should Be Criminal Offense​

STATION GOSSIP 08:56

Link: http://www.stationgossip.com/2023/07/survey-almost-half-of-millennials-think.html

Credit: @olilondon A new survey reveals that almost half of the millennials polled, those aged between 25-34, think that referring to a tr...​


Dangerous Fops (Cartoon)
Actor/Writer Strike (Cartoon)

trans-kids-600x336.jpg
Credit: @olilondon
A new survey reveals that almost half of the millennials polled, those aged between 25-34, think that referring to a transgender person by the wrong pronouns should be a criminal offense.
The survey, by Redfield & Wilton Strategies for Newsweek, polled 1,500 eligible voters in the United States.
Newsweek reports:

According to the survey by Redfield & Wilton Strategies, 44 percent of those aged 25-34 think “referring to someone by the wrong gender pronoun (he/him, she/her) should be a criminal offense,” versus just 31 percent who disagree. The remainder “neither agree nor disagree” or “don’t know.”
This view remains popular for those aged 35-44, among whom 38 percent think misgendering should be illegal, whilst 35 percent disagree and 26 percent either don’t know or didn’t express an opinion.
However the figure for millennials contrasts starkly with that for Americans as a whole, among whom just 19 percent want misgendering to be a criminal offense, whilst 65 percent disagree, 12 percent “neither agree nor disagree” and four percent answered “don’t know.”

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Ho hoho, u expect the rulers to have any respect for the stupid goons who support terror-state of Israel, who willingly drank proverbial "kool-aid," and STILL voluntarily take the poison covid vaxx?​

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Seniors Told To Brace For Far Lower Social Security Payment Boost In 2024​

BY TYLER DURDEN
FRIDAY, AUG 11, 2023 - 08:40 PM
Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times,

Link: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-...-far-lower-social-security-payment-boost-2024

The 2024 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) increase for Social Security recipients is likely to be a fraction of what it was in 2023 and a disappointment to many seniors, according to a nonpartisan seniors group, which found that some eight in 10 retirees report they're still reeling from inflation.

The latest COLA estimate from The Senior Citizens League (SCL) is around 3 percent, which amounts to a roughly $54 increase in the current average monthly benefit check of $1,789.
The estimate could still change, however, with SCL saying it will release its final projection for the 2024 COLA on Sept. 13.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) is expected to announce the actual COLA for 2024 sometime in mid-October.
To arrive at its official calculation, the SSA takes the average of the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) during the third quarter of 2023 (which includes July, August, and September). This figure is then compared to the corresponding data from the previous year.
"The COLA announcement is expected to be October 12, 2023, barring any unforeseen delays from a government shutdown," Mary Johnson, Social Security and Medicare policy analyst at SCL, said in a statement.
A partial government shutdown in 2013 led to delays in the official COLA announcement.

'High Prices Continue to Impact Households'​

The newest COLA estimate of around 3 percent is roughly in line with the SCL's earlier projection but far lower than last year's adjustment of 8.7 percent, which was driven up by multi-decade high inflation.
Annual inflation, which is a key input in the COLA calculations, inched up to 3.2 percent in July from 3 percent in June. While that's above the Federal Reserve's target of around 2 percent, the latest inflation reading is well below the 40-year high of 9.1 percent in June 2022.
"In 2023 Social Security recipients received the highest COLA in more than 40 years, but 79 percent of retirees report that lingering high prices continue to impact household budgets significantly," SCL said in a statement.
In an SCL survey of 1,759 retirees in mid-July, nearly eight in 10 said that essentials like housing, food, and prescription drugs are costing them more today than a year ago.
"High costs have significantly impacted older Americans' ability to access healthcare," SCL said in a statement.
Around two-thirds of retirees who participated in the survey said that high prices have forced them to put off dental care, including major work like dentures, bridges, and implants.
Nearly one-third of retirees said they had postponed filling prescriptions or getting medical care.
"Older consumers, especially those with lower retirement incomes remain vulnerable to some of the higher prices that haven’t gone down," Mary Johnson, Social Security and Medicare policy analyst at SCL, told Yahoo Finance.
Housing costs have risen 7.7 percent over the past year while rent is up 8 percent, the latest inflation data shows, with the estimated 3 percent COLA adjustment a far cry from these figures.
Richard Priedits of Grand Rapids, Michigan, told The Associated Press that he's noticed higher accommodation costs during his annual vacation.
“We are using credit cards a lot more," he said as he stopped at the Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area in Nevada.
“The hotel was probably about $100 more ... We filled up the tank this morning. It was like $90.’’
Prices are high back in Michigan as well, he said: “It’s expensive everywhere.’’
Some analysts expect that the pace of inflation in housing will slow down significantly going forward since there's a lag in rental costs being reflected in the government's inflation figures.
"Housing disinflation will pick up momentum in the coming months," Lydia Boussour, senior economist at EY-Parthenon in New York, told Reuters.
Despite the rate of inflation growth slowing from the 9.1 percent peak in June 2022, consumers are still feeling the effects of price pressures.
According to a Bankrate survey in July, 72 percent of Americans don't feel financially secure. Among them, 63 percent say that high inflation is making it hard for them to be financially comfortable.
Another survey by Bankrate in June found that 68 percent are saving less for unexpected situations because of inflation.

Social Security Fund In Danger​

Social Security is facing future challenges due to various factors such as inflation, economic conditions, and lower-than-expected tax revenue.
A recent projection by the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) estimates that the Social Security retirement fund will be insolvent in 2033, resulting in a 23 percent benefit cut. This means that, in 2033, annual benefits for the average newly retired dual-income couple would be cut by $17,400.
The future of Social Security has become a key political talking point as the 2024 presidential campaign ramps up.
Former President Donald Trump has warned his fellow Republicans not to cut Social Security benefits, while President Joe Biden has vowed to push back against any GOP-led efforts to slash Social Security payments.
CRFB says that any 2024 presidential candidate who "pledges not to touch Social Security is implicitly endorsing a 23 percent across-the-board benefit cut for the 70 million retirees" when the fund runs out of money within 10 years.
Accordingly, there have been bipartisan calls to come up with a fix.

