One Nation Leader Senator Pauline Hanson has a great piece in the latest One Nation newsletter, “Moving Past Lockdowns and Looking to the Future.” I got this by email, and did not have the link, and could not easily find the piece on the net, but, here it is:
“Take it from someone who’s been locked up for 11 weeks in maximum security - the removal of personal freedoms eventually breaks the strongest of characters and rewires an individual's disposition long term.
Call it what you want, cabin fever, neurosis, climbing the walls, claustrophobia, or temporary insanity. They are all symptoms of lockdowns and stay-at-home orders while eroding our everyday freedoms.
In 2014, it was estimated over 77,000 Australians were hospitalised with pneumonia.
Meanwhile, in 2017, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) recorded 4,269 deaths here at home from influenza and pneumonia, making it the 9th leading cause of death and yet we didn’t shut the borders.
Across the world, mankind has been playing with coronavirus since its discovery in the 1960’s. I don’t use the term ‘playing’ lightly. It’s been the subject of much experiment on humans with cold-like symptoms for 60 years.
And even with the discovery of other equally infectious human coronaviruses including SARS (2003) and MERS (2013), the world has never issued stay-at-home measures, shut state borders, or destroyed businesses as we have with COVID.
But if universal Governments continue with their fear campaign while supporting Resident Evil like laboratories that play god with viruses, we’re bound to face further viral outbreaks.
The truth is, we are overpopulating our city centres, making them ideal petri dishes for close contact transmission.
You only need to look at the traditional suburban backyards that I grew up in within the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s that have died a slow death as Councils and developers approve smaller house lots.
Brisbane city blocks of land now start from 180 square metres, with homeowners forced to live like battery hens with no yard and barely centimetres between brick walls.
Is there any wonder why repeated lockdowns and stay-at-home orders have sent people mad?
2016 ABS data reveals 16.6 million Australians (71%) live in a major city. Meanwhile, just 2.2 million (9.7%) people live in small towns.
Let’s face it, Aussies are abandoning small towns with dwindling government services, a lack of infrastructure, and deteriorating roads, yet they’ve proven to be the safest place to live throughout the coronavirus outbreak.
With more than two-thirds of our population living in Australian cities, the bulk of us have become sitting ducks in the event of a severe outbreak or deliberate viral attack.
If there’s one thing Covid-19 has taught me, it’s the importance of our small towns and the significance of our farming and mining sectors. Both industries powered and fed Australia’s economy, while small towns offered life as normal to the 1 in 10 Australians who haven’t given up on regional Australia.
Common sense would suggest to political leaders that it’s time we examine the kind of Australia we want in the new covid world. Because let’s face it, the virus isn’t going anywhere soon.
Do we continue growing densely populated cities, or do we finally start dispersing the nation's wealth and better funding our regional areas that will entice families to move into less populated parts of our country?”
The idea that cities have become concentrated spots for virus spread is sound, the elites from mass immigration, for short-term profit and the exterminate the Euro-White race, may have set in motion Darwinian forces that even they, with their Dark magic cannot control.