Debi Evans Blog: 29th August 2024

Welcome to another blog and thank you for taking time to listen to it or read it. What to include in each blog is often a challenge. I hope it serves to many of you as a little sanctuary of sanity, where you find out you are not alone, and that your thoughts and views are shared by many. 

My Hypothesis: Spiked

Before I cover current Stories in Brief, I would like to share a hypothesis with you that you may not have considered before. I welcome your thoughts and critique.

Background

The last four years, otherwise known as the ‘Convid’ years, have been the most extraordinary of my lifetime, and I am pretty sure yours too. All of us have a story to tell, an experience to share, and many losses to remember.

Compared to Brian Gerrish, Mike Robinson, and others, I was late to wake up to the horrors we are facing. Whilst I had always opposed authority and I am well-known by my family and friends for being a rebel, I had never considered or imagined that a secret cabal of demons could ever pull off something as huge as the Great Reset, otherwise known as the Fourth Industrial Revolution. These little words with humungous consequences changed our lives forever. The Great Reset is literal; it’s a completely new era, where everything we deemed normal has gone, never to return, and all in plain sight.

For those of us who haven’t succumbed to the deception, lies and spells that have been cast upon the planet, we are only too aware of the multiple shocking and heinous crimes that have, and continue to be, committed against humanity. Of that there is no doubt. However, in 2024, the right to challenge or bring those responsible to justice no longer exists. We are living in a world where the good people are relentlessly gaslit, punished, blamed and imprisoned, whilst the evil people are continually rewarded, acclaimed, and paid homage to. In the UK, those who are the evilest are rewarded, whilst being immune from prosecution and effectively above the law. Unless you are deemed important, wealthy or influential, you don’t get a Willy Wonka golden ticket to a dystopian Brave New World, not that you would probably want one if you got one! It’s a topsy turvy world where kind is cruel, justice is injustice, and evidence ismisinformation.

Question

Why can’t doctors inform patients of serious adverse events from what has been openly described as an ‘experimental’ and ‘novel’ injection?  Surely, they know the ingredients and what effects they may have on the human body? The answer is no. They don’t know what is in the injection, let alone what it may do to you. Fact. I know it’s a big statement, but I can back it up.

Answer and Evidence

After the rollout of the injection in 2021, you didn’t have to be an expert to notice the rapid increase in MHRA Yellow Card reporting, which I could only describe as a tsunami of serious adverse reactions, post-injection. In 2022, I asked the Royal College of General Practitioners if doctors knew what they were being paid to give. Did they know the ingredients of the injection to obtain informed consent?  I received this reply from Dr Michael Mulholland, Honorary Secretary of the RCGP, on 22 March 2022: 

I do not know how many Yellow Cards are submitted and am not aware of a standard number that should be submitted. The reason the GP cannot give you long-term information on side effects or the exact ingredients of a vaccine is because that information is not available to them’.

So serious was this admission that UK Column put it to Sir Christopher Chope MP. The interview and transcript can be found here.

Observation

If doctors aren’t told the ingredients of the pharmaceutical product they are giving, this would appear to suggest that informed consent to this injection has never existed. Similarly, if the public are being given a product that includes ingredients whose details have been deliberately withheld from them, has yet another criminal offence been committed? I would suggest it has. And here is how.

Spiked

As our physical world is changing quickly, so is our vocabulary and language. In plain sight, our overlords laugh in our faces whilst twisting and manipulating language to suit their narrative and intent. However, one word we all appear to have normalised appears to have a darker and even more significant meaning. And herein lies my hypothesis: the word spike. We are being spiked

Why are Covid cases spiking again? What is a spike protein? Who wrote the book Spike: The Virus vs. The People - The Inside Story? What does a ball and chain look like? What is the word spike slang for? There are spikes in the spread of ‘virus misinformation’, and spikes in excess deaths. Should we be taking more notice of this small but innocuous word, or has it become normalised without any of us realising?