Senate Judiciary Ranking Member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) speaks at a hearing with the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington on July 12, 2022. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said during a July 12 Senate Budget Committee hearing that Social Security must be preserved for future generations.
Mr. Grassley urged Congress to follow the example of President Ronald Reagan and House Speaker Tip O’Neill (D-Mass.) in the 1980s.
“When you have candidates for president on the Republican side and you have a Democratic president in office today who say, ‘We're not going to touch Social Security,’ how are you going to get things done?” Mr. Grassley asked.
“The only way to reach a deal on Social Security is to follow the Reagan–O'Neill model. That means Congress and the president working in a bipartisan fashion and keeping a chain, a range of options on the table,” Mr. Grassley said, referring to the 1983 agreement that stabilized Social Security for decades.
The Reagan-O'Neill model was basically a combination of increasing payroll taxes and gradually raising the retirement age.
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Taliban’s Massively Successful Opium Eradication Raises Questions About What US Was Doing All Along​


BY TYLER DURDEN
SATURDAY, AUG 12, 2023 - 10:30 PM
Authored by Alan MacLeod via MintPress News,
Link: https://www.zerohedge.com/geopoliti...adication-raises-questions-about-what-us-was/

The Taliban government in Afghanistan – the nation that until recently produced 90% of the world’s heroin – has drastically reduced opium cultivation across the country. Western sources estimate an up to 99% reduction in some provinces. This raises serious questions about the seriousness of U.S. drug eradication efforts in the country over the past 20 years. And, as global heroin supplies dry up, experts tell MintPress News that they fear this could spark the growing use of fentanyl – a drug dozens of times stronger than heroin that already kills more than 100,000 Americans yearly.

The Taliban Does What the US Did Not​

It has already been called “the most successful counter-narcotics effort in human history.” Armed with little more than sticks, teams of counter-narcotics brigades travel the country, cutting down Afghanistan’s poppy fields.
In April of last year, the ruling Taliban government announced the prohibition of poppy farming
, citing both their strong religious beliefs and the extremely harmful social costs that heroin and other opioids – derived from the sap of the poppy plant – have wrought across Afghanistan.
It has not been all bluster. New research from geospatial data company Alcis suggests that poppy production has already plummeted by around 80% since last year. Indeed, satellite imagery shows that in Helmand Province, the area that produces more than half of the crop, poppy production has dropped by a staggering 99%. Just 12 months ago, poppy fields were dominant. But Alcis estimates that there are now less than 1,000 hectares of poppy growing in Helmand.
Instead, farmers are planting wheat, helping stave off the worst of a famine that U.S. sanctions helped create. Afghanistan is still in a perilous state, however, with the United Nations warning that six million people are close to starvation.
Data from Alcis shows that a majority of Afghan farmers switched from growing poppy to wheat in a single year
The Taliban waited until 2022 to impose the long-awaited ban in order not to interfere with the growing season. Doing so would have provoked unrest among the rural population by eradicating a crop that farmers had spent months growing. Between 2020 and late 2022, the price of opium in local markets rose by as much as 700%. Yet given the Taliban’s insistence – and their efficiency at eradication – few have been tempted to plant poppies.
The poppy ban has been matched by a similar campaign against the methamphetamine industry, with the government targeting the ephedra crop and shutting down ephedrine labs across the country.

A Looming Catastrophe​

Afghanistan produces almost 90% of the world’s heroin. Therefore, the eradication of the opium crop will have profound worldwide consequences on drug use. Experts MintPress spoke to warned that a dearth of heroin would likely produce a huge spike in the use of synthetic opioids such as fentanyl, a drug the Center for Disease Control estimates is 50 times stronger and is responsible for taking the lives of more than 100,000 Americans each year.
“It is important to consider past periods of heroin shortages and the impact these have had on the European drug market,” the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) told MintPress, adding:
Experience in the E.U. with previous periods of reduced heroin supply suggests that this can lead to changes in patterns of drug supply and use. This can include further an increase in rates of polysubstance use among heroin users. Additional risks to existing users may be posed by the substitution of heroin with more harmful synthetic opioids, including fentanyl and its derivatives and new potent benzimidazole opioids.”
In other words, if heroin is no longer available, users will switch to far deadlier synthetic forms of the drug. A 2022 United Nations report came to a similar conclusion, noting that the crackdown on heroin production could lead to the “replacement of heroin or opium by other substances…such as fentanyl and its analogs.”
“It does have that danger in the macro sense, that if you take all that heroin off the market, people are going to go to other products,” Matthew Hoh told MintPress. Hoh is a former State Department official who resigned from his post in Zabul Province, Afghanistan, in 2009. “But the response should not be reinvade Afghanistan, reoccupy it and put the drug lords back in power, which is basically what people are implying when they bemoan the consequence of the Taliban stopping the drug trade,” Hoh added; “Most of the people who are speaking this way and worrying out loud about it are people who want to find a reason for the U.S. to go and affect regime change in Afghanistan.”
There certainly has been plenty of hand-wringing from American sources. “Foreign Policy,” wrote about “how the Taliban’s ‘war on drugs’ could backfire;” U.S. government-funded “Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty” claimed that the Taliban were turning a “blind eye to opium production,” despite the official ban. And the United States Institute of Peace, an institution created by Congress that is “dedicated to the proposition that a world without violent conflict is possible,” stated emphatically that “the Taliban’s successful opium ban is bad for Afghans and the world”.
This looming catastrophe, however, will not hit immediately. Significant stockpiles of drugs along trafficking routes still exist. As the EMCDDA told MintPress:
It can take over 12 months before the opium harvest appears on the European retail drug market as heroin – and so it is too early to predict, at this stage, the future impact of the cultivation ban on heroin availability in Europe. Nonetheless, if the ban on opium cultivation is enforced and sustained, it could have a significant impact on heroin availability in Europe during 2024 or 2025.”
Yet there is little indication that the Taliban are anything but serious about eradicating the crop, indicating that a heroin crunch is indeed coming.
A similar attempt by the Taliban to eliminate the drug occurred in 2000, the last full year that they were in power. It was extraordinarily successful, with opium reduction dropping from 4,600 tons to just 185 tons. At that time, it took around 18 months for the consequences to be felt in the West. In the United Kingdom, average heroin purity fell from 55% to 34%, while in the Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, heroin was largely replaced by fentanyl. However, as soon as the United States invaded in 2001, poppy cultivation shot back up to previous levels and the supply chain recommenced.

