Government behavioural psychologist and stalwart of the Communist Party Susan Michie wants you to be forced to wear useless masks again to turn you into compliant faceless robots – and this was always the plan as she knows. Nuremberg, Nuremberg, Nuremberg
The public must start wearing masks again to stop the spread of Covid, common colds and flu this winter, a Government adviser and public health experts have warned.
Susan Michie, a member of the Government’s scientific advisory board Sage, criticised ministers for failing to enforce the wearing of masks in indoor crowded spaces and said face coverings were vital for keeping people out of the health service over the winter.
She also urged anyone with symptoms “whether it’s cough, cold or flu” to stay at home.
The remarks come as Covid case rates have been averaging at around 37,990 per day over the last week and hit 40,000 on some days. Around 780 people who had Covid have died in the last seven days.
People across the UK have also complained of being struck with a “super cold” with symptoms of chesty coughs, runny noses and sore throats that are hard to shift.
Professor Michie, a Professor of Health Psychology at University College London, told
i “we need to keep people out of the health service” over the winter months so that the NHS can work through the backlog of patients.
“That means we need to keep them healthy,” she said. “We keep them healthy by taking more measures to reduce people’s risk of getting infected. It means that if you’ve got symptoms – whether it’s a cough, cold or flu – stay at home.”
Read More: Experts warn UK public to start wearing coverings again to stop spread of colds and Covid
Razer’s new Zephyr ‘smart mask’ is a vision of a Klaus Schwab future – what they will insist everyone wears in the Brave New Normal. However, your self-respect must be deleted or willingly handed over for this to happen
The company’s ‘Project Hazel’ concept is finally announced, but whether it will be seen much in the UK depends on illness, climate change, and a chunky price tag.
Razer, the computer company best known for its RGB lighting, announced a smart mask at the beginning of the year called ‘Project Hazel’. Today this concept came to fruition with a new name: the Zephyr.
The Razer Zephyr features two N95 filters, one on each side, and a passive filter on the bottom that are changed my removing the magnetically-attached plastic covers. It has a transparent outer shell, and internal lighting to make it easier to see people’s lips. There are two-speed fans, controlled by a companion app or the power button on the right-hand chamber and, of course, some customizable external lights.
For the past two years, during the pandemic, most people have worn the smaller cloth masks, and the move to a larger N95 mask – especially a larger, premium one like this – does feel akin to walking around as
Mad Max’s Immortan Joe. But it’s an upgrade that experts say could be necessary for everyone to take on the new variants of the coronavirus and perhaps protect against air pollution.
Read More: RAZER’S NEW ZEPHYR ‘SMART MASK’ IS A GLOWING VISION OF A CYBERPUNK FUTURE
Cult Script Reader Sadiq Khan Calls for Mandatory Face Masks on Public Transport
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has called on the Government to re-impose mandatory face masks on public transport and has recommended that members of the public wear them voluntarily in the meantime. Khan has also called on Londoners to protect the NHS this winter by receiving a Covid booster vaccine when it becomes available, as well as to book a place for the annual flu jab. The
MailOnline has the story.
The Government has been resistant to bringing in ‘Plan B’ measures, which would see the reintroduction of mandatory facemasks indoors and guidance to work from home and the use of Covid passports.
Mr Khan called for Londoners to get vaccinated against Covid and the flu to protect the NHS this winter.
It comes as official data shows more and more adults in their 30s and 40s are choosing to wear face masks on buses and trains amid spiralling Covid cases.
An Office for National Statistics poll found 33% of middle-aged adults wore coverings while on public transport at the start of September.
But just a month later this had ticked upwards to almost 40%, despite no change in official guidance.
The London Mayor said in a statement that the “deadly virus has not gone away and this winter we’re facing both flu and Covid”.
He added: “The worst thing we can do is to lower our guard, be complacent and underestimate the risk these viruses pose to all of us.
Read More: Sadiq Khan Calls for Mandatory Face Masks on Public Transport
£34,050-a-year Kent private school that makes children wear yellow badges if they are exempt from wearing masks is slammed for the ‘inappropriate’ similarity to yellow stars Nazis forced condemned Jews to display
A £34,050-a-year Kent private school that makes children wear yellow badges if they are exempt from wearing masks has been slammed for the ‘inappropriate’ similarity to yellow stars Nazis forced condemned Jews to display.
Farringtons School in Chislehurst made face masks mandatory for students in classrooms and corridors amid concern over rising
Covid-19 cases.
In a letter to parents explaining the decision, Headmaster David Jackson said exempt pupils ‘should wear a yellow badge’ and other students should wear a face covering ‘until further notice.’
The school has been criticised for being ‘deeply inappropriate’ and accused of ignoring the ‘historic connotations’ of yellow badges which condemned Jews were forced to display in Nazi-occupied Europe.
Read more:
£34,050-a-year Kent private school that makes children wear yellow badges if they are exempt from wearing masks is slammed for the ‘inappropriate’ similarity to yellow stars Nazis forced condemned Jews to display
‘Face masks instil fear and division – the British public may not comply this time’
I was reading my daughter’s 11+ book recently with her – Goodnight Mr Tom – and I was reminded that masks were implemented by governments often not for the reasons people are told they’re for, but instead for populations to take things seriously, or to feel that they are part of something even if they don’t want to be.
In the book, which is set during the Second World War, a lot of the older generation of villagers are war-weary. They don’t want another war.
They’ve seen what happened in the trenches 20 years before and they’re not interested.
The government then does something quite clever to bring everyone in and frightened: it is made illegal to not carry a gas mask.
These gas masks, as it happened, were not used, but for the whole duration, the whole six years, people would grass up their neighbours and you could be arrested and fined for not having it always on your person. This included children.
You could even be imprisoned for not carrying one.
The masks were frightening.
They scared people. They scared children. And they made the war real.
Read More: Face masks instil fear and division – the British public may not comply this time