Revealing that which is concealed. Learning about anything that resembles real freedom. A journey of self-discovery shared with the world.
Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them - Ephesians 5-11
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Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Wuhan Quarantine Violators Being Herded Into concentration camps massive burial pits nearby
Round em up, kill them, cremate the screaming remains. CCP has quite a solution to their population reduction agenda, as per Georgia Guide-stones ten commandments of Satan. Summary:
Diamond Princess confirms another 79 cases as quarantine ends. And the now these carriers will spread over Japan and the world, making damn sure this pandemic kills millions more
CDC questions Japan's handling of 'DP' quarantine. Really? Pot and kettle thing here.
UK tells passengers to stay aboard ship until it finishes planning an official evacuation
Video shows group who broke quarantine in Wuhan being taken to 'concentration camps with burial pits'
Russia "clarifies" ban on all Chinese: Cross our border and we will bury you. You are already dead, why do you want your misery, in our land?
Markets climb amid optimism that China is moving to support industries harmed by outbreak. Are you kidding me? What markets? There are no markets in Asia. Not any more. If you cannot buy or sell, or go to work, then your country has NO MARKET.
Puma, Adidas warn of virus-related hit in Q1
Taiwan, South Korea report new cases. Thousands of new cases, not reported in the west. Big surprise? Not at all.
* * * Update (1025ET): Epoch Times' Jennifer Zeng has
shared some of the most startling videos gleaned from Chinese social
media before the country's censors can take them down.
And this latest one is no exception. According to Zeng, the crowd of people depicted in the video are
being herded into the "No. 2 Hospital of Wuhan Iron & Steel Corp" to
be "re-educated" after they were caught walking the street without
permission or an excuse. Which means bullet in ear, tossed in pit for cremation.
These
draconian crackdowns are driving millions of Chinese bonkers as they're
confined largely to their homes. And all of it will be rendered
insignificant as Japan unleashes a boat load of infected patients on
Tokyo.
Meanwhile, the latest figures show that over 15,000 people
around the world have now recovered from the virus. The recovery rate
for Hubei is still below 15%, unfortunately, while the number
for the outside world is 40%. Eight out of nine patients in the UK have
recovered, while half of Thailand's 35 cases have recovered.
In Thailand, nearly half of the 35 cases in the country have
recovered. Earlier this week, the WHO said 4/5 of the cases in China
were relatively mild and are expected to recover. Elsewhere, Taiwan reported another confirmed case on Wednesday, its
24th confirmed infection: the victim was said to be a woman in her 60s
with no history of foreign travel. Just like in Japan, more cases are
emerging where the source of the virus is baffling to authorities. * * * Update (0900ET): Following Russian newswire reports
yesterday that the Kremlin would become the first country to completely
ban all Chinese from entering the country.
The ban will take effect Thursday at midnight Moscow Time.
The Kremlin imposed the ban because of the "worsening epidemiological
situation" in China, according to the office of the deputy prime
minister, according to the Guardian. The Foreign Minister added that the ban is temporary and only applies to visitors with tourist, private, student and work visas.
"We reiterate our willingness to continue close cooperation with China in order to efficiently eradicate this common threat."
Russia has had three confirmed cases of the Covid-19 disease. Beijing has made it known that it finds bans on Chinese travelers to
be "racist". Following the expulsion of 3 WSJ journalists over a
'racist' opinion column, we suspect the Russian embassy got an earful
from their partners in Beijing. * * * Update (0845ET): As the G-20 meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors begins in Riyadh, the IMF has published an essay warning that newfound "uncertainties" brought about by the coronavirus could lead to a "long-lasting and more severe outbreak".
In the lengthy piece, penned by IMF Managing Director Kristalina
Georgieva, warns that after central banks around the world including the
Fed cut rates 71 times last year, the biggest monetary boom since the
global financial crisis has left the global economy in good shape.
Still, China presents a serious problem. If the
virus is contained, the economic impact on the mainland will be
short-lived, and the knock-on effects for the rest of the world,
transmitted via disruptions to global supply chains, will be minimal. But if Beijing can't get a handle on this thing, well...
The coronavirus is our most pressing uncertainty: a global health emergency we did not anticipate in January. It
is a stark reminder of how a fragile recovery could be threatened by
unforeseen events. There are a number of scenarios, depending on how
quickly the spread of the virus is contained. If the disruptions from
the virus end quickly, we expect the Chinese economy to bounce back
soon. The result would be a sharp drop in GDP growth in China in the
first quarter of 2020, but only a small reduction for the entire year.
Spillovers to other countries would remain relatively minor and
short-lived, mostly through temporary supply chain disruptions, tourism,
and travel restrictions. However, a long-lasting and more severe outbreak would result in a sharper and more protracted growth slowdown in China.
Its global impact would be amplified through more substantial supply
chain disruptions and a more persistent drop in investor confidence,
especially if the epidemic spreads beyond China.