US Complicity in the Afghan Drug Trade​

The Taliban’s successful campaign to eradicate drug production has cast a shadow of doubt over the effectiveness of American-led endeavors to achieve the same outcome. “It prompts the question, ‘What were we actually accomplishing there?!'” remarked Hoh, underscoring:
This undermines one of the fundamental premises behind the wars: the alleged association between the Taliban and the drug trade – a concept of a narco-terror nexus. However, this notion was fallacious. The reality was that Afghanistan was responsible for a staggering 80-90% of the world’s illicit opiate supply. The primary controllers of this trade were the Afghan government and military, entities we upheld in power.”
Hoh clarified that he never personally witnessed or received any reports of direct involvement by U.S. troops or officials in narcotics trafficking. Instead, he contended that there existed a “conscious and deliberate turning away from the unfolding events” during his tenure in Afghanistan.’
Left, a US Marine picks a flower as he guards a poppy field in 2012 in Helmand Provine. Photo | DVIDS. Right, A man breaks poppy stalks as part of a 2023 campaign to target illegal drugs in Afghanistan. Oriane Zerah | AP
Suzanna Reiss, an academic at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and the author of “We Sell Drugs: The Alchemy of U.S. Empire,” demonstrated an even more cynical perspective on American counter-narcotics endeavors as she conveyed to MintPress:
The U.S. has never really been focused on reducing the drug trade in Afghanistan (or elsewhere for that matter). All the lofty rhetoric aside, the U.S. has been happy to work with drug traffickers if the move would advance certain geopolitical interests (and indeed, did so, or at least turned a knowingly blind eye, when groups like the Northern Alliance relied on drugs to fund their political movement against the regime.).”
Afghanistan’s transformation into a preeminent narco-state owes a significant debt to Washington’s actions. Poppy cultivation in the 1970s was relatively limited. However, the tide changed in 1979 with the inception of Operation Cyclone, a massive infusion of funds to Afghan Mujahideen factions aimed at exhausting the Soviet military and terminating its presence in Afghanistan. The U.S. directed billions toward the insurgents, yet their financial needs persisted. Consequently, the Mujahideen delved into the illicit drug trade. By the culmination of Operation Cyclone, Afghanistan’s opium production had soared twentyfold. Professor Alfred McCoy, acclaimed author of “The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade,” shared with MintPress that approximately 75% of the planet’s illegal opium output was now sourced from Afghanistan, a substantial portion of the proceeds funneling to U.S.-backed rebel factions.

Unraveling the Opioid Crisis: An Impending Disaster​

The opioid crisis is the worst addiction epidemic in U.S. history. Earlier this year, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas described the American fentanyl problem as “the single greatest challenge we face as a country.” Nearly 110,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in 2021, fentanyl being by far the leading cause. Between 2015 and 2021, the National Institute of Health recorded a nearly 7.5-fold increase in overdose deaths. Medical journal The Lancet predicts that 1.2 million Americans will die from opioid overdoses by 2029.
U.S. officials blame Mexican cartels for smuggling the synthetic painkiller across the southern border and China for producing the chemicals necessary to make the drug.
White Americans are more likely to misuse these types of drugs than other races. Adults aged 35-44 experience the highest rates of deaths, although deaths among younger people are surging. Rural America has been particularly hard hit; a 2017 study by the National Farmers Union and the American Farm Bureau Federation found that 74% of farmers have been directly impacted by the opioid epidemic. West Virginia and Tennessee are the states most badly hit.
For writer Chris Hedges, who hails from rural Maine, the fentanyl crisis is an example of one of the many “diseases of despair” the U.S. is suffering from. It has, according to Hedges, “risen from a decayed world where opportunity, which confers status, self-esteem and dignity, has dried up for most Americans. They are expressions of acute desperation and morbidity.” In essence, when the American dream fizzled out, it was replaced by an American nightmare. That white men are the prime victims of these diseases of despair is an ironic outgrowth of our unfair system. As Hedges explained:
White men, more easily seduced by the myth of the American dream than people of color who understand how the capitalist system is rigged against them, often suffer feelings of failure and betrayal, in many cases when they are in their middle years. They expect, because of notions of white supremacy and capitalist platitudes about hard work leading to advancement, to be ascendant. They believe in success.”
In this sense, it is important to place the opioid addiction crisis in a wider context of American decline, where opportunities for success and happiness are fewer and farther between than ever, rather than attribute it to individuals. As the “Lancet” wrote: “Punitive and stigmatizing approaches must end. Addiction is not a moral failing. It is a medical condition and poses a constant threat to health.”

