Ellen Stuttle

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Everything posted by Ellen Stuttle

  1. Oh, hell. Sweeney isn’t conceding. BREAKING: New Jersey Senate President Won't Concede to Republican Truck Driver - Says "12,000 Ballots Recently Found in One County" WWW.THEGATEWAYPUNDIT.COM New Jersey’s Senate President Sweeney says he is not conceding to the Republican truck driver who beat him in Tuesday’s election. We reported earlier on the truck driver in New Jersey who beat the... Ellen
  2. Just commenting on this point. The others are more than I want to take time to address right now. Looks like it's an assorted score between Kirsch and Deigin. On this one, they're both wrong (judging from Deigin's report of Kirsch's contention). ——- Yuri Deigin @ydeigin Lack of correlation in reported VAERS deaths and vaccination numbers does NOT disprove causality between the two (as I claimed in this slide) but actually proves that vaccines are much more deadly to older people 3:55 AM · Oct 28, 2021 ——- The lack of correlation between number of shots and number of deaths does NOT imply no causality, as Deigin says it does. It could happen, for instance, that one day 10 shots are given to people none of whom has whatever sensitivity produces a fatal reaction and the next day 10 shots are given to people all of whom have that sensitivity. On the other hand, neither does the lack of correlation prove that the shots are more deadly to older people, as Kirsch claims. Ellen
  3. I think there was an earlier mention, but it doesn’t seem to have been by Turkeyfoot (I read his few posts of the last months) and it doesn’t show on "Search." Maybe it was in a Quote box. "Search" - very irritatingly - doesn’t search material in Quote boxes. Ellen
  4. HaHaHA!!! Now that is really funny. Sometimes, in your ignorance, you provoke laughs to remember. Ellen
  5. Hooray! Durr win official. IT'S OFFICIAL: Humble Commercial Truck Driver Defeats One of the Most Powerful Democrats in New Jersey After Spending Only $153 on His Race WWW.THEGATEWAYPUNDIT.COM A humble Christian truck driver with no political experience has officially defeated New Jersey Senate President Steve Sweeney – one of the most powerful Democrats in New Jersey. Edward Durr is a commercial... Ellen
  6. If the child has been "jabbed" with the FDA-OKed Pfizer poison, it might be a short life. I've seen some references to the sacrificing of children to Moloch. They become almost literally apropos (no fiery furnace, but….). Ellen
  7. And now look what Pfizer is doing. The 10s of billions they've already raked in from selling poison isn’t enough for them. PURE EVIL: Disturbing Pfizer Ad Tells Kids They'll Get Superpowers from COVID Jab (VIDEO) WWW.THEGATEWAYPUNDIT.COM This is truly pure evil. Pfizer was given the go-ahead this week from the CDC to give the experimental COVID vaccine to children. Children have a greater chance of drowning, dying in a car wreck or dying from the... Ellen
  8. Note the publication: MIT Technology Review. MIT is another of the once-gold-standard-in-science institutions which have become collectors of ill-gotten government largesse. Of course MIT had already gone the way of the dark side on the climate issue. They've had practice. So Kirsch doesn’t sound reliable himself. Nevertheless, the automatic demonizing of opposition opinions by "scientific" institutions is indicative of how far the former greats have descended. Ellen
  9. Now this is a hell of a story. Maybe someone else has already posted it. I haven’t yet read today's political posts on OL. In case you all haven’t seen this….. David vs Goliath: Conservative Edward Durr, A Humble Truck Driver of 25 Years, On Verge of Unseating Longstanding NJ Senate President After Spending Just $153 on His Entire Campaign WWW.THEGATEWAYPUNDIT.COM It’s looking like David has beaten Goliath. A humble, lifelong resident of New Jersey – who has been a commercial truck driver for 25 years, has had absolutely no political experience, and was equipped with an... Ellen
  10. Amen. And to your other comments re sanitizing. Wearing a mask when doing surgery is one thing. Yes, operating room personnel should do that to impede particulate matter from getting into a wound. And of course hand washing, etc. But the silly anti-Covid flimflam masks only contribute to oxygenation and itching problems, etc. Here's a bizarre unanticipated consequence of requiring masks in medical offices. It was found in ophthalmological procedures - such as the 8-weekly injection I get in my left eye - that the patient’s wearing a mask increases the risk of infection because the exhaled breath is partly channeled around the mask edges, including upward into the eye. So…what to do, given the medical-establishment mask requirement? The solution adopted is to tape the top of the mask sealed on the skin with surgical tape. Hurts getting the damn tape off - and I'm left with lingering skin sensitivity for several days afterward. The smart thing to do would be to dispense with the masks, and the doctors and techs know that. But they have to comply with the regulations. Just one mini-insanity in the worldwide psychotic episode of this "pandemic." Ellen