The rest of the essay goes on to discuss a host of other global risk factors. The implications are clear: Central banks response to the outbreak
will inevitably be to ease more (a process that the PBOC has already
started, and which the Bank of Korea is expected to join). Which means
Davos 2021 will be all about central banks' inability to rescue the
global economy. * * * Tehran is not having a good year. First, President Trump rang in the new decade by barbecuing the
leader of the IRGC Quds Force. In response, Iran killed zero Americans
but accidentally shot down a Ukrainian passenger plane, killing nearly
200 people, including dozens of Iranian students, then they tried to lie
about it, before finally coming clean. All that was probably enough to destabilize the regime on its own.
Though it has quieted down somewhat, the public outrage is still
simmering as Iran's rolling economic crisis continues. Now, on top of all that, Tehran has confirmed to the AP that authorities have confirmed two cases of the coronavirus in Iran.
That means the virus has now infiltrated two of the world's most
isolated states - Iran and North Korea. Many outsiders believe North
Korea has confirmed at least one case of the virus, but that it has
withheld this information from the international community to avoid
inciting a panic. How in the hell did the virus get in Iran, unless it was DELIVERED THERE ON PURPOSE?
Even she is a plant, for the cameras. Because...the trains stopped running WEEKS AGO, WHAT IN THE HELL IS SHE DOING THERE? OPTICS...DAMN OPTICS, EVERY TIME.
Like North Korea, Iran's battered economy, crippled by years of
American sanctions, is hardly equipped to deal with the outbreak.
According to Iranian media, the cases were confirmed in the central
province of Qom. More patients are being tested as an unknown number of
suspected cases have been isolated, according to the AP. Last night in New York, we reported
that Japanese health authorities were preparing to release the first
batch of 500 passengers and crew who had reportedly tested negative for
the virus (though that doesn't completely rule out the possibility that a few of them might still develop symptoms caused by COVID-19). On Wednesday morning in the US (so Wednesday night in Japan), health
officials revealed that 79 more people onboard had tested positive for
the virus, taking the total number of infected aboard the ship to 621,
the AP reports. As we've noted several times, the notion that thousands of
people are about to be released while hundreds of cases of the virus are
still being confirmed seems like insanity. While most of the
patients will face two more weeks of quarantine when they return home,
how are they planning on getting there? There's been no word of an
official government transport. By allowing them to travel home, Japan is
breaking the quarantine. Britain has told passengers on board the ship not to disembark when
Japan gives them the all clear, instead advising them to stay put and
wait for the UK to organize an evacuation flight later this week to
minimize their odds of infecting others. Seems like a particularly stupid thing to do when the Tokyo Olympics are coming up this summer. After the virus death toll on the mainland hit 2,000 last night,
Johns Hopkins reports that the number of confirmed cases and deaths
haven't moved since then: By their count, total confirmed stood at
75,201 while deaths stood at 2,012. Johns Hopkins Last night, the CDC warned that Japan's quarantine of the 'Diamond
Princess' "may not have been sufficient" to prevent transmission among
individuals on the ship. In other slightly more positive cruise-ship related news, the Guardian
reports that A total of 781 guests who disembarked from the Westerdam
cruise ship in Cambodia have tested negative for Covid-19, according to Holland America, the ship's operator. The final passengers left the ship on Wednesdya. As Beijing tries to reassure its population, half of which is under
lockdown, that everything is going to be okay, Reuters reports that
China’s central bank and its finance ministry won't send any officials
to a G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting in Riyadh
due to the Coronavirus outbreak. Meanwhile, in Wuhan, the twin nightmares of the 'war time' lockdown
coupled with the ravages of the virus continue to work their wonders.
"Yesterday morning he was still
able to speak...It’s all because of their delay!...How can I get through
this without my dad?" A young girl cries on the street of #Wuhan over the death of her father. pic.twitter.com/O9xHB2q2GC
The yuan strengthened early Wednesday following reports that China is
weighing measures including direct cash infusions and mergers to bail
out the airline industry and others. Earlier, the state directed Chinese
banks to offer emergency loans to troubled companies. The South Korean
government and central bank announced a similar plan earlier this week.
Some of the measures including easing infection controls in certain
manufacturing hubs to get production back on line. Optimism about China's efforts to help companies hurt by the virus
put US stocks on track for a solid gain at the open on Wednesday,
potentially enough to send all three benchmark indexes to fresh record
highs. Speaking of South Korea, the country reported 20 new cases overnight, bringing its total to 51. As we reported earlier, Beijing expelled 3 WSJ reporters on Wednesday over an opinion column published by the paper that Beijing decried as 'racist'. Remember, next time you hear somebody talking about the outbreak 'slowing down', take a look at this: In corporate news, Puma and Adidas, which generate 1/3rd of revenues
in the APac region, became the latest clothing brands to warn of
disruption in their business in China as they have closed stores there.
Puma sees a hit in Q1, while Adidas notes an 85% decline in business activity in the world's second-biggest economy.