A “Uniquely American Problem”​

Nearly 10 million Americans misuse prescription opioids every year and at a rate far higher than comparable developed countries. Deaths due to opioid overdose in the United States are ten times more common per capita than in Germany and more than 20 times as frequent in Italy, for instance.
Much of this is down to the United States’ for-profit healthcare system. American private insurance companies are far more likely to favor prescribing drugs and pills than more expensive therapies that get to the root cause of the issue driving the addiction in the first place. As such, the opioid crisis is commonly referred to as a “uniquely American problem.”
Part of the reason U.S. doctors are much more prone to doling out exceptionally strong pain medication relief than their European counterparts is that they were subject to a hyper-aggressive marketing campaign from Purdue Pharma, manufacturers of the powerful opioid OxyContin. Purdue launched OxyContin in 1996, and its agents swarmed doctors’ offices to push the new “wonder drug.”
Approximately 1 million fake pills containing fentanyl seized on July 5, 2022, at a home in Inglewood, Calif. Photo | DEA via AP
Yet, in lawsuit after lawsuit, the company has been accused of lying about both the effectiveness and the addictiveness of OxyContin, a drug that has hooked countless Americans onto opioids. And when legal but incredibly addictive prescription opioids dry up, Americans turned to illicit substances like heroin and fentanyl as substitutes.
Purdue Pharma owners, the Sackler family, have regularly been described as the most evil family in America, with many laying the blame for the hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths squarely at their door. In 2019, under the weight of thousands of lawsuits against it, Purdue Pharma filed for bankruptcy. A year later, it plead guilty to criminal charges over its mismarketing of OxyContin.
Nevertheless, the Sacklers made out like bandits from their actions. Even after being forced last year to pay nearly $6 billion in cash to victims of the opioid crisis, they remain one of the world’s richest families and have refused to apologize for their role in constructing an empire of pain that has caused hundreds of thousands of deaths.
Instead, the family has attempted to launder their image through philanthropy, sponsoring many of the most prestigious arts and cultural institutions in the world. These include the Guggenheim Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, Yale University, and the British Museum and Royal Academy in London.
One group who are disproportionately affected by opioids like OxyContin, heroin and fentanyl are veterans. According to the National Institutes of Health, veterans are twice as likely to die from overdose than the general population. One reason for this is bureaucracy. “The Veterans Administration did a really poor job in the past decades with their pain management, particularly their reliance on opioids,” Hoh, a former marine, told MintPress, noting that the V.A. prescribed dangerous opioids at a higher rate than other healthcare agencies.
Ex-soldiers often have to cope with chronic pain and brain injuries. Hoh noted that around a quarter-million veterans of Afghanistan and Iraq have traumatic brain injuries. But added to that are the deep moral injuries many suffered – injuries that typically cannot be seen. As Hoh noted:
Veterans are turning to [opioids like fentanyl] to deal with the mental, emotional and spiritual consequences of the war, using them to quell the distress, try to find some relief, escape from the depression, and deal with the demons that come home with veterans who took part in those wars.”
Thus, if the Taliban’s opium eradication program continues, it could spark a fentanyl crisis that might kill more Americans than the 20-year occupation ever did.

Broken Society​

If diseases of despair are common throughout the United States, they are rampant in Afghanistan itself. A global report released in March revealed that Afghans are by far the most miserable people on Earth. Afghans evaluated their lives at 1.8 out of 10 – dead last and far behind the top of the pile Finland (7.8 out of 10).
Opium addiction in Afghanistan is out of control, with around 9% of the adult population (and a significant number of children) addicted. Between 2005 and 2015, the number of adult drug users jumped from 900,000 to 2.4 million, according to the United Nations, which estimates that almost one in three households is directly affected by addiction. As opium is frequently injected, blood-transmitted conditions like HIV are common as well.
The opioid problem has also spilled into neighboring countries such as Iran and Pakistan. A 2013 United Nations report estimated that almost 2.5 million Pakistanis were abusing opioids, including 11% of people in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Around 700 people die each day from overdoses.

Empire of Drugs​

Given their history, It is perhaps understandable that Asian nations have generally taken far more authoritarian measures to counter drug addiction issues. For centuries, using the illegal drug trade to advance imperial objectives has been a common Western tactic. In the 1940s and 1950s, the French utilized opium crops in the “Golden Triangle” region of Southeast Asia in order to counter the growing Vietnamese independence movement.
A century previously, the British used opium to crush and conquer much of China. Britain’s insatiable thirst for Chinese tea was beginning to bankrupt the country, seeing as China would only accept gold or silver in exchange. The British, therefore, used the power of its navy to force China to cede Hong Kong to it. From there, it flooded mainland China with opium grown in South Asia (including Afghanistan).
The effect of the Opium War was astonishing. By 1880, the British were inundating China with more than 6,500 tons of opium per year – the equivalent of many billions of doses. Chinese society crumbled, unable to deal with the empire-wide social and economic dislocation that millions of opium addicts brought. Today, the Chinese continue to refer to the period as the “century of humiliation”.
Meanwhile, in South Asia, the British forced farmers to plant poppy fields instead of edible crops, causing waves of giant famines, the likes of which had never been seen before or since.
And during the 1980s in Central America, the United States sold weapons to Iran in order to fund far-right Contra death squads. The Contras were deeply implicated in the cocaine trade, fuelling their dirty war through crack cocaine sales in the U.S. – a practice that, according to journalist Gary Webb, the Central Intelligence Agency facilitated.
Imperialism and illicit drugs, therefore, commonly go together. However, with the Taliban opium eradication effort in full effect, coupled with the uniquely American phenomenon of opioid addiction, it is possible that the United States will suffer significant blowback in the coming years. The deadly fentanyl epidemic will likely only get worse, needlessly taking hundreds of thousands more American lives. Thus, even as Afghanistan attempts to rid itself of its deadly drug addiction problem, its actions could precipitate an epidemic that promises to kill more Americans than any of Washington’s imperial endeavors to date.
 

America’s Big Three Entitlement Bankruptcies Are Inevitable​

by Stephen Anderson | Mises Institute
August 22nd 2023, 7:21 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/americas-big-three-entitlement-bankruptcies-are-inevitable/

A one-size-fits-all reform is not possible.

America’s federally sanctioned entitlement programs, Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security, each face bankruptcy in the next few years. Medicare and Medicaid were created in 1965 as part of President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society legislation. Social Security was created in 1935 to provide retirement income for Americans who reached the age of sixty-five. These three entitlement programs consume about fifty cents of every federal budget dollar, or $2.7 trillion in fiscal year 2023.

Medicare is a federal health-insurance and healthcare program available for enrollment when a person reaches the age of sixty-five. An American who has worked for a minimum of ten years is eligible for enrollment. Employees and employers each pay a minimum Medicare tax of 1.45 percent based on the employees’ wages. Once enrolled in the program, one pays a monthly insurance premium that changes every year. Sixty-five million people are enrolled as of 2022. There is a penalty for late enrollment. The amount of people on Medicare is roughly equal to the estimated state populations of Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois combined.

