• =?UTF-8?Q?After_three_years_of_zero-Covid=2c_nothing_feels_real_in_?= =

    From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 8 10:41:27 2023
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.china, soc.culture.israel

    https://archive.is/W1yZs


    After three years of zero-Covid, nothing feels real in newly ‘free’ Shanghai
    new
    Officials locked down people in lavatories and swabbed fish. Now
    restrictions are no more but millions remain traumatised
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    CHINATOPIX
    Cameron Wilson, Shanghai
    Saturday January 07 2023, 6.00pm GMT, The Sunday Times
    I’ve lived in Shanghai for 17 years, enjoying a ringside view of China’s rise — and countless wonderful adventures. But the last 12 months have
    left me feeling like an unwitting participant in some kind of
    hidden-camera television show. For a long time, every aspect of life in
    China was shaped by zero-Covid restrictions.
    Then, just before Christmas, the policy was suddenly and unexpectedly abandoned. For large numbers of people, the consequences have been
    tragic. But for many others, the whole experience has resembled a
    practical joke so elaborate that the late Jeremy Beadle would surely
    have considered it to be his finest work.
    Just a month ago, if you were deemed even to have been a close contact
    of someone who tested positive, you could be dragged off by dabai
    (health workers in white protective suits) to a grotty isolation centre
    and forced to stay there until you tested negative. Today? The official
    message is: it’s fine to turn up at work with the very same virus that
    we were told until late last year was a mortal threat.
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    CAMERON WILSON
    Sure enough, friends, family, colleagues and neighbours have fallen like dominoes. Everyone has. Each day brought a new empty seat in the office,
    a new social media post of a positive Covid test. After three years of
    barely anyone catching the disease, the sudden onslaught has created an overwhelming sense of confusion. Many were expecting mild, if any,
    symptoms, because the government published figures every day emphasising
    that the vast majority of cases were asymptomatic. But in fact almost
    everyone I know was knocked out for days at home with a heavy flu-like
    illness, having forgotten that the official definition of asymptomatic
    just meant not requiring hospital treatment.
    It’s hard to overstate just how intrusive zero-Covid was in Shanghai, particularly in 2022. You had to do a PCR test every other day and show
    a negative result to enter restaurants, shops and your workplace, or use
    public transport. You name it, you had to scan a code with an app on
    your phone to do it. Forgetting to do a test on time meant abandoning
    any plans you had to leave your house that day. Your health code app
    dominated every hour of your existence. And now, suddenly, it doesn’t.
    Right now the city is starting to recover and you can freely enter all
    the bars, restaurants and shops which didn’t go bankrupt — as a great
    many did.
    But a feeling of mass discombobulation remains. Most people were fine
    with the first couple of years of zero-Covid — millions of lives were
    saved. Unfortunately, the virus mutated into something significantly
    less deadly but a lot more transmissible. And rather than face up to the inevitable and make an exit plan, China escalated the policy and the
    madness started.
    The Shanghai lockdown saw 26 million people unable to leave their homes
    for more than two months, subjected to mandatory testing every day, and forcibly taken to isolation centres if testing positive. Some residents
    were even physically sealed inside buildings. The courier delivery
    system collapsed, leaving people to rely on government food handouts to survive. Every day, social media brought weird, sometimes disturbing spectacles. Videos of people jumping from buildings. Left-behind pets
    killed by healthcare workers. Hysterical kids being separated from
    parents taken to isolation. Suffering people walking naked in the
    street. Thousands of neighbours wailing crazily in unison. Meanwhile,
    official propaganda rubbed it in everyone’s faces by blaming “foreign forces” for a protest that saw millions of hungry residents bang pots
    and pans at their kitchen windows each night. Today, everyone is asking
    if all of this really happened — because in the end it was all for
    absolutely nothing.
    Seeing this happen in China’s biggest and most modern city seemed
    unreal. It was a trauma, which being honest, I have not fully recovered
    from, and I don’t think most others have either.
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    YANG JIANZHENG/VCG/GETTY IMAGES
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the author’s family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the author’s family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    CAMERON WILSON
    The months following the end of the lockdown brought even more bizarre phenomena, as the authorities cracked down on the increasingly
    transmissible Omicron variant. No act, no matter how contradictory,
    absurd or ridiculous, was considered overzealous in the “fight against
    the virus”. Live fish had their gills swabbed by people in white suits.
    Bars, nightclubs and sports stadiums remained closed, yet the metro
    carried millions of passengers every day. Public health officials
    visited a restaurant which only sold pizza and insisted on putting up
    campaign posters saying “use separate serving chopsticks to prevent
    spreading viruses”. Regular Covid outbreaks and brutally uncompromising enforcement meant people suddenly found themselves locked down in
    unusual locations such as public lavatories, offices or strangers’
    homes. Schools were constantly closing and opening. At one point a video
    of an unfortunate goose being anally probed by a government inspector at
    a wet market made the rounds.
    Eventually, the pressure began to take its toll in higher circles. The Communist Party’s 20th national congress — widely hoped to bring the end
    of zero-Covid, didn’t deliver in that regard but brought the spectacle
    of a confused-looking former president, Hu Jintao, being led out of the
    arena. As usual, nobody really knew what was going on, but something had changed. In November, the sight of maskless fans partying at the World
    Cup in Qatar did not go unnoticed by the Chinese population — nor the authorities, who censored crowd scenes on state TV broadcasts. Before we
    knew it, zero-Covid had delivered the ultimate in unthinkable
    developments, when protesters in Shanghai called for the end of the
    policy and for Xi Jinping to step down. Weeks later, zero-Covid ended at
    the worst time possible — the start of winter — leaving no time for any preparation such as stockpiling medicines or finishing vaccination
    programmes.
    Nobody knows how many people have succumbed to the virus since then,
    because the country has stopped publishing daily case data. However,
    there have been reports of crematoriums and hospitals becoming
    overwhelmed, and on Wednesday the World Health Organisation said that
    China was under-representing the true impact and in particular
    underplaying the number of deaths.
    In my household, however, the most utterly peculiar three years of our
    lives ended in typically perplexing style last week. My father-in-law —
    in his late sixties and of the very demographic that zero-Covid was
    meant to protect, reacted to testing positive by sauntering out to buy
    several £5 bottles of huangjiu (yellow wine). He polished them off that evening and was first in our family to recover just a day later. I half expected him to take off his mask to reveal that Beadle was still alive. Cameron Wilson is a freelance journalist based in Shanghai

