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From Lock-Down Canada « The Thinking Housewife
The Thinking Housewife
 

From Lock-Down Canada

April 12, 2021

HELENA writes from Ontario:

We are in a new lockdown here. Although the mall is closed, the food court has most of its stores open for take out. And so I decided to try the Greek stall.

I went there without my mask, and put it on as I was ready to order.

The young man who was working behind the counter wore a simple gold cross. I ordered a dinner, and as he was preparing the take-out box, I said how nice it was that he was wearing a cross. Then I asked him if he will celebrate Easter next month in May.

Yes, he answered. That cheered him up.

Then I asked him if he was ready to take the vaccine.

“I don’t know about that!” he said.

So, I said: “Don’t take it. These vaccines came way too early. It takes at least three years to make one, then to provide the vaccine to clinics and hospitals. These vaccines came out in six months.”

He seemed to know something about the mRNA vaccines, and their deleterious effects. I told him not to worry about the details. No-one really knows about the effects, even 30 years down the road. He could get some reaction when he’s 65, and it could be related.

“Yes!” he exclaimed. “I could get cancer, and nobody will know exact why it happened. And I don’t trust those news people, who repeat every day the same thing, over and over again.”

“Also,” he said. “I think they knew about this COVID even before it came out!”

“Yes, that is the general idea that they knew about COVID before COVID! But don’t worry about the details. You know enough already. Just don’t take the vaccine, and don’t let your family members take it if you can.”

I told him that I have extensive family and I don’t know ONE person who got COVID.

He laughed.

This young, entrepreneurial man bitterly said about this round of lockdowns: “Enough is Enough. I have no words.” He came up on his own with his conclusions about the vaccine. “I googled the information online,” he told me.

I don’t know how he will resist. But the world is full of brave people. He showed up in the bare and empty food court, with me as his only customer of the day (“No one wants to come down here,” he says), and keeps his shop open.

“I’ll come back for more of your food!” I said as I waved goodbye.  Says this sweet young man, who must be in his mid-twenties.”Bye, hon’.”

 

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