We are talking about different things, Cindy. That people in the Civilised West are calling for the Final Penalty for powerful people who have violated their trust is one thing. That this might develop into the mob rule in your allusion is another thing. Using the metaphorical language, we are already in the middle of a holocaust: is how…
That people in the Civilised West are calling for the Final Penalty for powerful people who have violated their trust is one thing.
That this might develop into the mob rule in your allusion is another thing.
Using the metaphorical language, we are already in the middle of a holocaust: is how it appears to those of us who are trying to assess the effects of this terrible medical intervention, which is nothing less than a gigantic betrayal.
I beg the indulgence of the readership for repeating this story from Alice Marriott's tales of the Kiowa in her "The Ten Grandmothers"
The Kiowa were a very special nation in those days. Elegant, Observant, Disciplined, they were everything that their best friend the Comanche (properly: Nurmunuh) nation were not. But the tribes were best friends and in this tale they shared a get together out somewhere in the Plains.
One of the Kiowa women had a super horse, a mare, a great runner; who had just given birth.
Her brother, drinking with the neighbours, talking of horse racing, decided to borrow the mare. His sister refused. He took the horse anyway. Won the first heat, won the second, dropped dead.
Apart from the great love and empathy that these people have for their animals, the horse is valued by the Plains Tribes as us Europeans value Gold.
The horse's owner hung herself from distress, shame, and many other feelings. Of course, her husband claimed. The tribal Council agreed, the criminal was stripped of his belongings (which were shared among the poorer member of the tribe) and his clothing, and he was sent away. You can figure.
Betrayal in a close community is obvious, that in a wider community is not so obvious. I trust you will find nothing difficult in this story. I have others, from my own family in the Peruvian Andes, of a more recent date, and others of a less fatal sentence.
People who think that Fauci and whoever else should get a second chance before eternal judgment are, in my personal opinion, not thinking clearly, and it's maybe this lazy "thinking" that has helped get us where we are today.
How many people believed that they actually NEEDED to get a "covid" "vaccination"?
?
If I shook my head in disbelief, the tears would scatter everywhere.
We are talking about different things, Cindy.
That people in the Civilised West are calling for the Final Penalty for powerful people who have violated their trust is one thing.
That this might develop into the mob rule in your allusion is another thing.
Using the metaphorical language, we are already in the middle of a holocaust: is how it appears to those of us who are trying to assess the effects of this terrible medical intervention, which is nothing less than a gigantic betrayal.
I beg the indulgence of the readership for repeating this story from Alice Marriott's tales of the Kiowa in her "The Ten Grandmothers"
The Kiowa were a very special nation in those days. Elegant, Observant, Disciplined, they were everything that their best friend the Comanche (properly: Nurmunuh) nation were not. But the tribes were best friends and in this tale they shared a get together out somewhere in the Plains.
One of the Kiowa women had a super horse, a mare, a great runner; who had just given birth.
Her brother, drinking with the neighbours, talking of horse racing, decided to borrow the mare. His sister refused. He took the horse anyway. Won the first heat, won the second, dropped dead.
Apart from the great love and empathy that these people have for their animals, the horse is valued by the Plains Tribes as us Europeans value Gold.
The horse's owner hung herself from distress, shame, and many other feelings. Of course, her husband claimed. The tribal Council agreed, the criminal was stripped of his belongings (which were shared among the poorer member of the tribe) and his clothing, and he was sent away. You can figure.
Betrayal in a close community is obvious, that in a wider community is not so obvious. I trust you will find nothing difficult in this story. I have others, from my own family in the Peruvian Andes, of a more recent date, and others of a less fatal sentence.
People who think that Fauci and whoever else should get a second chance before eternal judgment are, in my personal opinion, not thinking clearly, and it's maybe this lazy "thinking" that has helped get us where we are today.
How many people believed that they actually NEEDED to get a "covid" "vaccination"?
?
If I shook my head in disbelief, the tears would scatter everywhere.
I wish you well!
Thanks for your reply. I think we're having a productive conversation.