The UK Government describe ‘spiking’ as ‘an insidious and violating crime, catching its victims off-guard and often leaving them with little recall of what happened beyond the fact that they have been a victim of crime and in the worst instances, horrendous secondary offences’.

Police UK define the act of spiking as ‘giving someone alcohol or drugs without them knowing or agreeing. For example, in their drink or with a needle’. 

Spiking and the law

Spiking is illegal and carries a sentence of up to 10 years in prison. If a robbery, sexual assault, or other crime took place, the sentence may even be longer. Spiking offences are covered by more than one law, although most are covered by the Offences against the Person Act 1861. If a victim has been spiked with the intention of sexual assault, it is covered under the Sexual Offences Act 2003.

The UK Government published a document called Spiking: advice and support in December 2023. It states:

If you are in immediate danger, call 999 and ask for the police.

Spiking is a crime. You have the right not to be spiked:

  • you have the right to decide what you eat and drink and what goes into your body
  • you should not have to change your behaviour to avoid being spiked
  • you should not have to avoid bars or clubs or cover your drink at all times’

Recognise spiking

In the same document as above, the UK Government also states: 

Spiking can make you seriously ill. The signs you should look out for in yourself or someone you are with include: 

  • confusion and disorientation
  • nausea and vomiting
  • hallucinations and paranoia
  • poor co-ordination and vision 
  • an inability to communicate clearly 
  • memory loss and blackouts’

The UK Government will introduce a new law which will reinforce the seriousness of ‘spiking’. Whilst spiking is already a crime, the bill was announced in July 2024 during the King’s Speech and it will be one of the 35 bills in Parliament. Why? Allegedly, it will make the police more able to respond to incidents.

Will the vaccine injured and relatives of the bereaved be able to prosecute those who ‘spiked’ them with an unknown experimental injection? No amount of indemnity matters then, surely?

Conclusion

Are we being spiked with spikes? Are you recognising the signs? How many of us know what is in our food, water, pharmaceuticals, or environment? How many secret ingredients are being added? Many of you who are reading this will know someone, or perhaps, yourself, who has taken a Covid-19 injection in good faith, believing that the person giving it to you knew what they were giving you. They didn’t. Who does know? More importantly, who is going to admit what the ingredients are?

Or were you spiked with a solution that still no one knows definitively what is in it? And what of the future? Who knows what mRNA will be put into moving forward? Lettuce? Will we ever be told? Are all of us potentially at risk of being ‘spiked’?

Spike isn’t the only word I am now viewing with interest. Perhaps in another blog, I may share my observations on the word virus. Perhaps that blog will go viral, or maybe it will cause a computer virus on someone’s system. It’s an interesting word for another time. In the meantime, get used to these new globalist buzzwords. They’ll be spinning around in your brain in no time at all:

  • Change,
  • Peace (their peace; you will be silenced and censored), 
  • Security (their security; you will be locked up, surveyed, and tracked), 
  • And, of course, acceleration has become turbocharged.

Stories in Brief

Artificial Intelligence in the NHS

During the UK Column News on Friday, 23 August, I reported on a recent paper published by the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change called Preparing the NHS for the AI Era: A New Tool to Map Untapped Health Data. How do you feel about having your own digital health record within five years? This is one of the first and fastest steps to total control when you will have no privacy. Your life will be judged, scrutinised and evaluated by others. Blair is not the only advocate of Artificial Intelligence (AI); the NHS is a perfect testbed for trials and experiments. 

The Health Tech Newspaper published an article with examples of where AI experiments, cleverly disguised as clinical trials, were taking place within the NHS. Will AI be responsible for diagnosing you with a medical condition? Will it perform your investigation or allocate you a place on a waiting list? From polyps in the colon to personal care plans, AI will be able to do it all, even predict if you will suffer with Alzheimer's in the future. Thanks, but no thanks. I prefer not to know and to instead trust our Creator. Do you trust AI, bearing in mind it remains unregulated and the UK has no immediate plans to change that position?

Care Quality Commission (CQC) – Adult Inpatient Survey

The CQC recently published the results of the Adult Inpatient Survey 2023. I am astounded that it has taken ninemonths to publish. Why?

