It's more of an affordability crisis when it comes to food instead of actual scarcity. Inflation becomes a real thing and with the trillions being tossed in to the economy with government stimulus packages, it makes currency in third world places lose value against the dollar to the point where it turns people away from investment and the cost of basic necessities skyrockets to people who aren't receiving any assistance.
As for the thing about AIDs, that Plandemic video criticizing Fauci made me look a bit closer at the allegations that people with HIV were furious with him and it seems that they were rightfully angry at him for not including them in treatment trials. It seems like the news articles pop up on these engines like Bing and Google have recent stuff trying to portray him in a positive light but I'd like to hear from some of the original protestors. He was ignoring their pleas for help which is why they resorted to storming his campus.
A group of infected people called ACTUP it looks like the media tries to portray as radical but it seems out of the ordinary to me for people to storm a campus it looks like they must have been ignored for a long time to take such drastic measures. It doesn't add up. It deserves more scrutiny and reading articles before 2019 seem a lot less biased in favor of Fauci. I'd like to hear the opinions of the few surviving members of ACTUP. Calling some people with a deadly disease radicals when they were watching all their friends drop dead and were already marginalized is as outrageous as Bill Gates comment recent "I never had anything to do with any microchip thing" when he's the founder of MICROCHIPSOFT...wtf just think for 5 seconds and it falls apart
edit: as for the survival rate of covid, it may be high in the U.S. but keep in mind that although our healthcare system is feudal in the way the finance is operated, we are far ahead in terms of technology and staff/treatment compared to the majority of countries and people are well fed. People have healthier immune systems and access to endless water while hundreds of million probably aren't starving but are malnourished in some way, have poor hospitals, and for example don't have endless amounts of water they can drink for free to stay hydrated. The death rate in other countries is a lot more serious but who cares to cover it? There's also no way of knowing in many cases if someone who died in their home died of covid or natural causes or flu. Who is testing dead people?
As for the thing about AIDs, that Plandemic video criticizing Fauci made me look a bit closer at the allegations that people with HIV were furious with him and it seems that they were rightfully angry at him for not including them in treatment trials. It seems like the news articles pop up on these engines like Bing and Google have recent stuff trying to portray him in a positive light but I'd like to hear from some of the original protestors. He was ignoring their pleas for help which is why they resorted to storming his campus.
A group of infected people called ACTUP it looks like the media tries to portray as radical but it seems out of the ordinary to me for people to storm a campus it looks like they must have been ignored for a long time to take such drastic measures. It doesn't add up. It deserves more scrutiny and reading articles before 2019 seem a lot less biased in favor of Fauci. I'd like to hear the opinions of the few surviving members of ACTUP. Calling some people with a deadly disease radicals when they were watching all their friends drop dead and were already marginalized is as outrageous as Bill Gates comment recent "I never had anything to do with any microchip thing" when he's the founder of MICROCHIPSOFT...wtf just think for 5 seconds and it falls apart
edit: as for the survival rate of covid, it may be high in the U.S. but keep in mind that although our healthcare system is feudal in the way the finance is operated, we are far ahead in terms of technology and staff/treatment compared to the majority of countries and people are well fed. People have healthier immune systems and access to endless water while hundreds of million probably aren't starving but are malnourished in some way, have poor hospitals, and for example don't have endless amounts of water they can drink for free to stay hydrated. The death rate in other countries is a lot more serious but who cares to cover it? There's also no way of knowing in many cases if someone who died in their home died of covid or natural causes or flu. Who is testing dead people?