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Here we are in the middle of an international crisis, and yet we need to take a pause to discuss something else.

It so happens that it was this very week six years ago when the Covid lockdowns were imposed.

Given everything that's happened since, that seems like ancient history (though on the other hand, it's somehow also hard to believe that it's already been six years).

Even though we've got another big thing on our hands, we can't pass over days like these. You know the pattern: the regime does something destructive, it then develops a narrative in which it is actually the hero and people like you and me are the villains, and then its kept media and "educators" make sure that version gets drilled into everyone's heads.

One thing that will make the official Covid narrative more challenging to maintain is the presence at the National Institutes of Health (and now also at the Centers for Disease Control) of Jay Bhattacharya, who had a very different position on the so-called "mitigation measures."

So on some level they'll have to admit there had been another perspective, though they can also try to pretend that because he was appointed during the Trump Administration Jay was "anti-science," despite a stellar publication record and being a professor at Stanford.

I was just looking back at some photos of the days and weeks immediately before the world changed. In February we were in London, at the former Hammersmith Odeon, at a Dream Theater performance, and I snapped a picture with everyone's phone lights on -- none of us knew what was about to happen, so it was a final glimpse at the Before Time.

Just days before the restrictions came to New York City in March 2020, there we are in a nice photo having lunch with the great Gene Epstein (formerly of Barron's) and his wife, Hisako.

I don't know what it is about those pictures that my wife and I cherish so much. Maybe a sense of innocence -- we knew the world's regimes were destructive and evil, but we had no idea just what was coming, and the defenses that ordinary people would offer for the insanity.

The whole thing changed my views of mankind for the worse. I thought for sure on a mass scale people would fight back. I thought they valued their lives enough not to let them be stolen indefinitely -- especially after the emerging data made clear even to a damn fool that nothing these regimes was doing to us had made the slightest bit of difference.

That was also when I started to realize (belatedly, I know) that there just might be something wrong with the medical establishment.

Remember the "clean pens" and the "dirty pens" at the doctor's office, and that this persisted long after the official line had become that Covid didn't transmit via surfaces? So even from their own perspective the pen thing made no sense, but there it was.

And a good chunk of you reading this right now joined me during those dark days. I appreciate that support so much.

The last book of original material I'd written until Covid came out in 2011, and I had thought I was retired from writing books forever.

But the Covid situation was so grotesque, and the official line so transparently false, that I could not bear the thought of letting all my work on it vanish into the ether, so I came out of retirement to write Diary of a Psychosis: How Public Health Disgraced Itself During COVID Mania.

For the audiobook version I had to be the voice myself, so the book would have just that combination of sarcasm and contempt that the subject demanded.

Treat yourself on this anniversary:

 
Tom Woods

P.S. Please recall this upcoming deadline.

The background, in the form of a real example:

A commercial appraisal company supercharged its business by having AI gather, organize, and analyze comparable property data that an appraiser would normally have to spend hours hunting down. It gathers data from several sources, and product a coherent report with narrative sections and figures in minutes, saving 8-10 hours per report.

Imagine the equivalent being applied to your business, or to your personal life.


Yes, this technology really can act as a personal or administrative assistant to you -- you send it text messages and it can perform tasks for you.

We're talking about daily reports, inbox summaries, news summaries from your preferred sites and according to your interests, follow-up reminders, website monitoring, and indeed, personal research assistants: ask it to file things, summarize things, look things up, remember things, run tasks for you, etc.

That sounds amazing to most people -- and you can reclaim MANY hours for yourself this way -- but they have no idea how to make it do these things, and people who do know how seem like magicians.

Well, Woods World is about to learn how to be that kind of magician, and since you're part of Woods World, you should be part of this, too, especially during the early-bird period that is rapidly coming to an end (the bonuses alone will have you salivating):

 






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Tom Woods · PO Box 701447 · Saint Cloud, FL 34770 · USA