63,500 adults across 131 NHS Trusts in England were asked about their experiences as an inpatient in hospital. I am always slightly sceptical of surveys because I never know anyone who has been questioned. As a brief overview, these are my observations, although I would recommend you read the report in full.

Unsurprisingly, overall satisfaction rates remain much lower than prior to Covid. I was surprised to read that despite this result, 56% of respondents said there were enough nurses to care for them. In my day, 46% who felt there were not enough nurses to care for them would have made headlines. Today, it is virtually ignored.

Do you have confidence and trust in nurses? Please answer truthfully; as a trained nurse, my confidence and trust levels in my own profession are at rock bottom. However, it appears I am in the minority. The report reveals that in 2022,79% of respondents said they had confidence in nurses. In 2023, this dropped by just 1% to 78%. Experiences surrounding admission and discharge from hospital proved less favourable, with many saying their health had significantly deteriorated on long waiting lists, whilst others complained their experience upon discharge was less than satisfactory, citing long delays, lack of information, and post-discharge plans as reasons.

Project CAELUS - Scotland

CAELUS (Care & Equity – Healthcare Logistics UAS Scotland) is part funded (£7 million funding) by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) and Innovate UK’s Future Flight Challenge. For this project, AGS Airports, owner of the Aberdeen, Glasgow and Southampton airports, is leading, developing, and trialling a UK first: drones for deliveries. A distribution network of drones will transport essential blood, organs, and medicines throughout Scotland. Urgent laboratory samples which require urgent clinical decision making can take five hours to be road transported between NHS Borders and NHS Lothian. Drones are forecast to take a mere 35 minutes for delivery, even from remote areas. But has anyone considered a drone’s ability to invade your privacy, family life, and eardrums? For those who have never heard a drone, do click here; this is a relatively quiet example in comparison to commercial drones. Could anyone ever get used to noise like that? Not me, thanks.

Student nurse recruitment numbers falling

The National Health Executive revealed that Labour’s message of change must include student nurse recruitment. 13,870 students were accepted onto nursing degrees in England, a reduction of 20% over three years. Is there any wonder why?

I have spoken to many nurses over the last four years, including Jenna Platt. Perhaps we should go Back to Basics? I have been interviewed by Dr Ahmed Malik to talk about my experiences as a student nurse. What was the NHS like back in the 1970s?

I fought for my place at nursing school. For 70 places, there were 250 applicants. We were accommodated in a nurse’s home and ferried to hospital by minibus every day. We enjoyed a varied, heavily subsidised canteen, and we had free hospital laundry services. Of course we worked hard. Student nurses were the heartbeat of the hospital; it simply couldn’t have existed without them.

Student nurses being present on the wards from day one is a thing of the past. Today, student nurses spend the first 18 months in university, and barely see a hospital ward until halfway into their second year of training, by which time if they don’t enjoy it, a year and a half has been wasted.

Who wants a loan from the Government to train? Who wants to fork out premium rents to live in an inner city near a training hospital? With little or no financial support, affordable housing, or crèche facility, why are the Royal College of Nurses surprised at the lack of interest in nursing? The College will be 10,000 students short by 2025.

From my observations, it would appear nurses are no longer nurses, based on the true sense of the word and based on my memory. Nurses appear to do tasks that, in my day, we would have expected junior doctors to do. Basic but essential nursing care, which includes making beds, bed baths, mouth care, catheter care, fluid balance charts, observations, hand holding, and tender loving care has ended. If any of it still exists, it appears to be the responsibility of healthcare assistants, who are not nurses.

Making nursing more attractive isn’t difficult. Provide students with accommodation, a decent living wage with no debts, plus a Matron, and we would see numbers increase almost immediately. Nursing was never an academic career, it was always a vocation, and in my opinion, it should have remained one. Nurses are not made; they are born.