Medicare made net benefit payments of $689 billion in 2021. It comprised 20 percent of national healthcare spending and 12 percent of the federal budget in 2020. Medicare covers about 80 percent of medical costs, but dental and eye procedures are not covered.

Medicaid is a joint federal and state program that, together with the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), provides health coverage to over 72.5 million Americans, including children, pregnant women, parents, seniors, and individuals with disabilities. Medicaid is the single largest source of health coverage in the United States. Most participants are under the age of sixty-five. The amount of people on Medicaid is roughly equal to the estimated state populations of California and Texas combined.

For a state to participate in Medicaid, federal law requires that state to cover certain groups of individuals. Qualifying low-income families children and pregnant women, and individuals receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) are examples of mandatory eligibility groups. The Affordable Care Act of March 2010 (Obamacare) created the opportunity for states to expand Medicaid to cover nearly all low-income Americans under age sixty-five. Roughly twelve million people signed up after 2010.
https://www.infowarsstore.com/vitam...extad&utm_medium=TextLink&utm_content=VMFtext
Medicaid’s costs are swamping state budgets, climbing from 9 percent in 1989 to 20 percent today. A majority of its funding is from every American taxpayer, and a minority of funding is from each participating state’s taxpayer. Medicaid payments were $117 billion in 2000 and $589 billion in 2023. They are projected to be $879 billion in 2033.

Social Security is one of the largest government programs in the world as of 2023, paying out hundreds of billions of dollars each year. In 2021, 179 million people paid taxes into Social Security. The current tax rate for Social Security is 6.2 percent for the employer and employee each, or 12.4 percent total from the employee’s wages.

Sixty-seven million Americans will receive Social Security in 2023. The estimated combined populations of the US states of Ohio, Georgia, North Carolina, Michigan, New Jersey, and Virginia will be equivalent to the amount of Americans on Social Security as of 2023. Social Security provides retirement benefits and disability income to qualified people and their spouses, children, and survivors. Workers must be at least sixty-two years old and have paid taxes into Social Security over a minimum of ten years to qualify for its benefits.

The adult lifespan was about fifty-eight years in 1930 and seventy-nine years in 2020. The number of workers paying payroll taxes was about five for every beneficiary in 1960 compared to about 2.7 for every beneficiary in 2023. America’s population is aging and its families are having fewer children. This poses a problem for Social Security funding.

Some Americans are receiving Medicare and Social Security benefits at the same time: as we say in America, they are double-dipping.

Bankruptcy Reality

A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report from 2015 revealed that $60 billion of Medicare’s budget was lost in 2014 to waste. The GAO found 23,400 fake or bad addresses on Medicare’s list of providers.

Medicare has repeatedly suffered vast cost overruns, has been reformed countless times, and has imposed a seemingly endless series of price controls on doctors and hospitals. Price controls reduce competition from the free market, leading to less efficiency and higher prices.

The Medicare board of trustees projected that the reserves of the Hospital Insurance (HI) Trust Fund, which finances Medicare Part A, will be depleted in 2031. The program’s income will be able to cover 89 percent of scheduled benefits after that. How will hospitals and physicians handle an 11 percent shortfall in Medicare reimbursement payments?

Public literature on the future bankruptcy of the Medicaid program is near nil, so predicting a date for bankruptcy is not possible. However, the Social Security board of trustees in its 2023 report forecasts reserves in the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund will be depleted in 2033. Ongoing tax revenue will be enough to pay 77 percent of scheduled benefits after that point. Beneficiaries in that year will see their monthly payment reduced by 23 percent. Many American retirees today rely solely on Social Security to pay groceries, home insurance premiums, and utilities. Could you survive a 23 percent reduction in your income year over year?

Possible Solutions

America entitlement programs will not become bankrupt overnight but over many decades. Reforms will not solve this problem quickly, but they would be steps toward a more sustainable situation. Some possible reforms to Medicare and Social Security are to allow taxpayers under the age of forty-five to renounce future benefits with no federal tax impact and to live on their 401(k), Roth IRA, or other income, considering all their past tax payments lost. Another option is to allow such people renounce their benefits and to redirect their future tax payments to separate 401(k)-type retiree healthcare and retirement accounts under their oversight. Current and future Medicare and Social Security beneficiaries could also opt to receive reduced benefits based on financial realities before or after the programs’ bankruptcies.

Ryan McMaken, executive editor at the Mises Institute, penned a Mises Wire article in January 2023 titled “Raise the Social Security Age to (at Least) 75,” posing possible reforms. George Reisman penned a lengthy Mises Wire article in April 2011 titled “How to Eliminate Social Security and Medicare” with more detailed solutions.

Medicaid reforms that address fraud are being pursued by many states and the federal government. Some methods of Medicaid fraud are found on the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services’ fraud checklist. The current list of people subject to federal enforcement actions can be found on the Office of Inspector General’s website. The enforcement actions shown have yielded fines tied to a fraud conviction.

A one-size-fits-all reform is not possible. Some say to abolish each program right now and let the free market provide guidance out of the chaos. But the logistics of caring for an aging and ailing family member are not easy even when the family is prepared financially, physically, and spiritually. The reality of federal entitlement reform is before us, and the everyday people will bear the brunt of these entitlement programs’ bankruptcies.
 
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Study: VAIDS Triggered In Children Following Pfizer COVID Jab​

by Adan Salazar
September 1st 2023, 2:37 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/study-vaids-triggered-in-children-following-pfizer-covid-jab/

Children aged 5-11 tested after Pfizer jab developed vaccine acquired immune deficit, or VAIDS, leaving them susceptible to viruses, bacterias and other pathogens.

Children vaccinated with Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine developed weakened immune systems and diminished immune responses for months after the jab, a recent Australian study revealed.

In the study conducted by Australian researchers published last week in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers, titled, “BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccination in children alters cytokine responses to heterologous pathogens and Toll-like receptor agonists,” scientists tested the cytokine responses of 29 children aged 5-11 before their first dose of Pfizer BioNTech’s vaccine and 28 days after their second dose.

