So Bill Gates is not "behind the coronavirus" (never mind Event 201), does not "want
to forcefully [sic] vaccinate everybody" (never mind his many statements on the urgent
need to do precisely that), and the German government is not "helping him to do that"?
That those are all "conspiracy theories," according to Leonie von Hammerstein, tells us
that she would have done an aces job "reporting" for the German press in 1939, when it
was shrieking about Poland's plan to invade Germany, as Czechoslovakia had done
to Germany the year before.
And, speaking of Gates and Germany, here is the full final paragraph of this DW piece:
The surge has been attributed to more socializing, summer travel and the public becoming
negligent on social distancing rules, according to the Robert Koch Institute, the German
government's disease control and prevention agency.
If Ms. von Hammerstein were actually a journalist, employed by a genuine news outlet,
she would have noted that the Robert Koch Institute has itself been funded by the Gates
Foundation, and has (therefore) consistently exaggerated the true toll of COVID-19 in
Germany.
Now, having read DW's attack on all those reckless goons protesting Germany's mask
mandate yesterday, let's take a retrospective gander at DW's gushing coverage of the
George Floyd protests throughout Europe almost two months ago—when "social
distancing" was still required in Germany; and yet the nationwide convergences of
those protesting multitudes were just way cool, according to DW:
Fresh anti-racism protests kicked off across Germany on Saturday, with demonstrators
filling up city centers from Berlin to Dusseldorf.
Thousands gathered in Alexanderplatz in Berlin's city center, holding signs that said
"Black Lives Matter" and "No justice, no peace." Demonstrators, many of whom were
dressed in black and wearing facemasks, also held up placards with slogans such as
"Be the change," "I can't breathe," and "Germany is not innocent."
Thus "many" of those protesters—not all—were wearing masks, as ordered,
unlike those rampant Reds and Browns (and nutcase "conspiracy theorists"),
none of whom (of course) were masked. And, while not all of them were masked,
all those anti-racists congregating righteously all over Germany were as tightly
packed together as sardines ("The #Alex is packed. No more people are being
allowed in. Distancing is not possible," tweeted one of the participants, with
slight anxiety). Close study of the images of those Good Protests shows that,
sure enough, many were not masked, or had their masks pulled down below
their chins (presumably so they could breathe). And yet DW was strikingly
blasé about those multitudes protesting cheek by jowl, and shouting slogans
all together (a coronavirus no-no), as if COVID-19 had somehow gone on holiday
in Germany, in memory of George Floyd.
So there in Germany, as here in the US, COVID-19 has always been a crisis
more political than medical—as we were vividly reminded this past Friday,
when Rep. Jim Jordan asked Dr. Fauci, several times, if mass protests should
not also be banned, along with baseball games, church services and concerts:
a question that the usually smooth-talking Dr. Fauci, rather weirdly, could not
answer, though Rep. Jordan asked him several times.
MCM