By W. R, McAfee, Sr.

Copyright © by W. R. McAfee, Sr.  All rights reserved.

“Well, a National Coalition of Women’s (NCOW) press release on September 17 says the CDC failed to inform the vax manufacturers of the larger number of  miscarriages and stillborns that were occurring among pregnant women who took the vaccine. Initially thought to be 1,588, the number eventually reached 3,587, according to the release.”

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As long as people have access to the free exchange of (Internet) information, the boys behind the curtain will have to keep scrambling.  Their dark side is now common knowledge, thanks to the ‘Net; which simultaneously has exposed the dearth of good men willing to indict these criminals.

The Constitution and the rule of law has been renewed in the minds of Americans who’ve taken the time to inform themselves and grapple with the enormity of the monsters behind the havoc wrought upon humanity for profit.

The bird is on the wing now, though, thanks to the web.

That’s why Oz keeps trying to establish its own laws (codex alimentarius), courts (international), appointed government (in The Hague), and a central world bank and currency (Basel, Switzerland) 

Don’t blame them.  I wouldn’t want to be sitting in front of an honest judge or jury either in the U.S., having done what they’ve done.  9/11 would be a good starter.  The evidence is irrefutable. Send the first to prison or the gurney and the canary chorus would sound like a Tabernacle Choir.

The law used not to worry Oz. They kicked an Oklahoma grand juror off the panel who questioned the government’s version of how the Murrah Building in Oklahoma City was brought down. And they obfuscated the Ryder truck bombing of the. . .South Tower was it?  Even when an informant called to let his government handlers know it was going to happen.

No, nary a peep from their propaganda outlets.

No wonder they thought people would fall in line with their 9/11 false flagger; not realizing the cumulative impact the Net was having on people’s minds between “events.”

The Internet is like a good boxer’s jab.  At first it seems unimportant to the scheme of things, but round after round it begins to take its toll on unwary opponents until finally, in the latter rounds, the recipient’s  legs start to wobble. More