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG antivirus software.
    www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From HeartDoc Andrew@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Sun Jan 8 15:50:32 2023
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.china, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: alt.christnet.christianlife

    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    https://archive.is/W1yZs


    After three years of zero-Covid, nothing feels real in newly free Shanghai >new
    Officials locked down people in lavatories and swabbed fish. Now
    restrictions are no more but millions remain traumatised
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    CHINATOPIX
    Cameron Wilson, Shanghai
    Saturday January 07 2023, 6.00pm GMT, The Sunday Times
    Ive lived in Shanghai for 17 years, enjoying a ringside view of Chinas
    rise and countless wonderful adventures. But the last 12 months have
    left me feeling like an unwitting participant in some kind of
    hidden-camera television show. For a long time, every aspect of life in
    China was shaped by zero-Covid restrictions.
    Then, just before Christmas, the policy was suddenly and unexpectedly >abandoned. For large numbers of people, the consequences have been
    tragic. But for many others, the whole experience has resembled a
    practical joke so elaborate that the late Jeremy Beadle would surely
    have considered it to be his finest work.
    Just a month ago, if you were deemed even to have been a close contact
    of someone who tested positive, you could be dragged off by dabai
    (health workers in white protective suits) to a grotty isolation centre
    and forced to stay there until you tested negative. Today? The official >message is: its fine to turn up at work with the very same virus that
    we were told until late last year was a mortal threat.
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    CAMERON WILSON
    Sure enough, friends, family, colleagues and neighbours have fallen like >dominoes. Everyone has. Each day brought a new empty seat in the office,
    a new social media post of a positive Covid test. After three years of
    barely anyone catching the disease, the sudden onslaught has created an >overwhelming sense of confusion. Many were expecting mild, if any,
    symptoms, because the government published figures every day emphasising
    that the vast majority of cases were asymptomatic. But in fact almost >everyone I know was knocked out for days at home with a heavy flu-like >illness, having forgotten that the official definition of asymptomatic
    just meant not requiring hospital treatment.
    Its hard to overstate just how intrusive zero-Covid was in Shanghai, >particularly in 2022. You had to do a PCR test every other day and show
    a negative result to enter restaurants, shops and your workplace, or use >public transport. You name it, you had to scan a code with an app on
    your phone to do it. Forgetting to do a test on time meant abandoning
    any plans you had to leave your house that day. Your health code app >dominated every hour of your existence. And now, suddenly, it doesnt.
    Right now the city is starting to recover and you can freely enter all
    the bars, restaurants and shops which didnt go bankrupt as a great
    many did.
    But a feeling of mass discombobulation remains. Most people were fine
    with the first couple of years of zero-Covid millions of lives were
    saved. Unfortunately, the virus mutated into something significantly
    less deadly but a lot more transmissible. And rather than face up to the >inevitable and make an exit plan, China escalated the policy and the
    madness started.
    The Shanghai lockdown saw 26 million people unable to leave their homes
    for more than two months, subjected to mandatory testing every day, and >forcibly taken to isolation centres if testing positive. Some residents
    were even physically sealed inside buildings. The courier delivery
    system collapsed, leaving people to rely on government food handouts to >survive. Every day, social media brought weird, sometimes disturbing >spectacles. Videos of people jumping from buildings. Left-behind pets
    killed by healthcare workers. Hysterical kids being separated from
    parents taken to isolation. Suffering people walking naked in the
    street. Thousands of neighbours wailing crazily in unison. Meanwhile, >official propaganda rubbed it in everyones faces by blaming foreign
    forces for a protest that saw millions of hungry residents bang pots
    and pans at their kitchen windows each night. Today, everyone is asking
    if all of this really happened because in the end it was all for
    absolutely nothing.
    Seeing this happen in Chinas biggest and most modern city seemed
    unreal. It was a trauma, which being honest, I have not fully recovered
    from, and I dont think most others have either.
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    YANG JIANZHENG/VCG/GETTY IMAGES
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the authors family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the authors family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67 >CAMERON WILSON
    The months following the end of the lockdown brought even more bizarre >phenomena, as the authorities cracked down on the increasingly
    transmissible Omicron variant. No act, no matter how contradictory,
    absurd or ridiculous, was considered overzealous in the fight against
    the virus. Live fish had their gills swabbed by people in white suits.
    Bars, nightclubs and sports stadiums remained closed, yet the metro
    carried millions of passengers every day. Public health officials
    visited a restaurant which only sold pizza and insisted on putting up >campaign posters saying use separate serving chopsticks to prevent
    spreading viruses. Regular Covid outbreaks and brutally uncompromising >enforcement meant people suddenly found themselves locked down in
    unusual locations such as public lavatories, offices or strangers
    homes. Schools were constantly closing and opening. At one point a video
    of an unfortunate goose being anally probed by a government inspector at
    a wet market made the rounds.
    Eventually, the pressure began to take its toll in higher circles. The >Communist Partys 20th national congress widely hoped to bring the end
    of zero-Covid, didnt deliver in that regard but brought the spectacle
    of a confused-looking former president, Hu Jintao, being led out of the >arena. As usual, nobody really knew what was going on, but something had >changed. In November, the sight of maskless fans partying at the World
    Cup in Qatar did not go unnoticed by the Chinese population nor the >authorities, who censored crowd scenes on state TV broadcasts. Before we
    knew it, zero-Covid had delivered the ultimate in unthinkable
    developments, when protesters in Shanghai called for the end of the
    policy and for Xi Jinping to step down. Weeks later, zero-Covid ended at
    the worst time possible the start of winter leaving no time for any >preparation such as stockpiling medicines or finishing vaccination >programmes.
    Nobody knows how many people have succumbed to the virus since then,
    because the country has stopped publishing daily case data. However,
    there have been reports of crematoriums and hospitals becoming
    overwhelmed, and on Wednesday the World Health Organisation said that
    China was under-representing the true impact and in particular
    underplaying the number of deaths.
    In my household, however, the most utterly peculiar three years of our
    lives ended in typically perplexing style last week. My father-in-law
    in his late sixties and of the very demographic that zero-Covid was
    meant to protect, reacted to testing positive by sauntering out to buy >several 5 bottles of huangjiu (yellow wine). He polished them off that >evening and was first in our family to recover just a day later. I half >expected him to take off his mask to reveal that Beadle was still alive. >Cameron Wilson is a freelance journalist based in Shanghai

