Baron
Platinum Member
Lithuania today is the western world tomorrow.
Criminal governments don't care about your health, the only thing they fervently desire is to jab you and to send you to afterlife.
Litwin, if you're a honest human you shall confess the 'democracy' in your home country is a shit and you were more free in USSR as now.
The immunity pass as a ticket to freedom? Lithuania has the strictest covid passport system in Europe. It has brought the Baltic republic a merciless hygiene terror regime that tramples on the most basic human rights. It harasses and blackmails the unvaccinated, pillories them, excludes them almost completely from public life, and incites the rest of the population against them. Critics are slandered and silenced. A desperate family father reports from there.
Lithuania, the southernmost of the three Baltic states, is now in the ninth week of the strictest covidpass regime in Europe. There is no end in sight. On the contrary, things are soon to get even stricter.
The desperate situation in which Lithuanians find themselves who refuse to submit to the state's hygiene terror and allow themselves to be "poked" is described by a family father, Gluboco Lietuva is his name, on Twitter in a thread that is in acute danger of being deleted. "Without a passport, my wife and I are only allowed to enter small stores selling mainly food and medicines. We are forbidden to do anything else."
"Without a passport, we are also banned by law from all clothing stores. Even second-hand stores have to enforce the ban. No one is allowed to buy or sell without the passport."
Even in bookstores, drugstores, general stores "we are not allowed in without a passport. We are banned."
Until mid-October, the family was at least still allowed to get food and medicine in small stores. But then "the bureaucrats decided that this was too lax: they imposed a new restriction," according to which small stores must either allow in a maximum of one shopper per 30 square meters of sales space - or deny entry to people without passports.
But "one customer per 30 square meters is too little for many stores to survive. And so many - both individual retailers and entire chains - opted for the option of locking us out. According to the motto: Kill or be killed.
Lidl is also getting in on the act:
As a result, "without a passport, there is no way to buy food at all in many areas. Supermarkets have already locked us out since September, and now even small stores are locking us out." So how does one get food at all? "Online. At outdoor markets. Or you can find any of the few stores that haven't banned us from entering yet."
Most pharmacies also submit to the biofascist excesses. Because they, too, are usually only allowed to admit a single customer per 30 square meters, unless they demand an immunization card, long lines often form outside the entrance doors. Patients who are dependent on medicines have to wait outside in the wind and weather, often freezing and soaked.
Two out of five gas stations bar customers without passports completely. Only one in five allows them to continue entering. The rest only allow them to fill up and then pay outside.
Banks still offer all the usual services only to passport holders. For any visitor without ID, only "essential financial services" such as transfers or withdrawals are allowed - for a maximum of 15 minutes.
Libraries, too, are now available without restriction only to Covid passport holders. "Without a passport," Gluboco Lietuva reports, "my family is not allowed to enter or use the facilities. Merely we can pick up a pre-ordered book. Separate entrances reinforce segregation."
Plainclothes police officers raid stores, supermarkets and shopping centers. Randomly, they stop people and check their Covid passport and ID to make sure it is a valid certificate that actually belongs to that person. On a single day, October 22, nearly 200 officers - still 2.5% of all police officers in the small country - checked 11,700 people, 0.4% of Lithuania's total population. Anyone caught with a fake ID or using someone else's faces a fine of up to 5,000 euros, and up to six years in prison if they repeat the offence.
Day after day, Lithuanian media publish police reports about people guilty of the hygiene crime of entering stores with someone else's ID. "This is not 'education to promote vaccination.' This is how a police state operates."
