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Despicable Dispensers « The Thinking Housewife
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Despicable Dispensers

June 22, 2021

THE fixtures and rituals of the new compulsory state religion of hypochondria include something pervasive and loathsome that I would like briefly to bring to your attention. I know, it’s a small thing. But it’s small and it’s fake and it’s ugly and it’s powerful.

It’s at the supermarket checkout. It is in front of elevators. It’s on restaurant tables next to the salt and pepper. In office buildings, it’s at every turn. Even now when our economies have been generously “opened up” by our lying masters, push dispensers, small bottles or wipes are everywhere. These are the equivalent of holy water placed in the vestibule of churches. One does not enter without manifesting one’s faith.

Unless one is an apostate. There are many reasons why I refuse — religious, scientific, political, aesthetic and economic reasons.

“Hand sanitizer” — the pretentious, pseudo-scientific name is all you really need to know about it and people less susceptible to mass marketing, people less lazy about words and their meaning, would consider this term crass marketing or such a bad joke they would refuse to use it. It conjures technocracy, hyper-sterility, impersonal metropolises with flying automobiles and astronaut uniforms. “Pass me the hand sanitizer, please,” one robot says to the other. People would say, “Pass me the soap.” It conjures group think, the death of individuality, a dystopian dearth of messiness. Can personality exist where there is no mess? Can love exist where personality is not? There is some mysterious relationship between our selves and bacteria. The hand assimilates invisible hordes. The human race would have been wiped out long ago if this interaction was typically lethal. A hand without regular contact with the universe of microorganisms is like a street without trees or a garden without bees or a face without a mouth and nose. It’s lifeless. It’s divorced from nature. And isn’t that the point? To put us at enmity with our own bodies and our Creator’s miraculous ingenuity? It’s funny how the very same people who promote this mythology of germ theory are always talking about preserving the wilderness. You are a wilderness. Every human body is a lush wilderness of teeming microorganisms.

We should wash our hands a few times a day, sure, but this ritualistic drenching ourselves in pseudo-soap goes too far. It makes hands dirtier, replacing health-boosting bacteria and grime with pollutants. That’s my opinion and I cannot prove it. I am walking evidence that this theory is correct.  I sail past the dispensers. I have not used them during this fake pandemic, except when my dental hygienist insisted and given that she was clearly in a state of dangerous religious fanaticism, I complied. To her someone who refuses to use hand sanitizer is what the cartoonist who makes fun of Muhammad is to a fanatical Muslim. This apostasy deserves nothing short of the death penalty. These fundamentalists are scary people. I don’t fear viruses. I fear them.

But I return from the supermarket and everywhere else un-sanitized and put my germ-covered purchases away without washing my hands. And here I am. I haven’t even gotten the sniffles.

When I do wash my hands, I use old-fashioned water. Hand sanitizer creates a yucky coating on the skin. My pores can’t breathe. It gives me a strong desire to wash my hands with water. So what is the point?

Viruses are not alive and are not crawling all over the containers of milk and boxes of cereal at the store. They are inert matter generated within the body. They are internal soaps we miraculously generate. They break down toxins we cannot handle. Viruses are our friends, not our enemies. I refuse to participate in this unjust war against them.

As a rule, I don’t trust people who have a whole lot of money to gain from some new and untried medical cure. Hand sanitizer is snake oil, potentially harmful to the health and extremely costly over the long run.

When the French nobleman Alexis de Tocqueville visited America in the 19th century, he predicted that American-style democracy would entail deadening conformity and the oppression of minority opinions by the majority. Well, the hand sanitizing majority is oppressing the dirty few.

Hand sanitizer is everywhere, no one publicly dissents. It’s everywhere not because it is good for us, but because, like face masks, it keeps the state religion alive. As long as the political and economic rewards can be reaped, we must be encouraged to fear the invisible enemy and slather ourselves with fake soap. Hand sanitizer is brilliant propaganda, that’s all, and the people profiting from it are gangsters making millions off a new form of extortion. Technically, it’s only soap, but psychologically it’s a weapon that powerfully fostered paranoia and absolute trust in lies so people accepted imprisonment and economic oppression and were prepared for the pharmaceutical next step. Hand sanitizer was preparatory to the deceptive vaccine. And about that, I am too sad to speak.

The bottle of hand sanitizer is a tool of political and economic treachery.

History will harshly condemn those plastic dispensers. It will condemn the expense and the decadence and the unhealthiness of them. Future generations, if there are any, will see them as proof of how superstition and propaganda can grip the entire world. They will be amazed that with all our technical knowhow we could be so susceptible to fables and psychopathic manipulation. That’s the only possible bright side — our bad example will make others feel better about themselves.

I won’t burn incense at these altars. I will not wash my hands. Not this way. I would rather die. It’s not a small thing to me. It’s not our hands that need to be sanitized.

And thank you, dear reader, for letting me say this to you here. For there is nowhere else I can.

 

— Comments —

Mark M. writes from England:

I could not agree more, my well-honed Catholic intuition ensures that I have refused even one squirt and it quickly became apparent in February 2020 that holding the line on the least symbols of tyranny was essential to holding the inevitable “vaccines” at bay. Vade retro satana!!

Laura writes:

Good to know you’re out there!!

Hurricane Betsy writes:

Golly, that was one hot article.  Your computer must be belching black smoke.  Please don’t be too sad to unleash an even greater rage on vaccines.  I’ve been ranting and fulminating about them for longer than I can remember, 3 decades at least, maybe more,  since I was rather young.  They’re all goofy and dangerous, not just the corona 19 version.  They’re based on the idea that the Creator did not know what he was doing when he invented the world, where all things had a purpose.