    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    China & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19
    ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage
    mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?









    ...because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,

    HeartDoc Andrew <><
    --
    Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
    Cardiologist with an http://bit.ly/EternalMedicalLicense
    2024 & upwards non-partisan candidate for U.S. President: http://WonderfullyHungry.org
    and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrewCare
    which is the only **healthy** cure for the U.S. healthcare crisis

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to HeartDoc Andrew on Mon Jan 9 05:00:34 2023
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.china, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: alt.christnet.christianlife

    HeartDoc Andrew wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    https://archive.is/W1yZs


    After three years of zero-Covid, nothing feels real in newly ‘free’ Shanghai
    new
    Officials locked down people in lavatories and swabbed fish. Now
    restrictions are no more but millions remain traumatised
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    CHINATOPIX
    Cameron Wilson, Shanghai
    Saturday January 07 2023, 6.00pm GMT, The Sunday Times
    I’ve lived in Shanghai for 17 years, enjoying a ringside view of China’s >> rise — and countless wonderful adventures. But the last 12 months have
    left me feeling like an unwitting participant in some kind of
    hidden-camera television show. For a long time, every aspect of life in
    China was shaped by zero-Covid restrictions.
    Then, just before Christmas, the policy was suddenly and unexpectedly
    abandoned. For large numbers of people, the consequences have been
    tragic. But for many others, the whole experience has resembled a
    practical joke so elaborate that the late Jeremy Beadle would surely
    have considered it to be his finest work.
    Just a month ago, if you were deemed even to have been a close contact
    of someone who tested positive, you could be dragged off by dabai
    (health workers in white protective suits) to a grotty isolation centre
    and forced to stay there until you tested negative. Today? The official
    message is: it’s fine to turn up at work with the very same virus that
    we were told until late last year was a mortal threat.
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    CAMERON WILSON
    Sure enough, friends, family, colleagues and neighbours have fallen like
    dominoes. Everyone has. Each day brought a new empty seat in the office,
    a new social media post of a positive Covid test. After three years of
    barely anyone catching the disease, the sudden onslaught has created an
    overwhelming sense of confusion. Many were expecting mild, if any,
    symptoms, because the government published figures every day emphasising
    that the vast majority of cases were asymptomatic. But in fact almost
    everyone I know was knocked out for days at home with a heavy flu-like
    illness, having forgotten that the official definition of asymptomatic
    just meant not requiring hospital treatment.
    It’s hard to overstate just how intrusive zero-Covid was in Shanghai,
    particularly in 2022. You had to do a PCR test every other day and show
    a negative result to enter restaurants, shops and your workplace, or use
    public transport. You name it, you had to scan a code with an app on
    your phone to do it. Forgetting to do a test on time meant abandoning
    any plans you had to leave your house that day. Your health code app
    dominated every hour of your existence. And now, suddenly, it doesn’t.
    Right now the city is starting to recover and you can freely enter all
    the bars, restaurants and shops which didn’t go bankrupt — as a great
    many did.
    But a feeling of mass discombobulation remains. Most people were fine
    with the first couple of years of zero-Covid — millions of lives were
    saved. Unfortunately, the virus mutated into something significantly
    less deadly but a lot more transmissible. And rather than face up to the
    inevitable and make an exit plan, China escalated the policy and the
    madness started.
    The Shanghai lockdown saw 26 million people unable to leave their homes
    for more than two months, subjected to mandatory testing every day, and
    forcibly taken to isolation centres if testing positive. Some residents
    were even physically sealed inside buildings. The courier delivery
    system collapsed, leaving people to rely on government food handouts to
    survive. Every day, social media brought weird, sometimes disturbing
