In regards of the UK...
15. Many clinics in Europe and the US have been lacking patients and some have had to introduce short-time work.
Numerous operations and therapies were cancelled by clinics, even emergency patients sometimes stay at home
out of fear of the virus.
This is true. Some nurses have to go on short-hours due to this strange problem. LINK:
"...Tens of thousands of NHS hospital beds remain unoccupied amid the coronavirus crisis — about four times the
normal number — due to huge ongoing efforts to free up space, and a slowdown in admissions from other causes."
If beds and nurses have been put at the ready in Great Britain, why is there a problem in the media?
PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) is the answer, a shortage of medical everyday equipment.
But in reality, this access to specialised clothing is not a case of unpreparedness from Governments around the
world, it's something that's been around for a very long time. It's about the centuries-old avarice of the old-school
breed of what they used to call 'Robber Barons'.
From oil well to gas pump, farm to fork, hospital to pharmaceutical, drill rig to dollar bill, there is almost no aspect
of society that is not under control from those who originally invested and promoted the need of a product.
Introduce that need and you have yourself a guaranteed situation where power can be acquired and global society
can be manipulated. Oddly enough, money-making takes a second place in these instances and for those who hold
the reins of these commodities known as -I vaguely recall, known as 'pink products', there is an different agenda.
These days, the monopolisation of all aspects of modern-day life is the goal. Here's some suggestions and I'm aware
that considering the current 'plandemic' setting is an obvious ideal arena to prove my point, but I swear I'm not being
underhanded!
Toilet rolls... how important are toilet rolls in the world -especially the first world?
Plastic, a derivative of oil. Are medical face-masks, gloves and aprons important -regardless of the recent outbreak of
flu?
There are others where vast wealth can be made in just a day or two, but the managed-availability of such products
is also standing to one side in order for the true goal. Social control.
Snitch on your neighbour, civil disobedience, apps to track you and communication crackdowns. You don't need soldiers
and you don't need police, you just need to convince the world that the aliens a terrible disease has invaded our lives
and we need to fear everything.
'20. NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden warned that the corona crisis is used for the massive and permanent expansion
of global surveillance. The renowned virologist Pablo Goldschmidt spoke of a “global media terror” and “totalitarian measures”.
Leading British virologist Professor John Oxford spoke of a “media epidemic”.'
And the media are there to force it home.
................................................................................
The BBC's Africa web-page on articles regarding diverse current social aspects in that country.
Here's the list.
'Africa Live: Cuban medics land in South Africa to help fight Covid-19'
'The 'king' of Swahili writing who inspired me'
'SA police sorry for Muhammad remarks in mosque raid'
'Ghana extends ban on public gatherings'
'Kenya's top Covid-19 scientist demotion 'sparks row'
'Why do African states differ over lockdowns?'
'Live tracker: Coronavirus in Africa'
'Kenya's schools to remain closed for one more month'
'We have to use who we are to help others'
'Tear gas fired at mosques in Comoros'
'Sudan ex-leader's allies 'trying to infiltrate army'
'DR Congo farmers killed by rebels'
Features & Analysis
'How do you fight a locust invasion amid coronavirus?'
'Africa's top shots: Rainbows, pyramids and paint'
'No, hot steam is not a cure for coronavirus'
'Why some Nigerians are gloating about coronavirus'
'Is South Africa's alcohol ban working?'
Watch/Listen
Exercising in the street
Tips to improve your mental health during lockdown
S Africa president mocked over face mask struggles
Africa juggles locust and Covid-19 challenge
Coronavirus: How will the developing world cope?
Pop star donates house to help fight coronavirus
Programmes
Live: World Service for Africa
Africa Today Podcast
Newsday
Focus on Africa
BBC Minute
acute malaria.
All milk-toast with only a hint of worry in the once-called 'food-basket of the world.'
The BBC love to virtue-signal and hide their inner-racism in a perception of rainbows and unicorns.
Sadly, reality isn't like that.
...........................................................................................................
15. Many clinics in Europe and the US have been lacking patients and some have had to introduce short-time work.
Numerous operations and therapies were cancelled by clinics, even emergency patients sometimes stay at home
out of fear of the virus.
This is true. Some nurses have to go on short-hours due to this strange problem. LINK:
"...Tens of thousands of NHS hospital beds remain unoccupied amid the coronavirus crisis — about four times the
normal number — due to huge ongoing efforts to free up space, and a slowdown in admissions from other causes."
If beds and nurses have been put at the ready in Great Britain, why is there a problem in the media?
PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) is the answer, a shortage of medical everyday equipment.
But in reality, this access to specialised clothing is not a case of unpreparedness from Governments around the
world, it's something that's been around for a very long time. It's about the centuries-old avarice of the old-school
breed of what they used to call 'Robber Barons'.
From oil well to gas pump, farm to fork, hospital to pharmaceutical, drill rig to dollar bill, there is almost no aspect
of society that is not under control from those who originally invested and promoted the need of a product.
Introduce that need and you have yourself a guaranteed situation where power can be acquired and global society
can be manipulated. Oddly enough, money-making takes a second place in these instances and for those who hold
the reins of these commodities known as -I vaguely recall, known as 'pink products', there is an different agenda.
These days, the monopolisation of all aspects of modern-day life is the goal. Here's some suggestions and I'm aware
that considering the current 'plandemic' setting is an obvious ideal arena to prove my point, but I swear I'm not being
underhanded!