The human species does not change; illness used to be caused by evil spirits, angry gods and sinister constellations.  Today, those terrifying entities have been remodeled into bacteria, viruses, germs. Live however you wish, feed your kids trash, it don’t matter – just stick 70 doses of filth into that little arm and All Will Be Well. (Yes, it really is 70 or so doses by the time they’ve finished school.)

Laura writes:

Thanks. : – )

You’re right: it’s all superstition. “Educated” people are the most susceptible. They take everything on the authority of “experts.” They worship status. Anyone who has credentials and a bunch of degrees is inherently trustworthy.

They really deserve all this. But it’s sad as hell to watch.

Dianne from Reading, PA writes:

This was so good!! I wish it could be published everywhere, to be read by all. It amazes me how many times a day people place these strange concoctions of chemicals on their hands, especially those who are employed serving the public – sometimes with every customer/patient they encounter!

Holding the line in “small things” is so important.

Your commentary is always amazing. And thank you for putting yourself on the line in your promotion of a different theory about viruses. With my husband’s illness lately, I haven’t had the time to really pursue this line of thinking a whole lot but it makes sense to me. Our nephew has a PhD in chemistry and confirmed that the whole idea of viruses is controversial.

Laura writes:

Thank you very much. I haven’t been posting much lately because of the sadness thing, but I am getting back on my feet. You know how it is in boxing, when a man is down on the floor and the ref is counting to ten. I’m down but he hasn’t gotten to ten yet. Before he does, I’ll be back on my feet swinging! I don’t even care if I lose! Just want to land as many punches as I can before I go out.

My prayers for you and your husband.

Carmen writes:

You are spot on.  When our parishes in Dallas were finally reopened for Mass I was appalled that the Holy Water fonts were dry and there were masks and hand sanitizers instead. Only the devil himself could have conjoured up Catholic churches sans Holy Water when we needed it the most.  I never ever touched one hand sanitizer pump and when mentioning the situation to a Lutheran friend she exclaimed ” Imagine the millons of germs on those pumps everywhere!”

Is this the great delusion spoken of in Corinthians?  I’ve lost so much respect for many people that formerly seemed quite intelligent.  The media mind control is so pervasive.

I’m also in shock at how many of my conservative Christian mostly Catholic family and friends couldn’t wait to get the jabs.

Laura writes:

Thanks for your comments! I totally understand.

I pray the Mass from the St. Andrew’s Missal at home. Just because it has a Catholic name doesn’t make it so.

This is either the great delusion or a foreshadowing, a “figure,” of it. It’s all rooted in spiritual alienation and apostasy. I can predict with 99.9 percent accuracy whether someone will be a member of Branch Covidian, or not, based on their spiritual position. That includes A LOT of people who consider themselves Catholic and who have zero love for the truth. I know people are atheistical who haven’t fallen for this. They are deficient in graces and in many cases completely uneducated in the faith, but they have a strong craving and desire for the truth. (I don’t mean to suggest that you can’t get to heaven if you fall for political lies. But spiritual weakness creates delusion of all kinds.)

Buckle your seatbelts! We’re in for rough times. But the Holy Spirit will see us through this. Stay true to Our Lord and everything He foretold. Sacred Heart of Jesus, we love you more and more each day. Never do I lose faith, not for a second, that You will triumph in the end.

Laura adds:

One other thing, Carmen: Please bear in mind that these churches in many cases have accepted funds from the federal government in exchange for enforcing Covid rules. Churches and businesses were eligible for these grants. That’s probably why you saw masks and sanitizer when you returned. It’s a brilliant and diabolical scheme. So many things were thought out in advance. A round of applause to our Masters! You gotta give the Synagogue of Satan credit! They’ve outdone themselves on this one. Brilliant! Bravo! Bravo!

Katherine writes:

Excellent post about those despicable dispensers!

I just saw this in a meme:  “The main ingredient in hand sanitizer is paranoia.”

I’m so glad to see you posting again.  I was getting worried about you and was just about to email you to ask if you were alright.

Laura writes:

Thanks for your concern.

Janice G. writes:

Yes, yes, and yes to the comparison you drew between sterile liquid sanitizer (the word sanitizer absolutely does imply sterility!) vs. the good fruit of Holy Water used fervently! As blessed water in fact does give the devils a fright, sanitizer is the “sacramental” that gives  added boost of protection from the “evil germ”, according to the Covidian belief.

Accordingly, masks are the approved attire for those who worship at the Scientific-state.
As the Christian dons his or her Sunday best apparel and veil out of respect for God in Church, so the Covidian shows his reverence to pope Fauci’s directive for mask-wearing everywhere.

After the “catechumen” adopts these teachings of faith, comes the indelible mark, a  baptism: the injection! It’s effects can never be done away with.

Then the “passport” is the Confirmation of the faith, enabling the confirmed to proudly show himself everywhere as a believer.

That there is a rise of a new religion is no longer just metaphoric.

There is the Covidian evangelization and martyrology; they suffer adverse effects or even lose loved ones due to their faith in the shot, yet still preach it to others. Months ago one Covidian tweeted out that she “would die for the AstraZeneca jab”!

These sad souls do not see that when you kick God out of your life, then you must replace Him with something else. Covidianism is that something for far too many.

Pray, pray, pray!

Thank you, Laura.

Laura writes:

Well said.

Thanks for your appreciation.

 

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