    spectacles. Videos of people jumping from buildings. Left-behind pets
    killed by healthcare workers. Hysterical kids being separated from
    parents taken to isolation. Suffering people walking naked in the
    street. Thousands of neighbours wailing crazily in unison. Meanwhile,
    official propaganda rubbed it in everyone’s faces by blaming “foreign
    forces” for a protest that saw millions of hungry residents bang pots
    and pans at their kitchen windows each night. Today, everyone is asking
    if all of this really happened — because in the end it was all for
    absolutely nothing.
    Seeing this happen in China’s biggest and most modern city seemed
    unreal. It was a trauma, which being honest, I have not fully recovered
    from, and I don’t think most others have either.
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    YANG JIANZHENG/VCG/GETTY IMAGES
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the author’s family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the author’s family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    CAMERON WILSON
    The months following the end of the lockdown brought even more bizarre
    phenomena, as the authorities cracked down on the increasingly
    transmissible Omicron variant. No act, no matter how contradictory,
    absurd or ridiculous, was considered overzealous in the “fight against
    the virus”. Live fish had their gills swabbed by people in white suits.
    Bars, nightclubs and sports stadiums remained closed, yet the metro
    carried millions of passengers every day. Public health officials
    visited a restaurant which only sold pizza and insisted on putting up
    campaign posters saying “use separate serving chopsticks to prevent
    spreading viruses”. Regular Covid outbreaks and brutally uncompromising
    enforcement meant people suddenly found themselves locked down in
    unusual locations such as public lavatories, offices or strangers’
    homes. Schools were constantly closing and opening. At one point a video
    of an unfortunate goose being anally probed by a government inspector at
    a wet market made the rounds.
    Eventually, the pressure began to take its toll in higher circles. The
    Communist Party’s 20th national congress — widely hoped to bring the end >> of zero-Covid, didn’t deliver in that regard but brought the spectacle
    of a confused-looking former president, Hu Jintao, being led out of the
    arena. As usual, nobody really knew what was going on, but something had
    changed. In November, the sight of maskless fans partying at the World
    Cup in Qatar did not go unnoticed by the Chinese population — nor the
    authorities, who censored crowd scenes on state TV broadcasts. Before we
    knew it, zero-Covid had delivered the ultimate in unthinkable
    developments, when protesters in Shanghai called for the end of the
    policy and for Xi Jinping to step down. Weeks later, zero-Covid ended at
    the worst time possible — the start of winter — leaving no time for any >> preparation such as stockpiling medicines or finishing vaccination
    programmes.
    Nobody knows how many people have succumbed to the virus since then,
    because the country has stopped publishing daily case data. However,
    there have been reports of crematoriums and hospitals becoming
    overwhelmed, and on Wednesday the World Health Organisation said that
    China was under-representing the true impact and in particular
    underplaying the number of deaths.
    In my household, however, the most utterly peculiar three years of our
    lives ended in typically perplexing style last week. My father-in-law —
    in his late sixties and of the very demographic that zero-Covid was
    meant to protect, reacted to testing positive by sauntering out to buy
    several £5 bottles of huangjiu (yellow wine). He polished them off that
    evening and was first in our family to recover just a day later. I half
    expected him to take off his mask to reveal that Beadle was still alive.
    Cameron Wilson is a freelance journalist based in Shanghai

    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    China & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19
    ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?

    I am wonderfully hungry!


    Michael

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG antivirus software.
    www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From HeartDoc Andrew@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Mon Jan 9 12:24:18 2023
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.china, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: alt.christnet.christianlife

    Michael Ejercito wrote:
    HeartDoc Andrew, in the Holy Spirit, boldly wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    https://archive.is/W1yZs


