You're right, he doesn't have their backing. They're all in the protected class. Once they admit it, they are liable under the PREP Act for harm inflicted.
I have come to the realization that these hearings are not theater, but so that people will continue to wake up, and will receive the most current information they should have had an inkling of four years ago, in order to make an informed decision on the gene therapy/poison injections that rolled out in December 2020 and that our Government is still pushing on the yet misinformed and unsuspecting public. (The CDC officially stated today that the 65+ crowd should once again get another injection of mRNA for the XBB.1.5 scariant - that is now extinct - and it is extinct according to the CDC's own data/website.) This is intent to harm as they, our US Government Officials & Agencies, know this injection is all risk and no benefit. Well, no benefit to the recipient getting it in his or her arm anyway.
Senator Johnson has been made aware of all of the laws and regulations that have been passed since WWII to make this specific plandemic unfold beginning in 2019 (via Sasha Latypova and Katherine Watt, as they both provided him with a treasure trove of amassed US regulations, laws, etc., in December 2022 for him to review and act upon.) For Senator Johnson to call attention to the laws and regulations on the books, to state that this was, and still is, a bio-weapon that ultimately sickens, slowly sterilizes, and culls the populace, I don't think for a moment he has the courage to tell that large bit of truth to the American people.
So, he holds a hearing, and this was a doozy, to help awaken the masses. He will sleep better at night knowing that he did his best, or whatever thoughts are of comfort to him, while the rest of us try to get those who are still believing the 'safe and effective,' BS that 'it must have been designed to be of help, to protect us, right?' to wake the heck up.
No politician, not one, is going to turn this around. It takes each of us, in our families, our circle of friends, and our communities to get it to stop. Thus, why I posted the link to the hearing.
Good luck, and may you be blessed in your endeavors!
If they didnβt have such a long, cold, gray PNW skies winter, I would be there! I have visited Idaho 7 times since August 2022. The last time was in the beginning of December. It was Cold, snowing, and gloomy, barely saw the sun for over ten days (was in CDA and Moscow) and I was ready to get back to SoCA.
Oh yeah, CDA and Moscow are like the "Norcal" vs "SoCal" of weather. Having lived in both, I can attest to that. We're in the foothills of Ada County, (very similar to the foothills of the Sierra Nevada's 25 miles east of Sacramento), in a wonderful community about 20 minutes from downtown Boise. Completely different winter in this part of Idaho. We get snow, maybe a few inches at a time, followed by beautiful sun and blue skies. Typical snow fall accumulation is between December and March, but not anything near the accumulation of CDA.
I hear ya on the gloomy days of just clouds and no sun, it can get to you after a short while. Thankfully, that doesn't happen often here.
If you plan any additional trips up to Idaho, be sure to check out Stanley and the Sawtooth Mountain Range. Redfish Lake is a must when you visit Stanley. (Like a mini Truckee and Lake Tahoe.) Absolutely stunning! Plus, we have so many hot-springs up here, which are incredible. :)
Oh yes I went to a couple of hot springs last summerβ¦one out in the booniesβ¦Red River (donβt really recommend it, itβs funky and the rooms are funky and takes a long time to get out there)and in McCall, Burgdorf Hot Springs, which were wonderful! We heard about one, Gold Fork Hot Springs south of McCall, but they were requiring proof of vax and that the management was fairly discriminatory against people of color, who couldnβt speak English that well. So we passed.
Where you live does it get that βinversionβ deal that happens on.Boise in the winter?
I donβt know Iβm just not a winter where it gets cold person. I spent two winters in Santa Fe, NM and though it is a sunny winter there, the months of cold and having to be all bundled up I did not care for. And no greenβ¦
We have wanted to visit the Burgdorf Hot Springs! On our bucket list. And McCall is simply beautiful. Sorry about your experience from the other one. Thatβs terrible.
