Supplement to Vaccine Navigation Guide Summer Series (S1)
Q: Why am I creating this series? A: Many excellent reasons. Here is one of them.
Monday, May 19th, 2025
Dear Fellow Americans & Current Substack Subscribers,
If you’re a Free Subscriber, then you’ve missed the first two (2) parts of my Summer Series. This is a “current event supplemental article” that’s being shared with everyone! It presents an opinion, which my Summer Series generally does NOT do.
My Summer Series helps you do two things.
(1) “Know thyself” so you can better understand your own motivations, feelings, sense of comfort, and subconscious fears that effect your decision making.
(2) “Know the terrain” of this complicated issue, so you can dodge the landmines, access information, avoid emotional traps, and converse with others in a calm and relaxed way (even when they aren’t).
Much Ado About Liberty
It is easy, when one enjoys liberty, to settle into that comfort zone, get busy with life, and ignore distant warning signs. The cause is complacency. The forever truth that we don’t know what we have until it’s gone.
Here’s something I took for granted. Time with my Mom.
I miss my Mom. Terribly. It doesn’t dominate my daily life, but when I think of our missed opportunities, it hurts.
In 2022, my Mom was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Within days, something beautiful happened to our relationship. Every speck of discord or conflict between us (and we had very little, compared to all of my friends and all of hers) — just up and evaporated.
Poof!
Even though my Mom and I successfully lived together for roughly 20 years, after her divorce. Even though we gardened together, loved my boys together, cooked, cleaned, and “made a home” together, as well as did a bit of travel — there was a lingering element of strain between us that rose up from time to time.
Once she was diagnosed and (Thank God) made the decision to come home and be with us during her transition to what comes next, after this life, we had a purely blissful two and a half months together. Aside from the dying part, of course.
I feel a deep, deep ache whenever I think of her, and most of it is related to a terrible sense that she enjoyed life a little bit less, because of our occasional disagreements. If we knew then what we came to know after her diagnosis — we might have been able to relax into that blissful state of complete love and patience 20 years sooner!
Love them, while you can, the saying goes. And so it goes with liberty.
Or kite flying. Barefoot children with callouses. Playing in local swimming holes or streams. Board games and a TV with only thirteen channels.
The list of cherished aspects of life that have largely passed by the wayside is long…and it includes this strange thing that existed since the dawn of human kind through to the late 1800’s. Namely…
Children, and adults, living in a world where injecting something you don’t understand into your body (72+ times by age 18, and more to come in adulthood) was NOT NORMAL, and certainly not forced upon the citizenry by an international cabal of “stakeholders” manipulating the entire planet.
Since the concept of “vaccine medicine” was developed, there have been various governmental responses to the technology.
The battle between forcing everyone to risk their healthy bodies and their lives for the supposedly achievable goal of “eliminating disease” through mass compliance has gone back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. BACK AND FORTH.
I doubt the war will ever end, because it’s intrinsically linked to the question of liberty. Mainly, do we have it, or not? Are we protecting and fighting for it, or not? Have we been bribed, brainwashed, tricked, or manipulated into handing it over, of our own volition, for — of all things — a very questionable promise of safety?
This war didn’t begin with COVID, and it hasn’t ended with COVID, either. According to another Substacker following the issue, here’s what just happened yesterday:
Singapore just made it a CRIME to refuse a vaccination, threatening jail time and massive fines for saying “no.” Strangely, that law passed right AFTER Bill Gates and Klaus Schwab paid a visit. Coincidence? Or something more?
TODAY, if you Google the issue, it’s very hard to find anything about it. That’s the way these things go. If it’s going to alarm people, it’s kept as “hush hush” as possible.
Whereas, if the decision is made to “push” an agenda, then you can’t get away from the endless messaging.
However, I did find this petition on Change.Org:
If you are Singaporean — or if you like the idea of traveling to Singapore — you might want to sign it, share it, and start talking about it.
The Petition’s Title: Protect Right to Refuse Vaccination without Criminal Penalty.
Here’s the verbiage for the petition:
In the heart of a nation that prides itself on the freedom and rights of its citizens, I find myself in a troubling position. As a resident of Singapore, I believe it is my fundamental human right and right as a citizen to have control over my own body and health decisions. The decision to vaccinate should be a personal choice, not a legal mandate that carries the threat of imprisonment.
While I acknowledge the importance of vaccinations in public health, it is crucial to respect personal autonomy and freedom. Each individual should have the right to assess, understand, and decide what is best for their body without fear of legal repercussions. The imposition of criminal penalties for refusing vaccination is an infringement on personal liberties.
Statistics show that the majority of the Singaporean population is vaccinated, indicating that most citizens are willingly participating in public health measures. However, for those who opt-out, the threat of jail time is a disproportionate response that does not align with the principles of personal freedom and bodily autonomy.
I urge the Singaporean government to reconsider current mandates that threaten legal action against individuals who choose not to vaccinate. Instead, let us focus on educating the public about vaccines and offering them as a choice rather than a compulsion.
By signing this petition, you support the protection of individual rights and freedoms. You stand for a future where decisions about our bodies are left to individuals, free from punitive measures. Let's come together to advocate for a policy change that respects personal choice and promotes the dignity of every citizen. Please sign this petition if you believe in the right to decide without the fear of criminal consequences. Together, we can make a difference.