|     The Shepp Report Special Edition 
  Deadly Silence! 
              May 20, 2020     
        
          
            
              Victims Of The Disturbing Relationship Of Dr. Fauci, W.H.O., The DNC, Radical Western Media And The CCP   
          
            
              
                
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 Photo Source: EpochTimesMagazine |  
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                              "Silenced: Stories Of Citizens Suppressed For Speaking The Truth About The CCP Virus."   Article by Cathy He and Eva Fu, April 1, 2020, Epoch Times Magazine   
                            "Since last December, the Chinese regime has muzzled  citizens who have sought to reveal the true situation of the CCP Virus outbreak  that originated in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. Those suppressed have included whistleblower doctors,  citizen journalists, scholars, and business people.  Below are some of their stories. The Epoch Times  refers to the novel coronavirus, which causes the disease COVID-19, as the CCP  virus because the Chinese Communist Party’s cover up and mismanagement allowed  the virus to spread throughout China and create a global pandemic.   Whistleblower  Doctors
                              Li Wenliang. (Courtesy of  Li Wenliang) 
 Li Wenliang 
                            Li Wenliang, a 34-year-old  ophthalmologist at the Wuhan Central Hospital, was among the first people to  publicize information about the outbreak in Wuhan.   'Seven ‘SARS-like’ cases from the  Huanan seafood market have been confirmed,' he wrote on Chinese social media app  WeChat, in a chat group with hundreds of his former medical school classmates.  He attached a screenshot of a diagnosis report.  That was Dec. 30, 2019, a day before  Wuhan health officials acknowledged that there was a mysterious viral pneumonia  outbreak.  Despite Li’s reminder to not 'spread it  externally,' screenshots of the conversation showing his full name quickly  proliferated on the internet. On Jan. 3, police reprimanded him along with  seven other medical professionals for spreading 'rumors' online.   The police statement said he had  violated the law.   
                              'The public security department hopes  you can proactively cooperate with our work, listen to the urging of the  police, and stop illegal activities from now. Can you achieve that?' He wrote  'yes.'   'Don’t go against the authorities,  don’t wear masks, don’t make careless remarks,' hospital  colleague Zhao Chen recalled a department director as saying, after  Li was summoned by police. Zhao told state media in a since-deleted  interview that the hospital originally planned to fire Li.  Days later, Li contracted the virus  while operating on an asymptomatic patient for glaucoma. He died on Feb. 7,  leaving behind a pregnant wife and a young son. Shaken by his death, Chinese  citizens held vigils in mourning and began a wider call for free speech.   At least 200 health workers at Li’s  hospital have contracted the virus. Three of Li’s colleagues have died. On March 19, Wuhan police withdrew the  statement about Li and issued an apology, saying they will 'carefully  draw a lesson' from the incident.        Ai  Fen [Photo New York Post] 
Ai  Fen  
                            Ai Fen, an emergency surgeon at the  hospital, later revealed that she was the 'whistle provider' who gave  the diagnosis report to Li. Realizing that the virus could be  contagious, she required everyone in the emergency department to wear  masks.  Police didn’t go after Ai, but she  received an 'unprecedented, very harsh admonition' from her superiors.  'Many, many times, I thought how nice  it would be if we could turn back the clock,' she told Chinese magazine  Portrait, adding that she regretted not telling more doctors about the danger.  'If I knew what it would be like today,  no matter if I got criticized or not, I would have spread it all around,' she  said.  'Someone has to stand up and tell the  truth. … There has to be different voices in this world, right?'      Citizen Reporters    Fang Bin 
 Fang Bin in a video  posted on Feb. 4, 2020. (Screenshot/YouTube) Fang Bin 
                            Fang Bin, a Wuhan clothes salesman,  began filming his trips to hospitals around the locked-down city and posting  the videos online in late January. The scenes showed long lines outside  hospitals, patients clinging to life, and distraught family members. In one video that went viral, Fang  counts eight body bags in a van parked outside a hospital. 'So many dead,' he  says with a sigh. 'This is too many.'  Fang then walks into a room in the  hospital, where doctors are seen working around a patient who had apparently  just died.  
                              'Who is he?' Fang asks the man. 'My father,' the man cries.
 'He’s gone,' Fang says, after speaking  to the doctors.
 That evening, around half a dozen  masked men in hazmat suits knocked on his door, demanding to take his  temperature. Fang, who recorded the incident, said his temperature was normal  and asked them to come back with an inspection warrant. The men forced their  way into his house, confiscated his electronic devices, and took him to a  police station. There, police questioned him about his videos, Fang later  recounted.  Less than two weeks later, Fang went  missing. His friends told The Epoch Times that Fang had been detained.    Chen Qiushi 
 
