Subject: Three Books I Read This Year: I Think You’ll Like Them
It’s been a crazy 2.5 years, and with trying to keep on top of this COVID thing and especially the vaccine thing, I’ve watched more videos and read more online content, and read fewer books, than usual.
But I did read three books I want to highly recommend to you, with several that I’ve re-read, at the end, because they’re so relevant:
The Real Anthony Fauci by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Tony Fauci and Bobby Kennedy have been at war for many years. Fauci wants complete control of “the science” and in fact has said, recently, complaining about people critical of him: “I am the science.”
Kennedy wants healthy people, and clean air and water and food. He’d battled in the courts against toxic dumping in our waterways, long before he became aware that mercury was an even bigger issue in vaccines than in the water.
(A mother of a vaccine-injured, autistic child, a mother who also had a PhD, basically camped in front of Kennedy’s house until he read the box full of information she’d printed for him.)
Kennedy is now a hero for medical freedom the likes of which this world may never see again. When you read this book, you realize that the corruption of Pharma, and the capture of the government agencies, is older than you think and worse than you think. (However bad you think it is.)
The FCC and Telecom are a revolving door of executives just trading places. It’s a good-ol-boys’ network like no other, which is why we have 5G rolling out, with absolutely no safety testing for humans, animals and plant life.
Except for the CDC / FDA / NIH / etc and Pharma, which is even worse. Tony Fauci and his tightly controlled cohort have increasingly controlled not just public health policy, but also spending for medical research, for decades, and his reach extends into many countries.
Kennedy explores it and every chapter has extensive references to prove his points, so don’t be daunted by the length of the book, because half of it or more is references. And whatever you do, DON’T skip the last chapter.
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What Really Makes You Ill? Why Everything You Thought You Knew About Disease Is Wrong by Dawn Lester and David Parker
This book is a comprehensive review taking on all the “sacred cows” of public health and medicine. If you weren’t familiar with how false the premises that people rely on, to correct health problems, you’ll find everything in the world of pharma thoroughly debunked.
Not just because they’re toxic and unsafe, but also because they don’t work.
In Order to Survive: A North Korean Girl’s Journey to Freedom by Yeonmi Park
The reason to read this book is that most in America may not be aware of what life is really like under fascism or Communism.
It seems to me that reading the true stories of people in China, North Korea, Venezuela, Afghanistan, Romania, Afghanistan and other countries who fell into tyranny (many of whom have been there for longer than I’ve been alive) highlight what life is like in the third world.
Communism’s ideals of “equity” and “inclusiveness” are mere slogans, and this has never yet, in the history of the world, been the actual consequence of regime changes when a desperate population chooses a tyrant or falls into the hypnotic idea that a charismatic leader or a regime robbing the people of a voice in government, and basic human rights.
It appears to me that many Americans take free speech and independent media for granted. And we shouldn’t.
Notable mentions: I’ve also re-read A Brave New World, 1984, and A Handmaid’s Tale this year that I originally read as an English major in college. And I intend to re-read the incredible autobiography of a grandmother, mother, and daughter under the reign of Chairman Mao in China, in the Communist Revolution, written by the daughter to escaped to the U.S., called Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China.
I hope you enjoy one, two, or all three of these books!
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