It is quite obvious that Erdogan prematurely revealed his plans for the construction of a new Ottoman Empire, but he has no other choice. And that is why. The defeat of the ruling party last summer, in the elections in Istanbul, where the candidate from the Kemalist opposition won, showed the precarious position of the current government.
Did a quick search and it is clear that on the one hand, you are absolutely on target with your view that a lot of the global pandemic is 5G and microwave radiation illness being mis-labeled as the corona virus for whatever reason.
It is also clear that there is not enough openly available research and reliable sourcing on this issue, it needs much more public attention. Here are a few links.
Cruise Ships are the truth-teller — all radiation sickness from satellite emissions that the maritime communications service providers are not calibrating. Could this become a massive class action lawsuit?
ROBERT STEELE: This book documents the high probability that radiation sickness is caused by all forms of electricity including 5G, microwaves, and all other forms of emission.
The Spanish flu specifically, the current Wuhan virus — and the cruise ships particularly — as well as cancer and diabetes — are all arguably associated with electromagnetic pollution and exposure.
Shutting down the towers, putting the ill in Faraday protected areas, and giving them large doses of calcium radically reduces the epidemic.
This is not as definitive a book as one might wish, nor is the author as balanced as one might wish, but in light of the Wuhan virus, the Wuhan 5G and separate extreme low frequency submarine communications antennas, in combination with the cruise ships “spontaneous epidemic” far from China, I conclude that the author's assertions merit a full hearing.
Table of Contents and Seventeen Page Full Text Online Summary Below
There's a reason, Tim Bakken says, why the U.S. hasn't won a war in 75 years.
Bakken’s prognosis: the military as an institution has become so separate, so insulated, so authoritarian, that it can no longer perform effectively. In fact, it’s worse: the very nature of this beast is that it has been able to grow exponentially in size and mission so that it now conducts destructive expeditionary wars overseas with little or no real cohesive strategy or oversight. Its huge budgets are a source of corporate grift, self-justification, and corruption. The military has become too big, yes, but as Bakkan puts it, it’s failing in every way possible.
In the end, Bakken contends this world reduces “officers who are emotionally immature, needy, and dependent on others to make the most mundane decisions for them.”