  11. As time passes, the world’s people will increasingly realize what some of us already realize: The pseudo-vaccines aren’t remotely the protectors the real vaccines you mention are. Nowhere near the league. Tony still believes that the pseudo-vaccines provide some protection and would be advisable for persons at high risk from Covid. I don’t believe that they even do that, whereas on the other hand they pose long-term risk even for those (of whom there are many) who have evidenced no adverse reaction beyond the typical sore arm for awhile at the injection locus. Elderly people who got the jabs and showed no adverse effect yet will likely die anyway before long-term consequences become a problem for them. The younger the person, the more prospect for future trouble. Note: I'm talking about the mRNA injections. I haven’t really looked into whether the adenovirus-based actual, albeit odd, vaccines provide some protection. Maybe they do, although all of them have the sort of clotting risks which have plagued the history of attempts to develop successful vaccines against coronaviruses. (There's a reason why those sorts of problems occur. It has to do with the body "considering" the upper respiratory tract more as an outer layer, like skin, than an inner organ. The defense reaction is different than with an internal invader.) Ellen
  12. Yes, it is like that - although the metaphor I think of is an ostrich with its head in the sand, because Peter so resolutely refuses even to look. I would drop it entirely with him if not for…an 11-year-old granddaughter whose parents might listen to Peter in deciding whether or not to give the child the shots. I hope she is spared. Damn it, there are the tears forming in my eyes again. I am so upset about the OK for young children. Teenagers was already awful, young children… Crime against humanity, like some are wanting to instigate Nuremberg-style trials contending. Atrocity. Ellen
  13. What is that supposed to mean? Whatever, I am not amused, and, no, I do not miss Jon. I did like Jon quite a bit prior to his becoming rather a fanatic. By the time he was banned, I was glad to have him gone. Ellen
  14. Peter, I read and understand medical material which you wouldn’t begin to understand. (I started reading medical textbooks for fun when I was less than nine.) I already understood from a description of how the mRNA "jabs" work that they're "playing with fire," so to speak. As has been confirmed. You probably could understand some of the material Mark has linked to, however. Have you even looked at any of it? The "real" stats you quote are grossly inflated, as I have explained on this thread. (Note re Tony's point about there being many unreported mild cases. Agreed. Nevertheless, the official case figures include many cases which are actually flu or just a cold or even nothing at all except a false-positive PCR, and the official death figures include many cases which likewise aren’t Covid at all or are simply "with Covid," not "from Covid.") The "real" study you cited is junk. I've told you that my doctor was surprised (at my annual exam) that I hadn’t gotten "vaxxed" and I informed him of things he didn’t know. He'd been merely believing official medical sources which have been lying, lying, lying. He withdrew the recommendation that I "get the shot." Your doctor is either similarly misinformed or is going along with the herd despite knowing better. Not knowing your doctor, I couldn’t say which. In any case, doing what a doctor tells you simply because "Doctor says so" is not rational. One rationally does what a doctor says only if one has good reason to think that what the doctor says is sound advice. Doctors, even the best doctors, are not infallible, and many of them tend to be prone to herd dynamics fashion-following (observation from a lifetime of knowing doctors as family friends and acquaintances as well as in doctor-patient relationships). I very much hope that if a doctor recommends that you recommend a shot for your granddaughter that you say, NO! The 5-11 shots are going to outright kill or produce disability in some percentage of young children, as they have done in other age groups. And the long-term consequences are going to be horrendous. A medical catastrophe. Ellen
  15. Mark, This looks like another article worth noting: Spontaneous Abortions and Policies on COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Use During Pregnancy by Aleisha R. Brock1, Simon Thornley2 Ellen
