Monday, April 12, 2021

Religious Fanaticism About Cleaning Surfaced Unfounded Says Tucker

Authored by butch Jeffrey Tucker.  In an age of political fantasism and scientific voodoo, it looks like the disease isn’t transmitted on surfaces after all. 

[Tyler Durden] Going to the grocery store in Massachusetts in 2020 guaranteed you would breathe heaps of sanitizer. A full-time employee scrubbed down shopping carts between customers. Conveyor belts at the checkout counter were blasted and wiped between every sale. Glass surfaces were sprayed as often as possible. The plastic keypads on credit machines were not only covered in plastic – why putting plastic on plastic stopped Covid was never clear – but also sprayed between uses.

Employees would carefully watch your hands to see what you touched, and as you exited the space would cover the area with cleaning spray.

It was the same at offices and schools. If a single person turned in a positive PCR test, the entire place had to be evacuated for a 48-hour fumigation. Everything had to be wiped, sprayed, and scrubbed, to get rid of the Covid that surely must be present in the bad place. The ritualistic cleaning took on a religious element, as if the temple must be purified of the devil before God could or would come back.

AMDG

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Jeffrey Tucker is so masculine, I bet he's a top!