Air Force and Navy Fly “Operation Desperate”
April 28, 2020
THERE’S a law to organized lying. The more people doubt, the more outrageous the lying must be.
In desperate agitprop to support the manufactured, hyped Covid Crisis, especially as more people know or sense that something is not right with the official narrative, the Navy and Air Force are sending their party fighter jets out today to perform flyovers in the New York-New-Jersey-Philadelphia Corona Corridor in honor of overworked medical workers. We’re all supposed to look up while under house arrest, tears flowing at how we are all in this together. Our children steeped in imposed idleness will get a few seconds of aero-acrobatics and then go back to blithering boredom.
The advertising whiz kids who thought this slick stunt up are probably glowing with triumph; normally they don’t have fighter jets at their disposal!
The Hill reports:
The flyovers are part of what the Trump administration is calling Operation America Strong.
President Trump thanked the Blue Angels and Thunderbirds Thursday morning for the planned flyovers.
Aw, ain’t that sweet? Throwing millions away on air shows while the peons below starve. Oh, but then Trump is just getting bad advice, right? The whole thing is about bringing Trump down! (And if you believe that, I’ve got a bridge in Brooklyn ….)
As we all know, medical workers are not overworked. The opposite is true. They are being laid off or furloughed in large numbers because so many people are not getting medical treatment while the shutdowns continue. Sadly, some of these fearful and neglected patients will expire or suffer lifetime damage from untreated conditions.
Medical workers are, in fact, so underworked that a disturbingly high number have produced dance videos during their slow time. (Just Google “dancing nurses.”) This “dancing nurse” phenomenon is surely, at least in part, orchestrated propaganda to create division and distract with trivialities (that’s why I have not wasted your precious time on these Tik Tok videos), but some of the videos must be genuine.
Medical workers always deserve gratitude when they are caring for us. They should be routinely thanked. As I said to one of the four doctors who have seen me for various urgent, non-viral, curable problems during this Covid Crisis, “Thank you for seeing me.” I extend sympathy to those who are overworked, but the best way to honor medical workers at this point is not with flyovers, clapping crowds, songs or other forms of organized schmaltz.
End the shutdown and politically-orchestrated hysteria so that they can have their jobs back. End the shutdown and expose the truth about the virus so that people in need of medical treatment can come out of fear-induced hiding and get care.
And make sure this historically-unprecedented travesty never happens again. When a truly devastating pandemic hits, we will have plenty of opportunity to show our thanks. And there will likely be no party jets then.
— Comments —
Janice (who sent the image above) writes:
I noticed the language on this poster that implies that medical workers are soldiers deserving of a star-spangled salute, and that anyone wishing to see the salute must listen to their leaders as a child listens to it’s mother and follow directions to watch it “safely”, from a “distance”.
The conditioning continues…
Zeno writes:
This phenomenon of heroic “dancing doctors” who need “applause” is so bizarre, it makes me think if it’s not some kind of giveaway that the whole thing is conceived as a spectacle. It’s strange to be asked to clap for doctors for just doing their paid job (when millions are now jobless), and dancing in the hospital during a “pandemic” seems very unprofessional as well.
As for spending money on this flyover stunt, it’s completely absurd, especially with the information that you should “stay home” and not go outside to watch it. Is the idea to taunt the population? It reminds me of when the LA Mayor forbid fireworks in the city and then posted a video of fireworks saying “don’t try this at home” or something to that effect. We are constantly bombarded with contradictory images and ideas.
Laura writes:
Yes, it’s conceived as a spectacle. Good point.
I think the goal is to confuse.
Is this non-linear warfare?