The scientists concluded “vaccination in children alters cytokine responses to heterologous stimulants, particularly one month after vaccination,” however, they did not explain the implications of their findings, namely that all of the children essentially developed vaccine acquired immune deficit, or VAIDS, leaving them susceptible to viruses, bacterias and other pathogens.

According to the study, the decrease in immune response was noticeable in data after 28 days, and decreased immune response to viruses lasted for at least six months.


Researcher Igor Chudov noted the study’s findings are a milestone for the mainstream scientific community, in that they are finally, albeit indirectly, admitting what independent physicians and scientists have been reporting for a long time.
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Finally, we have scientific confirmation that vaccination against COVID-19 causes a marked decrease in immunity to heterologous pathogens such as viruses, bacteria, and fungi. This decreased immunity to other pathogens (acquired immune deficit) is what people colloquially refer to as “VAIDS.” (VAIDS stands for Vaccine-Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome)
A reduced immune response to common bacteria encountered daily can be highly concerning for children and may even have life-threatening consequences.

“Reduced responses to Staphylococcus aureus are very serious: this illness is difficult to treat and causes untold harm,” the researcher noted, showing a picture of a child suffering a bacterial infection on his face.



image.png

As Chuduv notes, it would have been nice to have this data before the Covid jabs were approved and disseminated to millions of people.

In the ideal world, careful scientists, cautious public health authorities, and principled medical doctors would investigate COVID vaccines’ effects before vaccinating tens of millions of children and billions of adults. Had they investigated and done the basic science (such as the study above) before mandating and injecting COVID vaccines, such dangerous injections would never have been given to children and young adults!
Instead, in the mad rush to “vaccinate the world” with vaccines that do not even work, we ruined the immune responses of millions of children and likely all other vaccinated people.
Likewise, vaccine researcher Alex Berenson emphasized the “VERY URGENT” findings on his Substack, consulting immunologists who concurred the study’s conclusions had profoundly disturbing implications, in addition to noting the cowardice of the study authors who downplayed its significance.

“My read on this paper is that it [mRNA vaccination] may in fact cause not just a short-term vulnerability to bacterial and viral infection in children, but it might cause a long-term immune deficiency,” one physician emailed, adding that he worried public health authorities will simply ignore the paper.
“Just see how the authors sidestep their own findings,” the physician wrote. “The authors won’t even bluntly state that it appears that the mRNA shot caused a persistent immune deficiency in children. Their conclusion is it “alters” the cytokine response. This is the amount of courage in medicine.”
The alarming findings come as President Joe Biden last week declared he was seeking congressional funding to develop a new Covid-19 vaccine which could then be recommended to everyone regardless of previous vaccine status.
 
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ESG investing in “net zero” climate agenda “must be stopped,” say Republican agriculture commissioners, or food inflation and FAMINE will follow​

February 11, 2024 5:25 pm by CWR

Link: https://citizenwatchreport.com/esg-...ers-or-food-inflation-and-famine-will-follow/

via naturalnews:

Twelve Republican state agriculture commissioners have sent a letter to six of America’s largest mega-banks letting them know that the relatively new trend of ESG (environmental, social and corporate governance) investing threatens to disrupt the nation’s food supply while increasing the price of food.

Bank of America (BofA), Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo are all members of a United Nations (UN)-organized program called the Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) that is “committed to financing ambitious climate action.” One of NZBA’s primary goals is to force the United States economy into producing zero “greenhouse gas” emissions by the year 2050, which the Republican state agriculture commissioners say will result in “severe consequences” for the nation’s farmers.

“Achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in agriculture requires a complete overhaul of on-farm infrastructure – one of the goals of the NZBA,” the letter reads.
“This would have a catastrophic impact on our farmers. Proposed net-zero roadmaps describe dramatic, impractical and costly changes to American farming and ranching operations such as switching to electric machinery and equipment; installing on-site solar panels and wind turbines; moving to organic fertilizer; altering rice-field irrigation systems; and slashing U.S. ruminant meat consumption in half, costing millions of livestock jobs.”
See also Republican Who Called Out Ilhan Omar for Serving Foreign Nation Gets Tons of Money from AIPAC
(Fact check: Most carbon “offset” projects are a scam, as is just about the entirety of the climate change industry.)

ESG, net zero and mass genocide​

By 2050, global food demand is expected to increase dramatically as it is. Coupled with the NSBA’s net-zero scheme to basically ban emissions, the end result will be widespread food shortages and famine, followed swiftly by mass starvation and death.
“… these changes will increase food costs and decrease food production at a time when global food demand is expected to rise dramatically,” the letter further reads.
“This is compounded by the fact that the average American has been struggling to keep up with inflation during the tenure of the Biden Administration. The reality could be much worse. These effects will hit the poor the hardest.”
Should the net-zero emissions scheme win out over reason and sound science, America’s agriculture sector could sustain permanent damage, which in turn threatens the country’s food security.

“American farmers should not be forced to put our food supply at risk,” the letter declares.
The agriculture commissioners who signed onto the letter include those of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Carolina, Texas and West Virginia.

See also Addicted To Gov? Government Worker Wage Growth Hits Record High As Savings Rate Falls To 3.7% (Acyclical Core PCE inflation Remains Extremely High)


In a statement, Will Hild, executive director of the watchdog group Consumers’ Research, noted that farmers and ranchers underpin the U.S. economy, and yet they are the targets of “international climate cartels like the NZBA.”
“The ag officials and commissioners hit the nail on the head in their letter: should their misguided climate extremism continue unabated, these mega-banks will put our entire food supply in serious jeopardy,” Hild further said.
“I applaud the states for their action, and I look forward to working with them to defend American consumers from this corporate malfeasance.”
Any involvement in net zero, by the way, represents crimes against humanity because, as we continue to report, climate fanaticism at its core is all about mass depopulation and genocide of the “useless eaters,” as the elitists often refer to the world’s poor.

The latest news about the climate change scam can be found at GreenTyranny.news.

