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Another sobering excerpt from 'Dissolving Illusions - Disease, Vaccines, and the Forgotten History' By Suzanne Humphries, MD and Roman Bystrianyk

After finishing chapter 2 "Suffer The Little Children", this third chapter "Disease — A Way of Life" starts just as depressing. Reminds me of what we experienced during WuFlu.

https://avalonlibrary.net/ebooks/Suzanne%20Humphries%20MD,%20Roman%20Bystrianyk%20-%20Dissolving%20illusions%20-%20Disease,%20Vaccines%20and%20the%20Forgotten%20History.pdf

  1. Disease—A Way of Life Like beasts, like maniacs, the people fell on them… There is no more dreadful sight than such popular anger thirsting for blood and throttling its defenseless victims… In the Rue Vaugirard, where two men were killed… I saw one of these unfortunates when he was still breathing and the old hags were just pulling the wooden shoes from their feet and beating him on the head with them till he was dead. He was quite naked and bloody and mashed; they had torn off not only his clothes but his hair, his sex, and his nose, and one ruffian tied a rope to the feet of the corpse and dragging it through the streets, shouting constantly, “Voilà le Cholera-morbus!”

– Heinrich Heine (1797–1856), 1832 Paris cholera epidemic

Another sobering excerpt from 'Dissolving Illusions - Disease, Vaccines, and the Forgotten History' By Suzanne Humphries, MD and Roman Bystrianyk After finishing chapter 2 "Suffer The Little Children", this third chapter "Disease — A Way of Life" starts just as depressing. Reminds me of what we experienced during WuFlu. https://avalonlibrary.net/ebooks/Suzanne%20Humphries%20MD,%20Roman%20Bystrianyk%20-%20Dissolving%20illusions%20-%20Disease,%20Vaccines%20and%20the%20Forgotten%20History.pdf >3. Disease—A Way of Life Like beasts, like maniacs, the people fell on them… There is no more dreadful sight than such popular anger thirsting for blood and throttling its defenseless victims… In the Rue Vaugirard, where two men were killed… I saw one of these unfortunates when he was still breathing and the old hags were just pulling the wooden shoes from their feet and beating him on the head with them till he was dead. He was quite naked and bloody and mashed; they had torn off not only his clothes but his hair, his sex, and his nose, and one ruffian tied a rope to the feet of the corpse and dragging it through the streets, shouting constantly, “Voilà le Cholera-morbus!” > – Heinrich Heine (1797–1856), 1832 Paris cholera epidemic
[–] 1 pt

people are nasty at times. The same thing would have happened here with Covid.