Speaker Johnson releases J6 video; defending the House; bio-lab report damns the CDC; SADS cancer professor, airline pilot, cardiac scientist; mayday squawks; self-checkout; sanctions; and lots more.
www.coffeeandcovid.com
💉 ANOTHER ONE. The Times of India ran a story this week that even used the word “another” in the headline: “
Another young death: Now, Air India pilot suffers cardiac arrest at Delhi Airport.”
Captain Himanil Kumar, 37, died of a sudden and unexpected heart attack while at the Delhi Airport on Thursday. He was well-rested — he’d just gotten back to work from his Diwali vacation — and had passed his most recent physical exam a few months ago on August 23rd.
The heavily-vaccinated pilot community sure is experiencing a lot of sudden cardiac deaths this year. But … so what? Happens all the time.
More seriously, when the headline editor added the words “another young death” to the headline, it was an act of quiet, editorial rebellion. Maybe some journalists are finally reaching the point where they have had enough of the lying.
💉 I debated whether to include this next story, because it isn’t verified. It’s based on independent work by amateur sleuths and (obviously) corporate media isn’t picking it up. But I decided it was interesting enough to include anyway, since it tracks our recent idea of looking for unexpected metrics with which to track the ongoing iatrogenocide.
An industrious independent investigator designed a software agent (a “bot”) to tweet whenever airplane pilots issue “mayday” calls. A mayday call is also referred to as “squawking a 7700,” which signals a general emergency on board. According to his unverified figures, starting around November 2021 (there’s a typo in the chart legend), the numbers of mayday calls from flying airplanes have increased by nearly
four hundred percent.
In other words, from an average of 40 per month to nearly 160.
Remember — one single failed shoe bomber caused every airplane passenger for the last fifteen years to have to x-ray their shoes in order to board an airplane. Just ONE. That’s how nuts we are about airplane safety.
If the world weren’t undergoing a mass hallucination right now, you’d think public pressure
at least would cause someone to look into this alleged phenomenon. I can’t verify the author’s conclusions, and there are some minor problems with the chart, but you can look through the real-time alerts for yourself in the twitter account
@GCFlightAlerts. It’s kind of eye-opening how many general emergencies are being reported.
What do you think?