By Peak Prosperity 3/20/2020
By Dr. John Campbell – 3/20/2020
What Muppet went on holiday during this? We have known for weeks this was coming, no excuse Morons

The seemingly unstoppable spread of coronavirus has already led the government to declare a national emergency over the deadly disease that has so far claimed 41 lives nationwide, and infected more than 1,600 people across the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
However, certain unsavory characters apparently decided to exploit the already tense situation to stoke more fear in the hearts of Americans and provoke real panic. People across the US received text messages claiming the president is about to impose martial law in a day or two, while urging people to stockpile supplies. This comes as many shops have already reportedly run out of toilet paper among other things.

The messages, citing insider information from âmilitary friends up in DC,â and warning of nothing less than a âtwo week mandatory quarantine for the nation,â fell on fertile ground. It immediately became a hot topic on social media as people posted thousands of messages on the topic.
Some rushed to break the âbad newsâ or to wonder if anyone else received the disturbing message. Others said that many of their friends forwarded the messages to them.
More attentive readers noticed, however, that the messages, which were fake, referred to Trumpâs plan to invoke the Stafford Act as the reason for claiming martial law is coming.
In fact, the president already invoked the law two days ago when he declared a national emergency. The government unlocked additional powers and funding for disaster response and involved the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in the fight against coronavirus â but nothing close to martial law was imposed.
Still, the impact of the hoax apparently reached such proportions that the National Security Council decided it was time to intervene, posting a statement on Twitter saying the text message rumors were fake.

However, this was not enough to convince everyone that there is no possibility of martial law being imposed in a week or two.



By Neil Clark
Compare and contrast. In his speech to the nation last night, Macron declared: âThis virus has no passport.â He added: âWe will undoubtedly take measures to close borders, but only when it is relevant⌠It is at the European level that we have built our freedoms.â

Macron is closing all schools, nurseries, universities and day care centres from next week and has called on the vulnerable to isolate themselves. But if anyone can still come into France unchecked from countries where coronavirus is even more of a problem, wonât those measures be undermined?
Ditto Germany. Angela Merkel said this week that âwe in Germany, in any case, are of the opinion that border closures are not an appropriate response to the challenge.â
Contrast this âopen borders,â âwe must protect Schengenâ approach with that of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria and Hungary who are all EU member states. Declaring a 30-day âstate of emergency,â the Czech government has closed its borders to people from 15 countries hit by coronavirus and banned its citizens from visiting these countries too. From Monday next week, all international travel to and from Czechia will be essentially prohibited.
Slovakia is closing its borders today to all foreigners except those who have a residency permit, while announcing that all Slovaks who have been abroad will have to face two weeks of quarantine. Austria has barred all people entering the country from Italy, unless they have a medical certificate. Hungary has banned arrivals from Italy, China and Iran.
But in Western Europe, it seems a commitment to maintaining âopen borders,â even at a time of a potentially very extreme health crisis, trumps other concerns.
An example of this fundamentalist and very dogmatic approach can be seen in the tweet from Belgian MEP Guy Verhofstadt who declared: âNationalism isnât the answer to COV19, because viruses donât care about borders or nationalities.â

International travel may broaden the mind, but unfortunately, it also helps Covid-19 to spread.
You really donât have to be Albert Einstein to understand that the more open the borders, the greater chance of a country seeing its coronavirus cases rise. Yet the most powerful countries in the EU â unlike the more pragmatic ones in central and eastern Europe â seem to be putting virtue signaling and liberal ideology first. Of course, thereâs a moral case that can be made for âfree movement,â but in a time of crisis, governments have to forget all that and put protecting their own citizens first. Nationalism? No, itâs just doing what governments are elected to do.
If we can criticize Macron and Merkel on these grounds, we can criticize Boris Johnson too. Plane loads of people arriving from the worst affected areas of Italy have been arriving in Britain without any proper checks. On last nightâs BBC Question Time, Professor John Ashton, a former director of public health, noted how around 3,000 supporters of the Spanish football team Atletico Madrid were in Liverpool this week for a Champions League tie. Spainâs Corona cases, as of Wednesday, had surpassed 1,600 with about half of them in the Madrid region.
Two-thirds of Spainâs deaths from the virus have occurred in the Madrid region. Yet, as Professor Ashton pointed out, the Madrilenos would have been out and about in Liverpool on Tuesday and Wednesday, drinking in bars, staying in hotels, traveling on public transport. How can governments say they are doing everything they can to stop the spread of coronavirus when unrestricted travel from Covid-19 âhotspotsâ is still taking place?
It may be true, as Macron says, that âIt is at the European level that we have built our freedoms,â but what price âfreedomâ if it means the âfreedomâ to die from coronavirus because the most logical, common sense step of all is not taken?
By Dr. John Campbell – 3/13/2020

