Yeah, that's actually one of the events that got me thinking about it. The thing is, it's not the only event like that by a long stretch. There are so many times and ways that the world could have ended, but as far as we can tell, it didn’t.
It's like the Covid thing itself - it had to go right in all the right places and wrong in all the right places to not end up in either rapid civilisational collapse (eg. Sars-cov-2 is far more deadly than anticipated, or the vaxes are far more deadly than anticipated, or widespread unrest and civil war) or the intended WEF global prison camp (avoided as a function of general incompetence, laziness and the inconvenient facts of neither safety nor effectiveness, plus some very courageous people, and little info-sharing pockets like this one). So we're left here, in the strange middle ground of slow collapse. Only the most die-hard (pun intended) vax advocates still think kindly of the vaxes - most vaxed I know are now mildly terrified but trying not to admit it, and the mood is definitely turning against "the elite", with those not calling for their deaths/imprisonment just outright ignoring them or doing the opposite of what they say.
Meanwhile every evening on the radio on the drive home, the news feels like that bit in the Hunger Games where a cannon booms at the end of the day and they read out a list of every contestant who's died today. It currently averages about 3 famous people a day. If we assume that 0.00041% of people are famous enough to be read out on the news (based on this article: https://www.wired.com/2013/01/the-fraction-of-famous-people-in-the-world/), that scales to a somewhat staggering 7317 people dying prematurely each day. A slow collapse, but an inexorable one.
As Kimberly likes to say, I could well be wrong on this, but I think Covid was a one-time scam. As one of the posters above alluded to, if the PMC are all either sick, dead or red-pilled, the machinists and metal-bashers sure as hell aren't going to listen to their "betters". And good luck running a functioning... anything... without blue-collar workers.
(Also, in all of my workplaces, my best friends have been the machinists and welders - they're always the most fun to talk to, most honest, and have the best stories!)
Re: The least worst outcome
It's like the Covid thing itself - it had to go right in all the right places and wrong in all the right places to not end up in either rapid civilisational collapse (eg. Sars-cov-2 is far more deadly than anticipated, or the vaxes are far more deadly than anticipated, or widespread unrest and civil war) or the intended WEF global prison camp (avoided as a function of general incompetence, laziness and the inconvenient facts of neither safety nor effectiveness, plus some very courageous people, and little info-sharing pockets like this one). So we're left here, in the strange middle ground of slow collapse. Only the most die-hard (pun intended) vax advocates still think kindly of the vaxes - most vaxed I know are now mildly terrified but trying not to admit it, and the mood is definitely turning against "the elite", with those not calling for their deaths/imprisonment just outright ignoring them or doing the opposite of what they say.
Meanwhile every evening on the radio on the drive home, the news feels like that bit in the Hunger Games where a cannon booms at the end of the day and they read out a list of every contestant who's died today. It currently averages about 3 famous people a day. If we assume that 0.00041% of people are famous enough to be read out on the news (based on this article: https://www.wired.com/2013/01/the-fraction-of-famous-people-in-the-world/), that scales to a somewhat staggering 7317 people dying prematurely each day. A slow collapse, but an inexorable one.
As Kimberly likes to say, I could well be wrong on this, but I think Covid was a one-time scam. As one of the posters above alluded to, if the PMC are all either sick, dead or red-pilled, the machinists and metal-bashers sure as hell aren't going to listen to their "betters". And good luck running a functioning... anything... without blue-collar workers.
(Also, in all of my workplaces, my best friends have been the machinists and welders - they're always the most fun to talk to, most honest, and have the best stories!)
Mr. Crow