    After three years of zero-Covid, nothing feels real in newly free Shanghai
    new
    Officials locked down people in lavatories and swabbed fish. Now
    restrictions are no more but millions remain traumatised
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    Covid patients line the hall of a hospital in Shanghai on Tuesday
    CHINATOPIX
    Cameron Wilson, Shanghai
    Saturday January 07 2023, 6.00pm GMT, The Sunday Times
    Ive lived in Shanghai for 17 years, enjoying a ringside view of Chinas >>> rise and countless wonderful adventures. But the last 12 months have
    left me feeling like an unwitting participant in some kind of
    hidden-camera television show. For a long time, every aspect of life in
    China was shaped by zero-Covid restrictions.
    Then, just before Christmas, the policy was suddenly and unexpectedly
    abandoned. For large numbers of people, the consequences have been
    tragic. But for many others, the whole experience has resembled a
    practical joke so elaborate that the late Jeremy Beadle would surely
    have considered it to be his finest work.
    Just a month ago, if you were deemed even to have been a close contact
    of someone who tested positive, you could be dragged off by dabai
    (health workers in white protective suits) to a grotty isolation centre
    and forced to stay there until you tested negative. Today? The official
    message is: its fine to turn up at work with the very same virus that
    we were told until late last year was a mortal threat.
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    The author took a photograph in this pose every day to relieve the
    tedium of daily testing
    CAMERON WILSON
    Sure enough, friends, family, colleagues and neighbours have fallen like >>> dominoes. Everyone has. Each day brought a new empty seat in the office, >>> a new social media post of a positive Covid test. After three years of
    barely anyone catching the disease, the sudden onslaught has created an
    overwhelming sense of confusion. Many were expecting mild, if any,
    symptoms, because the government published figures every day emphasising >>> that the vast majority of cases were asymptomatic. But in fact almost
    everyone I know was knocked out for days at home with a heavy flu-like
    illness, having forgotten that the official definition of asymptomatic
    just meant not requiring hospital treatment.
    Its hard to overstate just how intrusive zero-Covid was in Shanghai,
    particularly in 2022. You had to do a PCR test every other day and show
    a negative result to enter restaurants, shops and your workplace, or use >>> public transport. You name it, you had to scan a code with an app on
    your phone to do it. Forgetting to do a test on time meant abandoning
    any plans you had to leave your house that day. Your health code app
    dominated every hour of your existence. And now, suddenly, it doesnt.
    Right now the city is starting to recover and you can freely enter all
    the bars, restaurants and shops which didnt go bankrupt as a great
    many did.
    But a feeling of mass discombobulation remains. Most people were fine
    with the first couple of years of zero-Covid millions of lives were
    saved. Unfortunately, the virus mutated into something significantly
    less deadly but a lot more transmissible. And rather than face up to the >>> inevitable and make an exit plan, China escalated the policy and the
    madness started.
    The Shanghai lockdown saw 26 million people unable to leave their homes
    for more than two months, subjected to mandatory testing every day, and
    forcibly taken to isolation centres if testing positive. Some residents
    were even physically sealed inside buildings. The courier delivery
    system collapsed, leaving people to rely on government food handouts to
    survive. Every day, social media brought weird, sometimes disturbing
    spectacles. Videos of people jumping from buildings. Left-behind pets
    killed by healthcare workers. Hysterical kids being separated from
    parents taken to isolation. Suffering people walking naked in the