  16. A couple interesting tweets quoted on Gateway Pundit. The tweets might be taken down. I copied the text, which I suppose will stay here even if the original source vanishes: Joe Hoft writes: "In an article at Twitchy about recent tweets that have not yet been censored and taken down at Twitter, John Hayward pinpoints why the Democrats hate the phrase ‘Let’s Go Brandon’." John Hayward @Doc_0 · Nov 2, 2021 One reason Dems are so comically furious over "Let's Go Brandon" is they understand it's the kind of thing that triggers preference cascades - a moment when people look around and realize that huge numbers of their neighbors share what the ruling party claims is a fringe opinion. John Hayward @Doc_0 The Left expends a huge amount of effort on making its adversaries feel marginalized. They mastered the dark art of making the majority FEEL like a fringe minority. The demoralization-destabilization-subversion strategy of the Left is designed to make normal people feel abnormal. 8:16 AM · Nov 2, 2021 —— Ellen
  17. How disappointing. I did hope, the last few days, that some light had penetrated. Ellen
  18. To be fair…, "Leave it to Harry to be a fool." The spike protein jab is neither safe nor effective. Getting jabbed is at best misguided. And Harry has the scientific educational background to have known better. Ellen
  19. That's a gem of a summary of the Alice in Wonderland "logic." Ellen
  20. WOW! I never thought I'd live to see the day…. That's an enlightening way of putting the paradoxicalness of Rand, by which I was struck and puzzled from very early in my acquaintance with Rand's non-fiction and the conformity-enforcing quality of the Newsletter, then The Objectivist and of what I sensed (from a distance) of NBI dynamics. On the one hand, individualism and creativity, on the other, stifling uniformity. I liked your post a lot, including the excellent synopsis you quoted about Bloom's categories. I'll be marking the post for easy future reference. Ellen
  21. Toohey was psychologically astute. Harry is so psychologically dense, I think he's never had power over people except a power of inclusion or exclusion on his list (if that's still going). "Priest class," yes. Guardian of that class. "The Stormtrooper of Objectivism," some called him in NY O'ist circles when Rand was still alive. He doesn’t have the ability to manipulate, just to police. (I'm using present tense, though it's been years since I've seen Harry in person, but he sounds, like I said, unchanged.) Ellen
  22. Leave it to Harry to be a fool. LOL. Some things don’t change. Ellen
  23. Not "of all places." Johns Hopkins has been at the forefront of medical chicanery throughout the Covid scare and had probably lost its right to esteem well before then. Ellen
  24. Sometimes William's snooping produces a bonanza. Poking around at the DRASTICRESEARCH.ORG link, I found a list of Latest Papers authored/co-authored by D.R.A.S.T.I.C. Members The title of one of them intrigued me: Understanding Covid-19 and Seasonal Influenza as Quasispecies Mutant Swarms Reveals the Quantum Origins and Cryptic Fates of Human Pandemics Here's an excerpt from the introductory section. UNC is the University of North Carolina. Ellen
  25. Further quotes. === Start On a dazzling Friday morning in November 2016, Andrew was found dead on the floor of his living room. […] My son was 28 years old when he died. An autopsy was performed but no official cause of death was found. […] The time between late 2016 and 2019 is mostly lost to me. Grief, it turns out, doesn’t feel like sadness. It’s more like terror, being chased through oily blackness. My husband, younger son and I isolated. We drank. We drove, looking for Andrew. He’d loved mountains: South Dakota, Colorado, Oregon. We swore we felt him in the trees. We’d started to function again, slowly, by late ’19. In January ’20 we traveled to Bellevue, Washington, for a conference where John was speaking. I fell ill soon after with a fever and breathless cough I couldn’t shake for six weeks. This friend of ours—a corporate lawyer with business in China—raised an eyebrow and told us a pandemic was coming. All around there was tension, something uncontrolled and wicked in the air. John is an internet security expert with a background in mathematics. He’ll often talk about the “shape” of a problem. This is its outline, its gestalt. He envisions it like dots on a chart, or waves on a graph. I see holographic images—the shape of an ambitious refugee, white coats and flimflam men, glimmering under the figures we see today. In March, April, May, familiar shapes began to emerge. Suddenly there emerged a cadre of pandemic experts who recommended—then quickly required—extreme and unprecedented things. === End Quote Ellen