Sources for this article include:
ZeroHedge.com
NaturalNews.com
 

Were Covid patients left to die against their wishes? Care homes under pressure to issue Do Not Resuscitate forms. Signatures forged on vital paperwork. And helpless families kept in the dark about their loved ones' final hours...​

By JONATHAN BROCKLEBANK
PUBLISHED: 19:38 EDT, 5 April 2024 | UPDATED: 19:43 EDT, 5 April 2024

Link: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13277723/Were-Covid-patients-left-die-against-wishes.html/

[see vid at site link, above]

Little about the 4.11am phone call from the care home seemed to add up. Gillian Grant was told her grandmother had deteriorated in the last few hours but that no ambulance had been called.
When she asked staff to do so, she was told: 'I think it is beyond that stage.'
Assurances had been given days earlier that help 'absolutely' would be summoned if her condition worsened.

Ms Grant rushed to the care home, arriving just 19 minutes later yet, apparently, still too late. Staff greeted her with the news her grandmother had died ten minutes before. She asked to see her and, after being given PPE, was led through to her room.
'Her mouth and her eyes were wide open,' she recalled. 'I tried to shut her mouth but it was too hard and I think rigor mortis had set in. She was stone cold and, in my opinion, she had been dead a lot longer than 20 minutes.'
It occurred to her the 91-year-old had succumbed to coronavirus in the Dunbartonshire care home some time before that phone call was placed.
But a young female member of staff assured her she had sat with the pensioner all night. Which made Ms Grant wonder: 'If you have been sitting with my grandmother all night, why was I just called 20 minutes ago?'
Margaret Waterton (right) pictured with her late mother Margaret Simpson and late husband David Waterton


Margaret Waterton (right) pictured with her late mother Margaret Simpson and late husband David Waterton

Of the three members of staff on duty that night, one was a man in a dirty white T-shirt and jogging bottoms. He wore no PPE. Ms Grant was horrified.
Hours later she called the Care Inspectorate about what she had seen at Mavisbank care home in Bishopbriggs. She said: 'I immediately panicked about the whole situation because I thought everybody is going to die here.'
But there was a still more shocking sight to come. It was a piece of paper known as a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) form for her grandmother – and Ms Grant's name was on it as the next of kin authorising it.
Not only did she never authorise such a thing, but she had made it plain she had no intention of doing so. And yet, as a family member with power of attorney for her grandmother's affairs, here was her name on a document which effectively denied a beloved relative potentially lifesaving treatment.

READ MORE: Stop calling it 'Long Covid', doctors told... because illness is 'indistinguishable' for other post-viral

Ms Grant has related the tale of her grandmother's final weeks to the Scottish Covid-19 Inquiry which names the use of DNRs as one of its primary areas of investigation.
What the inquiry should find is the administration of this end-of-life procedure remained unaltered by the pandemic. The Scottish Government has, after all, repeatedly insisted there was no change to advice issued to clinicians about the use of DNRs – or DNACPRs (Do Not Attempt Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation) as they are also known.
But the evidence has deviated so far from this guidance that the prospect of criminal proceedings has now been raised. If a DNR form was forged, lawyer Aamer Anwar told the Mail, he would expect nothing less.
Was the DNR relating to Ms Grant's grandmother then a one-off? Or was the manner of the death of the pensioner – who cannot be named due to reporting restrictions issued by the inquiry – indicative of a pattern?
Days ago, the inquiry heard from Madeana Laing, a manager at Beech Manor Care Home in Blairgowrie, Perthshire. She described a culture in which health professionals urged care homes to update their 'anticipatory care plans' for residents. She said she was told: 'You need to look at who doesn't have DNRs because they will now need to have one.'
Her response was that this was a discussion for GPs to have with family members – and yet within a couple of days, all the outstanding DNRs were in place. She questioned the extent to which family members were involved in these decisions. The clear impression, she said, was if a resident became ill from Covid – or even an unrelated illness – they would not be going to hospital.
She said: 'You could clearly see that, if they went to hospital, they had a really good chance of improving, of getting over what was making them unwell in the first place. But it was almost like, you were not playing God, but it was just 'no, you can't go, so you just have to stay'.'
Her understanding, she said, was the DNRs were in place because of difficulties accessing ambulances, paramedics or hospital beds.
John Cowan (pictured) died with a DNR in place which his daughter Melanie Hunter, who had power of attorney, didn't know about


John Cowan (pictured) died with a DNR in place which his daughter Melanie Hunter, who had power of attorney, didn't know about
In the same day's evidence, Peter McCormick, managing director of Randolph Hill Nursing Homes, said he believed NHS Scotland had taken a decision – one not discussed in public – that restrictions would be placed on people in care homes receiving hospital treatment.
He said in the case of one nursing home, DNRs were issued on a 'blanket' basis – as he understood it, because of the pressures on the NHS.
He said: 'That couldn't have been a nuanced discussion. There would have been no discussion involved in that.'

Another witness, Tressa Burke of Glasgow Disability Alliance, told of GP surgeries calling her members out of the blue and urging them to sign DNRs. She said it made them feel they were 'not worth saving'.

READ MORE: Doctors admit they can't tell Covid apart from allergies or the common cold anymore


In contrast to the experience in some care homes, others did refer patients with Covid to hospitals.
It happened to John Cowan from Ayrshire, who had moved into Windyhall Care Home in Ayr not through any infirmity of his own but because Annie, his wife of almost 60 years, needed to be there and the two were inseparable.
Within a few weeks he tested positive and an ambulance was called to take him to Ayr Hospital despite his symptoms appearing relatively mild. A few days later Mr Cowan was dead.
A DNR order was in place which his daughter Melanie, who had power of attorney for both her parents, knew nothing about.
That was why he was never transferred to an intensive care ward. Ms Hunter said she learned about the DNR from a nurse four days after her father was admitted.
She told the Mail: 'She said she'd get the consultant to phone me, but he never did. He got one of the doctors below him to phone me.
'From that conversation, I received very little reasoning as to why this had been done but he did agree it should have been discussed with me.
'It was decided without my consent that my dad's life wasn't eligible for saving. In their eyes, my dad was dispensable. All they saw was an 83-year-old man who came from a care home. Not a husband who moved into the care home just to be with his wife.'
She added: 'The Government allowed this practice.'
In her witness statement, Ms Hunter said that, a few hours before her father died, a male nurse ordered her to 'stop asking them to help my dad as they were dealing with a very sick patient'.
She told of a nursing assistant her father had been 'joking and laughing' with when he was first admitted. After a week's holiday, the medic returned to see how he was.
Ms Hunter said: 'She said she couldn't believe it. She had to come along and see him with her own eyes. It just didn't make sense. She was standing in total shock and disbelief.
'I got a strong look and feeling from her that something wasn't right.'
It was, she said, a 'horrific death' in which her father 'fought, struggled and thrashed around for 13 hours.'
For now, the Scottish Covid-19 Inquiry continues its examination of some of Scotland's darkest days [Stock picture]