    street. Thousands of neighbours wailing crazily in unison. Meanwhile,
    official propaganda rubbed it in everyones faces by blaming foreign
    forces for a protest that saw millions of hungry residents bang pots
    and pans at their kitchen windows each night. Today, everyone is asking
    if all of this really happened because in the end it was all for
    absolutely nothing.
    Seeing this happen in Chinas biggest and most modern city seemed
    unreal. It was a trauma, which being honest, I have not fully recovered
    from, and I dont think most others have either.
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    The waterfront at the Bund in Shanghai is disinfected last March
    YANG JIANZHENG/VCG/GETTY IMAGES
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the authors family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    Taken in August 2020, the first time the authors family had left
    Shanghai for ten months. From left: Min Deyuan, now 66, Veronica Min,
    39, Cameron Wilson,47, Mhairi Min Wilson, seven, and Zhang Jinqing, 67
    CAMERON WILSON
    The months following the end of the lockdown brought even more bizarre
    phenomena, as the authorities cracked down on the increasingly
    transmissible Omicron variant. No act, no matter how contradictory,
    absurd or ridiculous, was considered overzealous in the fight against
    the virus. Live fish had their gills swabbed by people in white suits.
    Bars, nightclubs and sports stadiums remained closed, yet the metro
    carried millions of passengers every day. Public health officials
    visited a restaurant which only sold pizza and insisted on putting up
    campaign posters saying use separate serving chopsticks to prevent
    spreading viruses. Regular Covid outbreaks and brutally uncompromising
    enforcement meant people suddenly found themselves locked down in
    unusual locations such as public lavatories, offices or strangers
    homes. Schools were constantly closing and opening. At one point a video >>> of an unfortunate goose being anally probed by a government inspector at >>> a wet market made the rounds.
    Eventually, the pressure began to take its toll in higher circles. The
    Communist Partys 20th national congress widely hoped to bring the end >>> of zero-Covid, didnt deliver in that regard but brought the spectacle
    of a confused-looking former president, Hu Jintao, being led out of the
    arena. As usual, nobody really knew what was going on, but something had >>> changed. In November, the sight of maskless fans partying at the World
    Cup in Qatar did not go unnoticed by the Chinese population nor the
    authorities, who censored crowd scenes on state TV broadcasts. Before we >>> knew it, zero-Covid had delivered the ultimate in unthinkable
    developments, when protesters in Shanghai called for the end of the
    policy and for Xi Jinping to step down. Weeks later, zero-Covid ended at >>> the worst time possible the start of winter leaving no time for any
    preparation such as stockpiling medicines or finishing vaccination
    programmes.
    Nobody knows how many people have succumbed to the virus since then,
    because the country has stopped publishing daily case data. However,
    there have been reports of crematoriums and hospitals becoming
    overwhelmed, and on Wednesday the World Health Organisation said that
    China was under-representing the true impact and in particular
    underplaying the number of deaths.
    In my household, however, the most utterly peculiar three years of our
    lives ended in typically perplexing style last week. My father-in-law
    in his late sixties and of the very demographic that zero-Covid was
    meant to protect, reacted to testing positive by sauntering out to buy
    several 5 bottles of huangjiu (yellow wine). He polished them off that
    evening and was first in our family to recover just a day later. I half
    expected him to take off his mask to reveal that Beadle was still alive. >>> Cameron Wilson is a freelance journalist based in Shanghai