My point is: are student nurses being deliberately put off from applying to train because they, like doctors, are in essence the ultimate turkeys at Christmas? Will there be any need for nurses in the future? Humanoid nurses are, after all, set to take over. Have you met Grace? Will the campaign that NHS England launched to encourage more people to choose nursing and midwifery careers pay off, or are only humanoids welcome to apply?

England’s NHS maternity services – when babies die or are harmed

A new study, DISCERN, is attempting to find out from families what happens when things go wrong within our maternity services. What worked well and what didn’t? What is ‘open disclosure’, and how can it help support families and healthcare professionals?

Open Disclosure is an admission from the NHS that the care provided has directly caused harm. It is alleged that open disclosure will provide the families with honest answers and ensure mistakes made are not repeated. Recommendationsinclude improving guidance and training, and the setting up of a better system to support families and parents during discussions.

No service is perfect. Tragically, mistakes are made; however, no baby should ever die or be harmed by anyone, least of all the NHS. Do you trust the NHS with our unborn?

Nickita Starck set up When Push comes to Shove to help pregnant women navigate the system. Don’t miss her interview with Clive De Carle on UK Column here.

And Finally

AI has arrived and Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) has all but arrived, uninvited and unwanted by most of us. Also on the horizon is the Internet of Things, the Internet of Bodies, and the Internet of Medical Things. If you thought the internet that you are using now will continue, you would be wrong. Perhaps the internet you are using now is dead

A digital health record has been made possible, largely due to so many downloading the NHS App which appears to be the key to the door of the NHS. If you have the NHS app or know someone who does, please do try to encourage them to delete it. 

In the future, the NHS will exist in the Cloud, and we will rely on AI to diagnose, treat, and make clinical decisions which will affect our futures. AI will even bring your deceased loved ones back to life. Not even death is sacred anymore. 

With little less than two weeks left of the school summer holidays, we creep ever closer to autumn, short days, and long, cold nights. With energy prices set to spike, are you prepared for what could be a difficult winter? Perhaps we should take a leaf out of a hedgehog’s book; they are experts in hibernating. If you need to hibernate, can you sustain yourself and your family for a month with light, heat, food, and water? If the answer is no, it’s not too late, and if you are not familiar with ‘prepping’, I thoroughly recommend The Prepper’s Blueprint by Tess Pennington. 

Now is the time for a peaceful and legal uprising. How? Use cash. Boycott supermarkets and retail chains. Refuse to live online and avoid giving personal data. Boycott products and services from global organisations, especially those that operate online. Turn your mobile phone into an immobile one; it’s amazing how liberating a trip to the beach or park can be without constant interruptions and notifications. Withdraw cash from the ATM. If a million of us withdrew £50 at the same time, the system would crash. Delete the NHS App immediately. Avoid shopping at the weekend and arrange to do something more productive. If you do have to shop at the supermarket, at least boycott the self-service tills. Refuse to bank online. And if you fancy a coffee at the local Tesco café, it’s card only; cash is now banned. 

Stockholm’s 2040 vision

Last week on UK Column Extra, I reported on a glossy brochure released by Stockholm City Council back in 2018. It presented a vision for the future, and a vision for fireflies too. Laughter is so good for the soul, so I would like to thank seawag, one of our members, who made me laugh out loud when they posted in our community forums:

Personally, I’m not too worried about Stockholm city, although I’m sure “they” will try to roll it out everywhere.  Half the fireflies will be going round in circles because one of their wings is hanging off and some of them will be wearing hats that someone has decided to crochet for them. Someone will be blocking the EMF signals with bits taken from an old box of stuff left over from the 1940’s that he’s found in his shed. Some of the nanotech injected into people will be having no effect on them whatsoever and no one will know why. Everyone will be sticking chewing gum onto the facial recognition cameras at self service tills (happening already I believe). It’s going to be fun’.

And finally finally… I would like to recommend a book, a song and a film.  

Book: Rockefeller: Controlling the Game by Jacob Nordangård 

Song: Revelation by John Rich

Film: In Time (2011) - official trailer

Until next week 

God Bless 

Debi 

John 10:27 KGV
My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me