Mostly, we get a milder winter. It can still get down in the low double digits over night & in the early morning, but itβs temporary (a week at best from our 3 years here.) Usually, its 30βs & 40βs in the Dec-early March timeframe. Weβve already had a week in the mid50βs, and will be getting back there in the next few days. All this said, my two favorite seasons are fall & winter, having grown up in Michigan and my husbandβs are spring & summer, having grown up in California. Weβve found the hills & mountains, creeks & rivers, green hills in the summer, golden hills in the winter months to be a happy medium for both of us. Reminiscent of both states where we grew up. πππ»
I highly recommend Burgdorfβ¦rustic but very cool and the setting is gorgeous. It rained a bit when we were thereβ¦that was fun to be in the warm water in the rain. Itβs a wood lined pool with a sand bottom! And they limit the amount of peopleβ¦you have to βscheduleβ your time there. McCall is beautiful and well as south in the small towns of Donnelly and Cascade.
That was a very thoughtful comment. I shared the clip with a second cousin (in her mid 40βs) who is a college administrator at a small university in a small town in Western
CO. (And an avid NPR listener) Iβve been slowly βred pillingβ her. She has two kids in middle & high school. I send her stuff about the childhood vaxxes and the Covid scam in general and all the migrants streaming over the border (where I live) and a lot of Substack content. She never replies to the emails. She and her family live in that βhigher education mentality bubbleββ¦bleeding heart liberal type and all. She has no clue whatβs really going outside her little town and the world of a college administrator! Her mom is my older cousin and sheβs totally clueless. I donβt even bother sending her stuff. Perhaps the 14 minute clip of the hearing will assist in her awakening!
I completely understand the type, having worked in higher ed for a decade. That bubble is suffocating! I donβt miss it at all.
Good on ya for continuing to try - that is all of our calling right now. IMHO, itβs why weβre here in this very moment - to help awaken as many people as we can whether itβs 1, 10, 100β¦ we all play an important part. π€
You're right, he doesn't have their backing. They're all in the protected class. Once they admit it, they are liable under the PREP Act for harm inflicted.
I have come to the realization that these hearings are not theater, but so that people will continue to wake up, and will receive the most current information they should have had an inkling of four years ago, in order to make an informed decision on the gene therapy/poison injections that rolled out in December 2020 and that our Government is still pushing on the yet misinformed and unsuspecting public. (The CDC officially stated today that the 65+ crowd should once again get another injection of mRNA for the XBB.1.5 scariant - that is now extinct - and it is extinct according to the CDC's own data/website.) This is intent to harm as they, our US Government Officials & Agencies, know this injection is all risk and no benefit. Well, no benefit to the recipient getting it in his or her arm anyway.
Senator Johnson has been made aware of all of the laws and regulations that have been passed since WWII to make this specific plandemic unfold beginning in 2019 (via Sasha Latypova and Katherine Watt, as they both provided him with a treasure trove of amassed US regulations, laws, etc., in December 2022 for him to review and act upon.) For Senator Johnson to call attention to the laws and regulations on the books, to state that this was, and still is, a bio-weapon that ultimately sickens, slowly sterilizes, and culls the populace, I don't think for a moment he has the courage to tell that large bit of truth to the American people.
So, he holds a hearing, and this was a doozy, to help awaken the masses. He will sleep better at night knowing that he did his best, or whatever thoughts are of comfort to him, while the rest of us try to get those who are still believing the 'safe and effective,' BS that 'it must have been designed to be of help, to protect us, right?' to wake the heck up.
No politician, not one, is going to turn this around. It takes each of us, in our families, our circle of friends, and our communities to get it to stop. Thus, why I posted the link to the hearing.
Good luck, and may you be blessed in your endeavors!
And youβre in Idaho! πππΌ
So happy to be here!!
If they didnβt have such a long, cold, gray PNW skies winter, I would be there! I have visited Idaho 7 times since August 2022. The last time was in the beginning of December. It was Cold, snowing, and gloomy, barely saw the sun for over ten days (was in CDA and Moscow) and I was ready to get back to SoCA.