    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    China & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19
    ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage
    mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID
    vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?

    I am wonderfully hungry!


    While wonderfully hungry in the Holy Spirit, Who causes (Deuteronomy
    8:3) us to hunger, I note that you, Michael, are rapture ready (Luke
    17:37 means no COVID just as eagles circling over their food have no
    COVID) and pray (2 Chronicles 7:14) that our Everlasting (Isaiah 9:6)
    Father in Heaven continues to give us "much more" (Luke 11:13) Holy
    Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) so that we'd have much more of His Help to
    always say/write that we're "wonderfully hungry" in **all** ways
    including especially caring to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward
    (John 15:12 as shown by http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest ) with all
    glory ( http://bit.ly/Psalm112_1 ) to GOD (aka HaShem, Elohim, Abba,
    DEO), in the name (John 16:23) of LORD Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Amen.

    Laus DEO !

    Suggested further reading: https://groups.google.com/g/sci.med.cardiology/c/5EWtT4CwCOg/m/QjNF57xRBAAJ

    Shorter link:
    http://bit.ly/StatCOVID-19Test

    Be hungrier, which really is wonderfully healthier especially for
    diabetics and other heart disease patients:

    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrew touts hunger (Luke 6:21a) with all glory
    ( http://bit.ly/Psalm112_1 ) to GOD, Who causes us to hunger
    (Deuteronomy 8:3) when He blesses us right now (Luke 6:21a) thereby
    removing the http://tinyurl.com/HeartVAT from around the heart

    ...because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,

    HeartDoc Andrew <><
    --
    Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
    Cardiologist with an http://bit.ly/EternalMedicalLicense
    2024 & upwards non-partisan candidate for U.S. President: http://WonderfullyHungry.org
    and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrewCare
    which is the only **healthy** cure for the U.S. healthcare crisis

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)