Passing Observations 244
Dr Vernon Coleman
1. I don’t trust anyone providing health advice if they still have a channel on YouTube. If they are still on YouTube then they are presumably `approved’ by governments, security services and the conspirators.
2. `Always remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else.’ – Margaret Mead.
3. It’s funny how old memories come out of nowhere. Looking at an egg cooking in a pan I remembered that I used to be able to break an egg (and empty the contents) with one hand. I did it once live on a television cooking programme. I cannot remember what I was doing there or where it was. But I can also remember that I once read the weather forecast at the end of a TV news programme. These half-forgotten memories hide away like old broken stubs of pencil and broken shoe laces that are preserved for some entirely forgotten reason at the back of a dusty drawer.
4. The Just Stop Oil protestors who attacked the Magna Carta should be sentenced to spend the rest of their lives without enjoying any of the benefits of fossil fuels. Put them on a hillside in Wales and leave them there.
5. The sun is being blocked to destroy farms, to maintain the myth of climate change and to stop people acquiring vitamin D.
6. I was about to take the strimmer into a part of the garden neither of us ever visits. It is known as the old orchard because the trees there are so old that they produce fruit which only the squirrels and birds will eat. Suddenly, I stopped. Why, I wondered, was I going to spend hours tidying a stretch of garden that we don’t use and never visit? As I put the strimmer away I wondered how much of my life I have wasted doing things that I thought I ought to do.
7. Farmers can earn £1,200 per hectare, index linked for 20 years, if they allow a company to put solar panels on their land. Or they can simply plant a wildflower mix and receive £800 per hectare from taxpayers. And so farmers have stopped growing food.
8. Financial fraud is on the increase. And there is no doubt that banks and other financial institutions are largely responsible for the increase in fraud because they constantly demand too much information (much of which they are not required by law to collect) and when they have the information they do not look after it properly. Every time banks complicate things they make life easier for crooks. For some years now banks have been encouraging customers to record a voice print message to identify themselves. Customers were assured that the voice print would protect their identity and their money. But now there are AI machines which can perfectly mimic human voices – so that’s another security gimmick which will be a liability. And in Canada, now totally ruled by conspirators, an `open banking’ system is introduced which will allow third party service providers (just about anyone) to have free access to the banking data of trusting customers.
9. Major banks reassured customers that when their local bank branch closed they would still be able to do their banking at one of their mobile branches. And then, having lied through their corporate teeth, the banks closed all their mobile banks, leaving customers with a 20 mile round trip to the nearest bank branch. With the way the buses run these days that can mean two four journeys and an overnight stay in a hotel.
10. It seems to me that all bankers care about is how much money they can fit into the back of their Mercedes S class on a Friday evening. Multi-million pound salaries and multi-million pound bonuses paid to average people who do average jobs, and whose contribution to society is negative, are never going to endear bankers to the public. As evidence I offer the fact that Goldman Sachs (a constant contender for the most immoral, most unethical, worst and greediest company in the world) paid its chief executive, David Solomon, £25 million in 2023 despite the fact that the bank had reported its worst annual profit for four years. Solomon’s salary jumped 24% while the bank sacked 3,200 people. And the sick thing is that Solomon wasn’t the highest paid banker on Wall Street.
11. Here’s a useful tip: check your emails twice a week. If you only look once a week the trash becomes impenetrable.
12. Scientists are confused by the extraordinary weather we’ve been having. `Some days the weather is quite sunny,’ said Walter Wallkarpet, a senior climatologist, speaking to himself. `And then, without any warning, there will be a shower. On other days things are completely different. The weather will be quite chilly and then there will be a bit of sunshine breaking through. We blame mankind for what is happening to our weather. We believe that these extraordinary weather incidents are being caused by people riding bicycles while wearing plastic sandals and having little battery powered cameras strapped to their helmets. These camera batteries can use surprisingly large amounts of electricity – sometimes as much as can be obtained by burning two tons of best coal or three tons of nutty slack.’ (Note: for valuable information about climate change please read `Greta’s Homework’ by Zina Cohen. It’s the only book on climate change that you need to read. And if you buy the paperback edition you can use it to keep the rain off your head and the sun out of your eyes.)