Franzese, who has also appeared as an actor on the popular TV series ‘Gomorrah’, posted a series of videos on social media last weekend in which he appeals for help as the body of his sister Teresa lies in bed behind him.
Teresa Franzese, 47, reportedly died on Saturday after showing symptoms of Covid-19 for several days.
âI am making this video for the good of Italy, for the good of Naples,â a distraught Luca says in the video.
âMy sister died last night, probably because of the virus, and Iâve been waiting for answers since last night.

âI had to force them to come and do the test. Iâve had to put myself in self-isolation. I might have the virus.
âTo keep my sister alive, I tried to give her mouth to mouth resuscitation and no one cared, no one is calling me.
“We are ruined, Italy has abandoned us. But we must give each other strength.â
The trainer-turned-actor later confirmed that his sister, who had a form of epilepsy, had tested positive for Covid-19.
He said he had been forced to wait for 36 hours with her body at home â where elderly relatives were also staying â as he desperately sought funeral services who would come and take her body away for burial.

Teresa Franzese was reportedly the fourth person to die of the coronavirus in the southern Italian region of Campania, where there have been more than 120 cases of the disease.
Local councillor Francesco Emilio Borrelli said that the confusion over Teresa Franzeseâs death came from the fact that she had been the first person to die at home from the virus.
“It was the first case in Italy in which a person with the virus dies at home, so there was some confusion on what to do,” he said, Al Jazeera reported.
“The family [exemplifies] altruism, they are doing everything they can to protect their community, and the community is staying close to them by bringing food.
“Now the big problem is that they have been closed in there for four days, and no one is taking away their trash. It’s getting unhygienic and we don’t know what to do about it. Someone needs to help them.”Â
A funeral home eventually agreed to come and take the body after Luca Franzeseâs was widely shared online.
“It was surreal. We used masks, sterile shoes, hazmat suits, glasses, and gloves. Luca and another relative were there, but other family members were all in another room,” said Pasquale Pernice, an employee at the Aprea Funeral Home service.
Italy has recorded almost 12,500 cases of the coronavirus pandemic, with more than 820 people dying of the disease, making it the worst-hit country outside of China.
The country and its 60 million population have been placed on lockdown, with all bars, restaurants and schools shut, as well as most shops.

In the city of Piacenza, in the heart of northern Italy’s coronavirus outbreak, overworked medical personnel are reaching their breaking point â and there seems to be no sign that the epidemic is letting up. With a population of just over 100,000, the city was placed on lockdown on Sunday, after suffering 50 deaths and more than 630 coronavirus diagnoses.
Visibly tired and with bags under his eyes, Davide Bastoni, who works in the emergency room of the Gugliermo Da Saliceto Hospital in Piacenza, told Ruptly that the battle against Covid-19 has been unceasing â and humbling.
“The night was very exhausting… This epidemic permits us to understand the fact that at the end of the day, we are all human beings, we are all the same, when facing these outbreaks or these viruses,” said Bastoni.
Dressed in a white smock and a hair net, the doctor confessed that protecting against the highly-contagious has separated patients from their caregivers.
“They are all patients who need human contact, who need some words of comfort, which is difficult to give them because we have the masks and all the protective devices,” the medical professional noted. He said that trying to make treatment more “humane” has forced clinicians to “reinvent” how they communicate with their patients.
There were more than three dozen patients with symptoms of the virus waiting to be screened and processed when the interview was recorded on Wednesday. But according to Bastoni, the epidemic is likely to get worse before it gets better.
The doctor urged his fellow Italians, especially young people, to take all possible measures to avoid contact with the virus.

“It’s clear that if the community doesn’t follow the restrictions and the numbers [of the infected] continue to rise, at a certain point, our ability to help people will reach its limit,” Bastoni warned.
He expressed fear that it would soon become necessary to classify patients based on those who have a greater chance of surviving the illness.
“I really hope this doesn’t happen,” he said.
Italy remains Europe’s worst-hit country, with the number of confirmed cases reaching 12,462 on Wednesday and the death toll jumping by 196 to 827 in just 24 hours.