                            
                              
                                Chinese  citizen journalist Chen Qiushi speaks in front of a convention center-turned  makeshift hospital amid a viral outbreak in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei  Province, on Feb. 4, 2020. (Courtesy of Chen Qiushi via AP)
 Chen Qiushi 
                            Chen Qiushi, a 34-year-old  lawyer-turned-citizen-journalist from eastern China, arrived in Wuhan on Jan.  24, a day after the city was placed under lockdown. Armed with a smartphone, he  said he wanted to document stories about the city’s residents. 'What sort of a journalist are you if  you don’t dare rush to the frontlines?' he said in his first video in Wuhan,  filmed with a selfie stick, from the railway station where he had just  disembarked.  In just over two weeks, he published  more than 100 posts on his YouTube and Twitter accounts—both platforms are  banned in China—that drew millions of views. He filmed interviews with locals  who had lost loved ones, patients lying on temporary beds lining hospital hallways,  and, according to Chen, a body left under a blanket outside an emergency  ward.  In one hospital, a woman in a  protective mask holds up the body of a relative in a wheelchair, whose head is  seen drooping downward.    
                              'What’s wrong with him?' Chen asked the  woman. 'He has already passed,' she said.
 The work took a toll on Chen.   'I’m scared. In front of me is the  virus. Behind me is China’s legal and administrative power,' he said in an  emotional video, recorded in his hotel room on Jan. 30.   Authorities have harassed his parents,  who live in eastern China, probing for his location, Chen said. Then, he said  through tears, while pointing at the camera: 'I’m not afraid of dying. Why  should I be afraid of you, Communist Party?' On Feb. 7, his mother, in a video  shared on his Twitter account, said Chen had gone missing the day before.  Chen’s friend Xu Xiaodong, a prominent  mixed martial arts fighter, later said in a YouTube video that Chen had been  forcibly quarantined, but didn’t show signs of symptoms.    Li Zehua 
 
                            
                              
                                Li Zehua, 25, a former  state broadcast CCTV anchor, during a live stream on Feb. 26, 2020.  (Screenshot) Li Zehua 
                            Li Zehua, a former anchor for Chinese  state broadcaster CCTV, was the third video blogger arrested in the outbreak  epicenter of Wuhan.  'I don’t want to shut my eyes and ears.  … I’m doing this so that more young people like me can stand up,' Li, 25, said  in a passionate speech live-streamed on YouTube, before police entered the  hotel and presumably detained him.  Li arrived alone in Wuhan by train on  Feb. 12, tracing the steps of Chen Qiushi and Fang Bin, who had been arrested  by local police. It was 'not by coincidence'—he said in his first YouTube  video—that the first hotel he checked in was right next to where Chen had  stayed.   Over the two weeks, before the police  got him, he visited the Baibuting residential compound, where many became  infected after attending a large-scale banquet, interviewed a funeral home  worker, and went to a local train station where migrant workers were said to be  stranded.   On his way back from visiting a local virology  lab, however, he realized he was being chased.   'I’m driving really fast. … Please help  me,' he said breathlessly from under a mask.  Hours later, plainclothes police  knocked on his hotel door.   He at first refused to let them in. He  turned his camera on, and began alluding to the student-led Tiananmen  pro-democracy protests in 1989, which came to a bloody end after Beijing  deployed tanks and guns. Li lamented the ignorance of Chinese youth to recent  history, the protests being a heavily censored topic in China. 'I feel that it’s unlikely that I will  not be taken away and quarantined. But I want to make this clear: I am not  ashamed to face myself, nor my parents, the Communication University of China  where I graduated from … and this country,' he said shortly before he opened  the door and let the police in. The police confiscated his phone and laptop,  and cut off the signal.   Ren Zhiqiang during the  2006 High-End Economic Forum at Luxehills International Club in Chengdu,  Sichuan Province, China, on Jan. 7, 2006.    Businessman   Ren  Zhiqiang 
 