For now, the Scottish Covid-19 Inquiry continues its examination of some of Scotland's darkest days [Stock picture]
The agony was compounded by the fact that, by then, Mr Cowan's wife, who suffered from dementia, was in the same Covid unit. She was taken to see him on November 8, hours before he died and the sight of him left her bewildered. 'She didn't understand what was happening,' said Ms Hunter.
Her mother was discharged after four weeks and returned to the care home, but it later emerged there was a DNR form for her too. Again, Ms Hunter knew nothing about it. Mrs Cowan died last December.
Evidence has also been heard in the inquiry from former senior nurse Margaret Waterton, 66, who lost both her mother and her husband to Covid in the space of a few months.
Both tragedies raise disturbing questions about DNRs.
When Mrs Waterton's mother, Margaret Simpson, 86, was admitted to University Hospital Wishaw in Lanarkshire in May 2020 for an asthma-related illness, she tested negative for Covid on arrival.
But in the four nights she spent there, she was in four different clinical areas. Even pre-pandemic, Mrs Waterton said, such a level of movement of an elderly patient would be an infection risk. It is now clear her mother contracted Covid during that hospital stay.
On the day Mrs Simpson arrived home again, her daughter found an envelope in her hospital bags. Inside was a DNR form.
'Mum had attempted to sign it the day she was admitted to hospital. I asked Mum if she knew what it was, and she said she didn't. When I explained what it was and what it meant, she was horrified.
'She didn't recall signing it at that point but later, when she had time to think, she remembered that, when she was admitted to A&E, a doctor had spoken to her, but she didn't understand what the doctor was saying and said that she felt the doctor was putting words into her mouth.'
An 86-year-old woman, whose medical notes say she was in a state of delirium on her admission, was, then, asked to sign a DNR on the spot.
Mrs Waterton took it up with the hospital and said the response from the medical director was 'less than satisfactory'.
A few days later, Mrs Simpson was back in hospital, this time testing positive for Covid and gravely ill. Now, after a compassionate and reasoned discussion with a consultant, Mrs Waterton agreed with the assessment that her mother would be unable to withstand active resuscitation.
She was with her when she died on June 18, 2020.
Six months later, she and her husband of nine years David, 71, both tested positive and, a few days after Christmas, his condition worsened so severely she had to call 999 late at night for an ambulance.
The next morning she spoke to a doctor treating him at University Hospital Hairmyres in Lanarkshire and the news sounded 'relatively positive'.
Mrs Waterton said: 'I made it explicitly clear that I wanted David to be afforded every effort and every level of treatment made available to him.'
At the time, he was well enough to text and call her and there was no mention of DNR discussions having taken place.
Each of these awful tragedies raise disturbing questions about DNRs [Stock image]


Each of these awful tragedies raise disturbing questions about DNRs [Stock image]
Besides, she said: 'From previous conversations with David, I was clear that he would not agree to this and would want every effort and every level of treatment afforded him, including ventilation and ITU [Intensive Therapy Unit] care.'
Around New Year there was a disturbing phone call with a hospital consultant who wanted to know how far her husband could walk and how long it took him.
'He kept pressing me about this specifically,' said Mrs Waterton. 'I recall feeling badgered by him and anxious about how my response would be used in the decision making.'
She told the Mail she did not want to answer his question. 'I had this absolute sense this was going to drive something and I didn't know what.'
She now strongly suspects it drove a DNR decision.
When her husband's condition worsened, she was shattered to be told that he would not be moved to ITU, that he had received the 'maximum treatment' – and further, that all this had been discussed with her.
She remembers calling the nurse who told her this 'a liar'. None of it had been discussed with her.
When she was finally allowed to see her husband on January 2, his first words were: 'I thought I would never see you again.'
She said that, on seeing her and his daughter for the last time, 'it was as if a wave of peace washed over him'. He died around 40 minutes later.
Mrs Waterton, a member of the Scottish Covid Bereaved group which is represented by solicitor Mr Anwar, said she was in no doubt about the tremendous efforts of NHS staff faced with unprecedented numbers of critically ill people.
But she said the 'lived experiences' of members and evidence heard at the inquiry suggested 'bundles of DNACPR forms being posted through the letterboxes of care homes' and consent for them being obtained 'inappropriately' in hospitals and used to determine further treatment.
Poor communication, she said, was a 'consistent theme' and, taken as a whole, it pointed to a 'gap between the rhetoric and the reality'.
She said: 'This has left us with not only many unanswered questions but also feelings of doubt about the decisions that were made and feelings of guilt that we could have and should have done more for our loved ones.'
M R Anwar said his understanding was any allegations of criminality, including forgeries of DNR documents, would be looked at by the Crown Office. He said: 'The allegations made against certain care homes on the overwhelming use of DNR could only be described as a cynical practice, treating old people as expendable, toxic waste that they could discard.
'These are very serious allegations which must be the basis of any criminal investigation into care homes.
'The treatment of families was callous and cruel at the very moment they should have been comforted that their loved ones were being dealt with compassion and respect.'
For now, the Scottish Covid-19 Inquiry continues its examination of some of Scotland's darkest days. Considerations of criminality do not fall within its remit. But hearings of a very different nature may follow in its wake.
 
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