13. The world’s leading communist countries today are: USA, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, France and Germany.
14. The BBC is the Home of the Troll. Everyone who works for the BBC is, by definition, a troll.
15. My website www.vernoncoleman.com was set up in 1992 (long before most internet sites) and is a little clunky compared to some modern sites. When www.vernoncoleman.com was launched, very few people had access to the internet and 75% of those using the site were members of the American armed forces, the CIA and the FBI. (They were there because I was regarded as a `dangerous subversive’ even in those distant days.)
16. I read all sorts of books and sometimes I find paragraphs which shock and surprise me. So, I found this paragraph in The Diaries of Kenneth Tynan. This is the entry for 4th June 1973 and it rather suggests that Tynan, a drama critic and famous for creating the revue `Oh Calcutta!’ and for being the first person to say `fuck’ on British television. No one ever before suggested that Tynan was a conspiracy theorist. But if modern definitions are applied then he clearly was. `Inflation rides high, and I believe intentionally. A super-rich class is being built on top of the existing structure – an international-conglomerate-business rich, drawing on the US and the Common Market – with the aim of keeping the insurgent and overweening middle classes in their place, and of decisively depressing the proletariat (and restricting their aims to merely increasing their wages to keep pace with inflation). Only members of the super-rich – the new feudal class – will be able to keep their heads above the decline in the real value of money, because they are paid in perks, property, possessions and tax-exempt benefits. This is what will separate them from the rest of us, whose effects will perforce be dedicated not to changing society but to keeping ourselves from drowning. Thus cunningly manipulated, inflation can create (as well as destroy) a ruling class.’ Absolutely bang on the button – written 51 years ago by a drama critic.
17. Thirty six years ago, in my book `The Health Scandal’ published in 1988, I predicted that euthanasia would be legalised by 2020. At the time it was seen as an absurd prediction. For years those who have forecast the end of the human race have talked of nuclear war, starvation in the third world, and pollution as being the major threats to our survival. But the decline I predict for the year 2020 will be triggered not by any of these forces but by much simpler and entirely predictable developments. The human race will be destroyed by medical ambition, commercial greed, and political opportunism. In those last desperate years as our species destroys itself, attempts will be made to restore the balance. Euthanasia will be widely advocated. Politicians will call for parents to submit to genetic checks before being issued with breeding licences. Murder will be seen as a social service. But it will be too late. (I wrote that warning in 1988. The Health Scandal is now available again, via the bookshop on www.vernoncoleman.com )
18. There is no evidence that vaccines do the good they’re supposed to do but tons of evidence proving that they’re dangerous and lethal. There’s even a government trial proving this. The real problem, of course, is that no one has done the research needed to show, for example, that giving 30 or 40 vaccines to an infant and small child is safe. Drug companies say their products are safe and doctors accept what they are told until the evidence appears proving that they aren’t. This happens time and time again, with all sorts of drugs, and my book `Truth Teller: The Price’ contains a summary of the startling evidence showing just how often the big drug companies have been fined for flogging dangerous products. And just for the record, it’s a blatant lie to claim that vaccines conquered smallpox, polio or whooping cough. Take a look at the book `Anyone who tells you vaccines are safe and effective is lying’ if you want to know more. The book is available via the bookshop on www.vernoncoleman.com
19. The Government’s Department of Terminology has approved a new technical term for people who agreed to be jabbed with the covid-19 vaccine and who believe in the myth of global warming. In the future such sorry souls will be known as ‘suckers’.
20. I was sitting in the garden, braving the freezing cold and intense heat, when a baby rabbit, no more than four inches long, hopped into view and sat by my feet. He ate daisies, at first cautiously and then with enthusiasm, and as he chewed he looked up at me with huge brown, trusting, bunny eyes. And I remembered that vivisectors do a lot of their experiments on rabbits. They drop chemicals into the rabbits’ eyes to test them. A man I met worked for a drug company. He told me that the typists worked in a room on the same floor as the company’s animal laboratory. ‘The typists complained about the constant screams from the rabbits,’ he told me. ‘Did they stop the experiments?’ I asked. ‘No,’ he replied. ‘The company put up sound proofing.’ That’s how drug companies think.
Copyright Vernon Coleman May 2024
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