Oh yeah, CDA and Moscow are like the "Norcal" vs "SoCal" of weather. Having lived in both, I can attest to that. We're in the foothills of Ada County, (very similar to the foothills of the Sierra Nevada's 25 miles east of Sacramento), in a wonderful community about 20 minutes from downtown Boise. Completely different winter in this part of Idaho. We get snow, maybe a few inches at a time, followed by beautiful sun and blue skies. Typical snow fall accumulation is between December and March, but not anything near the accumulation of CDA.
I hear ya on the gloomy days of just clouds and no sun, it can get to you after a short while. Thankfully, that doesn't happen often here.
If you plan any additional trips up to Idaho, be sure to check out Stanley and the Sawtooth Mountain Range. Redfish Lake is a must when you visit Stanley. (Like a mini Truckee and Lake Tahoe.) Absolutely stunning! Plus, we have so many hot-springs up here, which are incredible. :)
Oh yes I went to a couple of hot springs last summerβ¦one out in the booniesβ¦Red River (donβt really recommend it, itβs funky and the rooms are funky and takes a long time to get out there)and in McCall, Burgdorf Hot Springs, which were wonderful! We heard about one, Gold Fork Hot Springs south of McCall, but they were requiring proof of vax and that the management was fairly discriminatory against people of color, who couldnβt speak English that well. So we passed.
Where you live does it get that βinversionβ deal that happens on.Boise in the winter?
I donβt know Iβm just not a winter where it gets cold person. I spent two winters in Santa Fe, NM and though it is a sunny winter there, the months of cold and having to be all bundled up I did not care for. And no greenβ¦
But I Love Idaho in the summer.
We have wanted to visit the Burgdorf Hot Springs! On our bucket list. And McCall is simply beautiful. Sorry about your experience from the other one. Thatβs terrible.
Mostly, we get a milder winter. It can still get down in the low double digits over night & in the early morning, but itβs temporary (a week at best from our 3 years here.) Usually, its 30βs & 40βs in the Dec-early March timeframe. Weβve already had a week in the mid50βs, and will be getting back there in the next few days. All this said, my two favorite seasons are fall & winter, having grown up in Michigan and my husbandβs are spring & summer, having grown up in California. Weβve found the hills & mountains, creeks & rivers, green hills in the summer, golden hills in the winter months to be a happy medium for both of us. Reminiscent of both states where we grew up. πππ»
I highly recommend Burgdorfβ¦rustic but very cool and the setting is gorgeous. It rained a bit when we were thereβ¦that was fun to be in the warm water in the rain. Itβs a wood lined pool with a sand bottom! And they limit the amount of peopleβ¦you have to βscheduleβ your time there. McCall is beautiful and well as south in the small towns of Donnelly and Cascade.
That was a very thoughtful comment. I shared the clip with a second cousin (in her mid 40βs) who is a college administrator at a small university in a small town in Western
CO. (And an avid NPR listener) Iβve been slowly βred pillingβ her. She has two kids in middle & high school. I send her stuff about the childhood vaxxes and the Covid scam in general and all the migrants streaming over the border (where I live) and a lot of Substack content. She never replies to the emails. She and her family live in that βhigher education mentality bubbleββ¦bleeding heart liberal type and all. She has no clue whatβs really going outside her little town and the world of a college administrator! Her mom is my older cousin and sheβs totally clueless. I donβt even bother sending her stuff. Perhaps the 14 minute clip of the hearing will assist in her awakening!
I completely understand the type, having worked in higher ed for a decade. That bubble is suffocating! I donβt miss it at all.
Good on ya for continuing to try - that is all of our calling right now. IMHO, itβs why weβre here in this very moment - to help awaken as many people as we can whether itβs 1, 10, 100β¦ we all play an important part. π€