Beware, the Coming Covid Scare! By Brian Simpson
Australia's health authorities, media, and experts are pushing another Covid-19 scare campaign, hyping the Omicron subvariant NB.1.8.1 as a "highly contagious" threat driving the country's twelfth wave since 2020. They're hammering case numbers, 40% of cases in Victoria, 25% in Western Australia and New South Wales, 20% in Queensland, under 10% in South Australia, while pleading for booster shots, fully funded by taxpayers. The ABC calls the variant "pretty much everywhere," and doctors warn of an imminent spike, but the campaign's a massive flop. Western Australia's health data shows no rise in hospitalisations or ICU admissions, with zero Covid ICU cases for months. National stats are flat, barely registering compared to past waves, yet the fear machine churns on, desperate to keep the narrative alive.
The public's over it. Only 6.6% of adults got a booster in the last six months, despite free access. A Murdoch poll shows 75% of readers don't care. Health Minister Mark Butler's begging people to "have a serious think" about jabs, but he's got no leverage: guidelines only recommend boosters for those over 75 or severely immunocompromised, admitting the risk-benefit doesn't work for most. Experts now concede the virus mutates too fast for vaccines to keep pace, with NB.1.8.1's spike protein evading antibodies. Warnings from years ago about immune imprinting, vaccine-driven variants, and the futility of vaccinating against respiratory viruses, backed by a Fauci-co-authored paper saying such vaccines rarely last, are proving true. But the government's locked into billion-dollar mRNA contracts, with investments and purchase commitments driving the push, not health needs. The media keeps hyping "BREAKING" variant stories for clicks, while the public laughs or tunes out.
This isn't just Australia's mess, it's a global trend of elites clinging to failing narratives, as the Alor.org blog discusses today. In Europe, migration critics get shut down with "racism" labels, despite 70% of Germans wanting stricter borders (2024 YouGov poll). South Korea's technocrats push immigration to fix a 0.7 fertility rate, ignoring cultural backlash from young men raging on X about "losing our identity." Poland's 1.099 fertility rate and flopped "800+" child benefit scheme show the same disconnect, ignoring root causes like housing and jobs. Trust is crumbling everywhere. A 2024 U.S. report from the Committee to Unleash Prosperity found public faith in health institutions tanked post-Covid overreach.
The bigger issue: elites are stuck, pushing fear-based agendas, war, migration, viruses, while the public's scepticism grows. In Australia, the NB.1.8.1 campaign's crashing because people see the disconnect: normal hospital stats don't justify panic, just like Europe's migration data doesn't justify open borders, or South Korea's economic fixes don't justify cultural erosion. The government's already prepping the thirteenth scare campaign, tied to mRNA deals they can't walk away from. Media outlets will keep churning out press releases for clicks, even as X users fire back with "LMAO" replies. But the public's done, tired of the "bs," and not buying this tired sequel. Health authorities need to drop the fear and get real about what vaccines can do, or they'll keep bombing with a public that's checked out.
https://news.rebekahbarnett.com.au/p/new-covid-wave-scare-campaign-massive
"Like the Marvel franchise, with its unlimited instalments and spin-offs, a new Covid scare campaign is underway in Australia.
Like the Marvel franchise, the entertainment content exists largely to create demand for merchandise.
Unlike most Marvel films, this latest virus fear-mongering drive is turning out to be a massive flop.
The hook: There's a new "highly contagious" Covid Omicron subvariant in town, catchily named NB.1.8.1.
Sticking with time-tested tradition, health authorities, experts, and media are playing the 'cases, cases, cases' angle, as the latest variant "sweeps the nation" with what I calculate to be Australia's twelfth Covid wave since the pandemic scare series kicked off in 2020.
Exposition: "According to Griffith University, the NB.1.8.1 variant makes up more than 40 per cent of total COVID cases tested in Victoria, around 25 per cent in Western Australia and New South Wales, around 20 per cent in Queensland and less than 10 per cent in South Australia," reports ABC.
"There are hundreds of different strains of Omicron, and the new subvariant NB.1.8.1 is driving up infections and hospitalisations, particularly in Asia and Western Australia," reports the Daily Mail.
Narrator's aside: Case counts and hospitalisations are well within the normal range in Western Australia (WA) and no one has been admitted to ICU with Covid for months, according to the latest WA Health reporting.
Source: Virus WAtch, 11 May 2025, WA Health.
We're not seeing anything out of the ordinary in national statistics either.
Source: Australian Respiratory Surveillance Report - 5 May to 18 May 2025.
However, we mustn't let this contextualising information get in the way of the narrative arc.
Climactic build up: Back to cases, cases, cases. It's "pretty much everywhere," according to ABC. "Doctors are expecting a further spike in cases," so "experts are urging people to get their COVID booster jab."
Endless vaccination is the only way out!
Climactic escalation: But experts are furious that Australians are not vaccinating enough. You naughty, naughty Australians. In the past six months, only 6.6% of adults have received a Covid vaccine, according to recent federal figures, despite the vaccines being "free," i.e.: already paid for with your taxes.
Crisis response: Our protagonist takes action to meet the threat head-on. After all, the government has product to shift, so the vaccine advertorial must keep pumping.
Health Minister Mark Butler bravely does the media rounds, imploring anyone who can get a booster to "have a serious think" about following through.
Hero falters: Unfortunately for Butler, boosters aren't recommended for many cohorts in Australia anymore, because the risk-benefit profile is not favourable for most people.
Current Australian guidelines suggest adults aged over 75 should get a booster every six months, while those aged between 65 and 74, along with severely immunocompromised adults over 18 years of age, should get one every year. Outside of this, boosters are not recommended but are available to all Australian adults, and to children who are severely immunocompromised.
Plot twist: Experts admit that the reason everyone needs another booster is that vaccinating against a fast-mutating coronavirus doesn't work super well.
"The virus gradually evolves so that some of its proteins are a little bit different so that it can avoid the antibodies that we've now got present at population level," says one.
"In this case, we've got mutations in the spike protein that seems to be making it easier for this virus to attach to our cells and it seems to be making this virus evade our antibodies better," says another.
Flashback montage: Every expert who warned of immune imprinting, immune suppression, immune tolerance, the role of vaccines in driving new variants, vaccine-associated enhanced disease (VAEDs), and the general futility of vaccinating against respiratory viruses.
Slow roll a peer-reviewed article co-authored by Dr Anthony Fauci concluding that, "Durably protective vaccines against non-systemic mucosal respiratory viruses with high mortality rates have thus far eluded vaccine development efforts."
Comic relief: Like the good lackeys they are, media outlets are beating up the BREAKING new variant story, to which the general public response has been LMAO.
An online Murdoch media poll indicates three-quarters of their readers just aren't interested.
Denouement: Collective apathy. The failure of this latest scare campaign is unlikely to preclude a thirteenth scare campaign, as the government is generally unresponsive to market feedback, and it has mRNA investments and purchase commitments driving its decision-making.
Media will continue to uncritically print government press releases provided they convert to clicks - LMAO or otherwise.
Expect the next instalment just in time for the summer Covid wave."
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