"It's 'us vs. them': hatred poisons the social climate in Lithuania, too." "Opinions that were considered reprehensible in 2019 have become mainstream in 2021. The Covid Pass regime has shredded piece by piece the bonds that hold us all together in one society," the Twitter author notes. Government, authorities, and hand-picked "experts" loyal to the regime are engaging in sedition against piecemeal phobics. "The unvaccinated are acting irresponsibly," comments Zivile Gudleviciene, chief advisor to Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte. Patience is running out. It is true that we have to provide medical services to everyone. But we could limit their access to hospitals and say they will be treated at home." (1)
Foreign Minister Gabrielus Landsbergis allowed himself to be carried away by the following statement: "Those who think it is okay not to be vaccinated bear much of the responsibility for children whose parents are dead. I know that no earthly court is likely to judge such people. But I hope that somewhere they will have to answer to something higher. When you play such a game, you should not neglect to wash your hands. For there is blood on them." (2)
Social and Labor Minister Monika Navickiene demanded, "We must hold anti-vaxxers accountable for being complicit in the loss of so many lives." (3)
The mayor of Lithuania's capital Vilnius, Remigijus Simasius, justice minister from 2008 to 2012, blatantly threatened, "We must restrict the movement of the unvaccinated. If you want to spend Christmas with your family, get vaccinated now." (4)
In Lithuania, too, "the media and government collude to prevent free expression and suppress protests against the Covid policy." The journalistic mainstream demands and welcomes censorship of "disinformation" - a synonym for doubting the official epidemic narrative:
"In this way," Lietuva laments, "politicians and the media here and around the world seek to normalize what is not normal: an authoritarian regime of exclusion and control in which undesirable behavior is punished by banishment from society."
"The Covid Pass has already transformed Lithuania into a regime of authoritarianism and segregation. Other countries now face the same inescapable reality. We Lithuanians are merely a few months ahead."
Thought to the end
Will the Covid Pass remain a temporary measure that will disappear as soon as the pandemic has subsided? Only a few steps are needed to make it a permanent institution: an entitlement certificate for participation in social life, in the exercise of basic rights. Once introduced, this system can easily be expanded to separate conformists from rebels, followers from critics, "good" from "bad" citizens. A worldwide social points system based on the Red Chinese model appears on the horizon - if not already with Covid-19, then at the latest with Covid-31. Or already with Covid-24?
Translated from:
www.klartext-online.info
Criminal governments don't care about your health, the only thing they fervently desire is to jab you and to send you to afterlife.
Litwin, if you're a honest human you shall confess the 'democracy' in your home country is a shit and you were more free in USSR as now.
The immunity pass as a ticket to freedom? Lithuania has the strictest covid passport system in Europe. It has brought the Baltic republic a merciless hygiene terror regime that tramples on the most basic human rights. It harasses and blackmails the unvaccinated, pillories them, excludes them almost completely from public life, and incites the rest of the population against them. Critics are slandered and silenced. A desperate family father reports from there.
Lithuania, the southernmost of the three Baltic states, is now in the ninth week of the strictest covidpass regime in Europe. There is no end in sight. On the contrary, things are soon to get even stricter.
The desperate situation in which Lithuanians find themselves who refuse to submit to the state's hygiene terror and allow themselves to be "poked" is described by a family father, Gluboco Lietuva is his name, on Twitter in a thread that is in acute danger of being deleted. "Without a passport, my wife and I are only allowed to enter small stores selling mainly food and medicines. We are forbidden to do anything else."
"Without a passport, we are also banned by law from all clothing stores. Even second-hand stores have to enforce the ban. No one is allowed to buy or sell without the passport."
Even in bookstores, drugstores, general stores "we are not allowed in without a passport. We are banned."
Until mid-October, the family was at least still allowed to get food and medicine in small stores. But then "the bureaucrats decided that this was too lax: they imposed a new restriction," according to which small stores must either allow in a maximum of one shopper per 30 square meters of sales space - or deny entry to people without passports.
But "one customer per 30 square meters is too little for many stores to survive. And so many - both individual retailers and entire chains - opted for the option of locking us out. According to the motto: Kill or be killed.
Lidl is also getting in on the act:
As a result, "without a passport, there is no way to buy food at all in many areas. Supermarkets have already locked us out since September, and now even small stores are locking us out." So how does one get food at all? "Online. At outdoor markets. Or you can find any of the few stores that haven't banned us from entering yet."
Most pharmacies also submit to the biofascist excesses. Because they, too, are usually only allowed to admit a single customer per 30 square meters, unless they demand an immunization card, long lines often form outside the entrance doors. Patients who are dependent on medicines have to wait outside in the wind and weather, often freezing and soaked.
