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  • L'évolution des sacrifices humains

    L'Homo sapiens, est-il aussi sage que son nom l'indique ? Pourquoi à certains moments de l'existence s'octroie-t-il le droit de sacrifier des êtres humains ? 
    Un ouvrage de Pierre Bonnechere et Renaud Gagné, soutenu par le Conseil de Recherches en Sciences humaines du Canada développe magistralement. 

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  • The problem with science

    Jay Bhattacharya is one of the few heroes to emerge from that society-wide misadventure we call “Covid”. A professor of health policy at Stanford, he was one of the authors of the Great Barrington Declaration. It urged adherence to longstanding pandemic plans that emphasized the isolation and protection of the most vulnerable, rather than locking down society at large. He also conducted, with colleagues, the first seroprevalence study of the virus that causes Covid, in nearby Santa Clara county. It revealed that infection was widespread. This was crucial information, as it indicated that, despite widespread infection (estimated by them at 53,000 people), the vast majority of people were not having a significant enough health crisis to show up as a “confirmed case” (of these there were 1,200). This gave us a measure of how dangerous the virus was.

    For these contributions, Jay was attacked by every organ of the Government/ Big Science complex that meters out status and funding to its own loyalists. Fauci and Francis Collins, in private emails, called for a smear campaign against him and a handful of other “fringe epidemiologists” at backwater, fringe universities such as Harvard and Oxford. His own institution of Stanford hung him out to dry. Yet he never backed down, and has been vindicated on every particular. 

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  • Bill Gates ou le mythe du « bon milliardaire »

    L'histoire officielle veut nous présenter un visionnaire sans scrupules qui a conduit Microsoft à un succès planétaire – avant de prendre son « chemin de Damas » après le procès intenté par le gouvernement américain à la fin des années 90 pour contrer son emprise tentaculaire sur l'industrie de l'informatique. Peu de temps après, la Gates Foundation a été créée en 2000 pour investir une partie de son immense fortune dans l'humanitaire. 

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