Toilet rolls... how important are toilet rolls in the world -especially the first world?
Plastic, a derivative of oil. Are medical face-masks, gloves and aprons important -regardless of the recent outbreak of
flu?
There are others where vast wealth can be made in just a day or two, but the managed-availability of such products
is also standing to one side in order for the true goal. Social control.
Snitch on your neighbour, civil disobedience, apps to track you and communication crackdowns. You don't need soldiers
and you don't need police, you just need to convince the world that the aliens a terrible disease has invaded our lives
and we need to fear everything.
'20. NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden warned that the corona crisis is used for the massive and permanent expansion
of global surveillance. The renowned virologist Pablo Goldschmidt spoke of a “global media terror” and “totalitarian measures”.
Leading British virologist Professor John Oxford spoke of a “media epidemic”.'
And the media are there to force it home.
................................................................................
The BBC's Africa web-page on articles regarding diverse current social aspects in that country.
Here's the list.
'Africa Live: Cuban medics land in South Africa to help fight Covid-19'
'The 'king' of Swahili writing who inspired me'
'SA police sorry for Muhammad remarks in mosque raid'
'Ghana extends ban on public gatherings'
'Kenya's top Covid-19 scientist demotion 'sparks row'
'Why do African states differ over lockdowns?'
'Live tracker: Coronavirus in Africa'
'Kenya's schools to remain closed for one more month'
'We have to use who we are to help others'
'Tear gas fired at mosques in Comoros'
'Sudan ex-leader's allies 'trying to infiltrate army'
'DR Congo farmers killed by rebels'
Features & Analysis
'How do you fight a locust invasion amid coronavirus?'
'Africa's top shots: Rainbows, pyramids and paint'
'No, hot steam is not a cure for coronavirus'
'Why some Nigerians are gloating about coronavirus'
'Is South Africa's alcohol ban working?'
Watch/Listen
Exercising in the street
Tips to improve your mental health during lockdown
S Africa president mocked over face mask struggles
Africa juggles locust and Covid-19 challenge
Coronavirus: How will the developing world cope?
Pop star donates house to help fight coronavirus
Programmes
Live: World Service for Africa
Africa Today Podcast
Newsday
Focus on Africa
BBC Minute
acute malaria.
All milk-toast with only a hint of worry in the once-called 'food-basket of the world.'
The BBC love to virtue-signal and hide their inner-racism in a perception of rainbows and unicorns.
Sadly, reality isn't like that.
...........................................................................................................
Quote:Virus triggers African unrest: Riots break out in Johannesburg over food shortages and Lesotho's under-fire PMDaily Mail: (More in link)
deploys army to 'restore order' as Covid-19 claims over 1,000 lives across the continent - including Nigerian
presidential aide
'Unrest has spread across Africa, with riots over food shortages and an army being deployed to 'restore order' as the
coronavirus crisis rocks the continent. Protests have erupted in Cape Town, the military have been mobilised in Lesotho
and the chief of staff to the Nigerian government died of the lethal bug.
Scenes not very 'BBC' and Prime Minister Thomas Thabane
Africa now has more than 1,000 deaths from COVID-19, the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Saturday.
A total of 52 of Africa's 54 countries have reported cases of the deadly virus, with the overall number of cases more than 19,800.
In Cape Town people have broken into tuck shops and attacked each other and police because they are hungry, one resident
claimed. Joanie Fredericks, a community leader in Mitchells Plain township in Cape Town, said in a viral clip: 'Mr President we
are in the middle of a food crisis. It's war out here.'
The desperate plea was made in a video posted on social media to President Cyril Ramaphosa who imposed a five-week
lockdown to try curb the spread of the coronavirus. Four weeks into a 35-day shut down poor communities are facing food
shortages as incomes for mostly informal workers have dried up.
Imposed from March 27, the lockdown has placed already cash-strapped citizens under further strain.
The numbers of people lining up for food at the self-funded scheme run by Fredericks and other volunteers are growing by the day.
'When we started out feeding people we started out with the very vulnerable, ...the children, the disabled people and the pensioners.
'But we are way past that Mr President, we are past the stage of sending people away,' an emotional Fredericks pleaded.
Already, several violent protests have broken out across the country over access to food parcels handed out by authorities.
Hundreds of angry people fought running battles with the police, hurling rocks and setting up street barricades with burning tyres
in Mitchells Plain over undelivered food parcels on Tuesday.
Police fired rubber bullets and teargas to disperse them. Social commentators fear such violent episodes could escalate.
'There's a bunch of us at home getting fat and there's a bunch of people who really have nothing,' said Julian May, director of
the Centre of Excellence in Food Security, at the University of the Western Cape.
'And it speaks a lot about the inequalities in South Africa (that) are likely to come out,' said May.
'As people are not getting food parcels or hear of other people getting parcels they are starting to react. And I don't think that's
going to ease unless there's more rapid delivery of food to people in poor areas.'
Lesotho's embattled prime minister announced on Saturday he had sent troops on to the streets to 'restore order', accusing
unnamed law enforcement agencies of undermining democracy. Prime Minister Thomas Thabane is under pressure to step
down after police said they suspect him of having a hand in the murder of his estranged wife in 2017, a case that has thrown
the country into political turmoil...'
Edith Head Gives Good Wardrobe.