Two out of five gas stations bar customers without passports completely. Only one in five allows them to continue entering. The rest only allow them to fill up and then pay outside.
Banks still offer all the usual services only to passport holders. For any visitor without ID, only "essential financial services" such as transfers or withdrawals are allowed - for a maximum of 15 minutes.
Libraries, too, are now available without restriction only to Covid passport holders. "Without a passport," Gluboco Lietuva reports, "my family is not allowed to enter or use the facilities. Merely we can pick up a pre-ordered book. Separate entrances reinforce segregation."
Plainclothes police officers raid stores, supermarkets and shopping centers. Randomly, they stop people and check their Covid passport and ID to make sure it is a valid certificate that actually belongs to that person. On a single day, October 22, nearly 200 officers - still 2.5% of all police officers in the small country - checked 11,700 people, 0.4% of Lithuania's total population. Anyone caught with a fake ID or using someone else's faces a fine of up to 5,000 euros, and up to six years in prison if they repeat the offence.
Day after day, Lithuanian media publish police reports about people guilty of the hygiene crime of entering stores with someone else's ID. "This is not 'education to promote vaccination.' This is how a police state operates."
"It's 'us vs. them': hatred poisons the social climate in Lithuania, too." "Opinions that were considered reprehensible in 2019 have become mainstream in 2021. The Covid Pass regime has shredded piece by piece the bonds that hold us all together in one society," the Twitter author notes. Government, authorities, and hand-picked "experts" loyal to the regime are engaging in sedition against piecemeal phobics. "The unvaccinated are acting irresponsibly," comments Zivile Gudleviciene, chief advisor to Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte. Patience is running out. It is true that we have to provide medical services to everyone. But we could limit their access to hospitals and say they will be treated at home." (1)
Foreign Minister Gabrielus Landsbergis allowed himself to be carried away by the following statement: "Those who think it is okay not to be vaccinated bear much of the responsibility for children whose parents are dead. I know that no earthly court is likely to judge such people. But I hope that somewhere they will have to answer to something higher. When you play such a game, you should not neglect to wash your hands. For there is blood on them." (2)
Social and Labor Minister Monika Navickiene demanded, "We must hold anti-vaxxers accountable for being complicit in the loss of so many lives." (3)
The mayor of Lithuania's capital Vilnius, Remigijus Simasius, justice minister from 2008 to 2012, blatantly threatened, "We must restrict the movement of the unvaccinated. If you want to spend Christmas with your family, get vaccinated now." (4)
In Lithuania, too, "the media and government collude to prevent free expression and suppress protests against the Covid policy." The journalistic mainstream demands and welcomes censorship of "disinformation" - a synonym for doubting the official epidemic narrative:
"In this way," Lietuva laments, "politicians and the media here and around the world seek to normalize what is not normal: an authoritarian regime of exclusion and control in which undesirable behavior is punished by banishment from society."
"The Covid Pass has already transformed Lithuania into a regime of authoritarianism and segregation. Other countries now face the same inescapable reality. We Lithuanians are merely a few months ahead."
Thought to the end
Will the Covid Pass remain a temporary measure that will disappear as soon as the pandemic has subsided? Only a few steps are needed to make it a permanent institution: an entitlement certificate for participation in social life, in the exercise of basic rights. Once introduced, this system can easily be expanded to separate conformists from rebels, followers from critics, "good" from "bad" citizens. A worldwide social points system based on the Red Chinese model appears on the horizon - if not already with Covid-19, then at the latest with Covid-31. Or already with Covid-24?
Translated from:

Ein Albtraum namens Litauen – Wohin Covid-Pässe führen können
Der Immunitätsausweis als Ticket zur Freiheit? In Litauen gilt das strikteste Covid-Passwesen Europas. Gebracht hat es der Baltenrepublik ein gnadenloses Hygieneterror-Regime, das grundlegendste Menschenrechte mit Füßen tritt. Es schikaniert und erpresst Ungeimpfte, stellt sie an den Pranger...