                            
                              
                                Ren Zhiqiang during the 2006 High-End Economic Forum at Luxehills International Club in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China, on Jan. 7, 2006. (China Photos/Getty Images) Ren  Zhiqiang  
                            Dubbed by Chinese media as 'the cannon'  for his fierce, unreserved criticism, 69-year-old Chinese real estate tycoon  Ren Zhiqiang went missing days after he took aim at the Beijing regime.   In a scathing article published online  in early March, he criticized authorities for their handling of the outbreak  and the censorship of internet information. 
                               'This outbreak of the Wuhan pneumonia  has verified the reality: when all media   ‘take on the surname of the Party,’  the people are abandoned,' he wrote.  'Without media to represent people’s  interests and report on the truth, people are left to the harms of both the  virus and a seriously diseased system.'  Ren criticized the Chinese Communist  Party for praising its achievements during a February teleconference with top  leaders.  'The truth as seen from the outbreak is  that the Party is defending its own interests,' he said.   'There was no investigation into the  causes of the outbreak, no one reflecting and taking on the responsibility.  Instead, they attempt to cover up the truth with all kinds of grand  accomplishments.'  On March 12, Ren became  incommunicado.  He’s not the only one recently punished  for criticizing the authorities’ outbreak response. Xu Zhangrun, a legal  scholar at the prestigious Tsinghua University, was placed under house arrest  after he published an article, titled 'Angry People Are No Longer Afraid,' in  early February, denouncing the regime’s hypocrisy.   'It is true that the present level of  popular fury due to the handling of the epidemic is volcanic; people thus  enraged may, in the end, also cast aside their fears,' he wrote."    
                            
                              
                                
                                  This article was published in The Epoch  Times’ CCP Virus special edition magazine.    Above article by Cathy He and Eva Fu, April 1, 2020, Epoch Times Magazine   Subscribe Today To The Epoch Times 
                          
                            Freedom Is Knowledge receives no compensation for asking you to subscribe. For conservatives, the Epoch Times is an excellent resource for your right to know the truth outside the dangerous spin of the globalist news outlets owned by  corporations such as Comcast and AT&T, to name a few. - Webmaster    |  |        
        
          
            
              
                
                  
                    Is The Science In On Mask Protection From COVID-19? Maybe Not. What the Obama mainstream media is doing to silence U.S. doctors on behalf of a corrupted DNC under the leadership of Pelosi and Schumer in our U.S. Congress is not unlike the personal stories you have just read about the CCP.  I hope you let that sink in, seeing how fast your freedoms can evaporate under the watch of 1.) some elected state governors, 2.) their health officials, 3.) city mayors, 4.) an Obama weaponized CIA, FBI, 5.) local police directed by authorizes and 5.) Ruth Bader Ginsburg's ACLU along with our 6.) U.S. Supreme Court that Senator Schumer threatened.  The United States Senate did nothing to reel in State Senator Schumer, who represents the failed New York City government lead by an anti-police health commissioner and an elected communist mayor by a vast majority of progressive Democrat-lead voters.  If you thought America would last forever, you can see for yourself how fast it's Constitution can start to fail in only weeks. It is why our founders warned about the Republic they handed to the people, warning if you can keep it. - Webmaster   Click Here To Watch if this video has been taken down by the dangerous censors at YouTube, which side with the corrupt leadership of W.H.O. and its relationship with the Communist Chinese Party (CCP.)  
        
          
            
              
                
                  Neurological Surgeon Russell Blaylock says that by wearing a mask, "the exhaled viruses will not be able to escape and will concentrate in the nasal passages, enter the olfactory nerves and travel into the brain." (See this study on headaches.)  Wikipedia reported on Dr, Blaylock, "Blaylock completed his general surgical internship and neurosurgical residency at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, SC. He was licensed to practice Neurological Surgery in North Carolina between May 6, 1977 and December 15, 2006. He is retired as a clinical assistant professor of neurosurgery from the University of Mississippi Medical Center and is currently a visiting professor in the biology department at Belhaven University, a Christian university in Mississippi. He is associated with the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons and was on the editorial board of their journal." - Webmaster                              
                  
                    
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