https://www.thedailybell.com/all-articles/news-analysis/covid-propaganda-roundup-the-biomedical-states-crimes-against-humanity-cannot-go-unpunished/
Indeed. Down to the local doctor’s office vigilance and in corporate management overriding as well! No one responsible goes without retribution. Perhaps a mirroring of the treatment meted out to the “Dissenters From The Grand Narrative” I kind of am entranced by the grass roots resistance to mandatory vaccines and Covid living and the public response to increasing evidence the almost worse case assumption of harm from vaccination was accurate. Almost is this side of human.
We might on the other hand be inclined to think maybe, not human, but alongside human, para-human, related maybe 5 million years ago who knows as the past contains contradicting multitudes. Or demons from other dimensions why not.
Christianity as then a truly human force arose and defended man from demons and death. Once Christianity as a living force was crucified the gambling began and here we are my dicing over the garment of a felon as if in the tradition of Buddha. But here’s what we are told in the sutras about mendicant robes during that time. They were made from discarded scraps of cloth, or what is called in Sanskrit pāmsūda or pāmsūla. There are various lists identifying what constitutes pāmsūda. For example, cloth that has been 1) burned by fire, 2) munched by oxen, 3) gnawed by mice, or 4) worn by the dead. The Japanese equivalent of pāmsūda is funzoe, a polite translation of which is “excrement sweeping cloth” and indicates another potential source.
These scraps were scavenged from the trash, out in the fields, by roadsides or even from the cremation grounds. Any truly unsalvageable parts were trimmed off and the resulting bits were washed and sewn, piecemeal and without pattern, into a rectangle large enough to wrap around and cover the mendicant. Then the rectangle was dyed, using gleaned roots and tubers, plants, bark, leaves, flowers or fruits, especially heartwood and leaves of the jackfruit tree, which resulted in a variable and generic color known in Sanskrit as kashaya, denoting mixed/variegated, neutral or earth tones. It’s also defined as "color that is not pure" or "bad color." I have also been told that it refers to colors considered ugly, colors chosen to renounce that culture’s values. This also ties in with another connotation of the word kashaya, which is impurity or uncleanliness, reflecting back to the source of the cloth used.
Tells ya a bit about the CHARACTER of the Russian soldier I’d say.