Giving up on conventional medicine and hope for the future
The more dealings I have with anyone working in the conventional health professions - doctors, nurses etc - the more it becomes clear that modern western conventional medicine has no interest in, no awareness or understanding of actual health. All that they are capable of and interested in doing is disease management, moving the sick from doctor A to doctor B to doctor C and back again to doctor A and so on ad infinitum, all the while taking money and giving industrially produced gimmicks of dubious effectiveness. The place of man in the cycle of life and his part in the ecosystem, the influence of farming on nutrition, nutrition on health and health on resistance to disease is at best unknown and misunderstood, at worst derided and dismissed. There are doctors and nurses, scientists and researchers, teachers and practitioners who do understand and who do work hard to help and heal the sick, to restore them to their place in the natural order, and to maintain health in those lucky - or clever - enough to have received it, but these few men and women are harder and harder to find. They have been ostracised from their professions, banned from social media, fired from their posts and their work erased from the results pages of search engines.
And the more I read of government measures being introduced to make vaccination in particular and conventional medical conformity in general mandatory - without ever having the honesty to say so in as many words - the more I am convinced that there will be a parting of the ways, a rupture in society greater than anything seen before. But this rupture, this secession from society of the revolutionaries and the rebels who are the back-to-the land types, the holistic medicine practitioners, the regenerative farmers and permaculturists, the naturopaths, the “anti-vaxxers,” and the “conspiracy theorists” will not look the way it is depicted by the Gates and Schwabs of the world: whilst many in the resistance may very live in the “small 19th century villages” so disparagingly referred to in the World Economic Forum’s famous article “Here’s How Life Could Change in My City By The Year 2030,” (previously entitled "Welcome to 2030. I own nothing, have no privacy, and life has never been better") they won’t be the ones living in slums, “feeding” themselves on vacuum packed industrial gloop (for the poor) and sweaty burgers made with factory-grown GMO (for the billionaires), being continually tracked and monitored and socially engineered, perpetually instilled with fear and panic, and divested from any remnants of freedom or self-responsibility. No, the rebels will be in the countryside, living in loose and interlinked communities, working both with and in nature, whilst establishing and nurturing a new culture where freedom and responsibility, strength and gentleness, independence and sharing, flexibility and permanence are not exclusive concepts but inter-dependent and complementary pillars of a society resilient like no other before it. And we will be the ones breathing in the freshest air, eating the tastiest and healthiest produce, prepared by the best chefs, and drinking the beat wines and the cleanest water.
So, despite the fear and the hate spread by the media and governments, and the temptation to give in to despair, I see the efforts made by the technocrats, the globalists, the corporate magnates and the enemies of nature and of mankind, as proof more of their fear than of ours, as a sign that they know what most of us do not: that their society is the brittle one, not ours, that their future hangs by a thread, not ours, that they can be toppled from atop their ivory towers whilst we can not, that they neither know nor understand nature and her manifold processes, and that they hate their very humanity and seek to escape from it whilst we champion it and see in it our greatest link to nature and therefore the means to our salvation.