12 Comments

Hi Amy, thanks for that interesting article, and as you correctly wrote it is once again another screaming Red Flag raised to the covid-vaccination madness. I am living in Thailand (Southern Isaan) since 2017, and have been quite active on two Thai Fora. The main one permanently banned me for my critiques on the lockdown, quarantaine, masking and vaccination policies. And in mean time all the posts that got me banned as a 'conspiracy anti-vaxxer' have turned out to be fully correct. But I am now active on another Forum, that allows my 'controversial' postings and my thread has become by far the most popular content-wise thread on that Forum. And so my question to you, whether I could re-post your article in that thread. Obviously I will mention the source, and it will probably result in some new Thai-based subscribers on your blog. Cheers - Peter BlueSphinx

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Absolutely you can repost! Finding like minded expats in Thailand has been difficult online and I am trying to expand my Substack as fast as I can! I gave up on theThaiger forums et cetera over a year ago there's no pushback to the narrative allowed. Where are you in Isaan? We have some land in Thad Phanom we've been thinking of building a house on...

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Thanks Amy. But as your substack-blog has international appeal, I think it's better not to use the comments section for exchanges of limited interest to your readers. Not that I am not willing to get in touch with you, on the contrary. But I propose to do that by you registering on the ThaiGer Talk Forum, and once you have done that to send a PM to BlueSphinx (my username). Also note that you will not have immediate access to the Controversial Covid Corner thread that I launched, and where many like-minded members exchange information and experience about covid. And that's because you need 'Bronze status' (which is automatically provided once you have made your 10th post) to be able to view/access that thread - this to protect the Forum from repercussions because of the MSM-narrative challenging content in that thread. Alternatively you can also e-mail me on this address > peterdldenis@gmail.com

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Hi Amy, A very good article, thank you, I have sent an email to you

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I agree with much of what you say.

However, and pardon the sarcasm, with the borders closed the Thai ladies can't find foreigner husbands.

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LOL that is indeed an alternative explanation! Of course I'm comparing completely closed borders 2020 to somewhat open to jabbed 2021. Some of these farang loving Thai ladies could have gotten pregnant in the first few months of 2020 before the world stopped, but some of their farang boyfriends might have also gotten jabbed just so they could see their boo in 2021. Curiously the only obviously pregnant woman I've seen in months was a Western woman with her Western fiance getting wedding pictures taken on the beach. I don't think that would explain that much of the large drop though: I know a lot of Thai people, even in touristy Phuket, who have normal Thai husbands and children, and up in Isaan where we have land and many Thai friends mass tourism and red light bars were always near non-existent. If a man is dedicated enough to his Thai lady to make babies he could get here...

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Hi BlueSplinx, Please contact me " rickbrimson@yahoo.co.uk " thank you.

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HI Rick > as requested I have sent you an e-mail right no from my peterdldenis@gmail.com e-mail account. Cheers!

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January 22, 2022
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You are absolutely correct! War and civil strife counterintuitively lead to population growth, which is why some of the highest birth rates are seen in places like Iran and Palestine. In times of uncertainty women are more likely to put faith in God and hope for the best, or perhaps they don't anticipate all of their children surviving to adulthood so they try to have more of them. A lot of the baby boom seen post world war 2 in many countries was a statistical artifact death rates were dropping fast due to improved nutrition and sanitation birth had a lag to catch up. Now women in many advanced countries invest everything into their one precious offspring or don't even bother since there's so many people already! Economic problems are more of a mixed bag though the closest comparison in Thailand would be the crisis in 1997 or so...

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January 23, 2022
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I hadn't heard about the demonstrations but did see the stillbirth and death rate increase you mentioned. Yes I do suspect mass depopulation as a motivation of the elites. I'm watching the live birth data space closely. Really a month by month breakdown is going to be best. I know in Thailand pregnant women were one of the first vaccine rollout groups so you'd be looking after April 2021 and seeing if the downturn gathered steam. It's going to be real bad picking up the pieces even if everyone turns this around right now. If not there might not be much of a life worth returning to...

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January 28, 2022
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I was aware of this hospital reporting. Such an alarming increase should be setting off alarm bells everywhere. Such a report if true and extrapolated out to other areas would indicate genocide. There was recent US military whistleblower testimony that there's been a 500% increase in infertility codes and a 200% increase in miscarriages. The original trials had a very low number of pregnant women in them they showed safety signals even though the CDC insisted the rate (13% in 2nd and 3rd trimester miscarriage, stillbirth) was in normal range. Many of these pregnancies had not resolved through fetal death or live birth yet so the number probably settled higher. Back when I was in school (my specialty area in Sociology was marriage and the family, demographics) you could actually chart miscarriage rates/preterm births by week of pregnancy. The vast majority of these unfortunate occurrences back then were in the 1st trimester, often quite early when some type of congenital abnormality prevented the fetus from growing or developing. The rates were quite low later in the pregnancy but started rising after prenatal jabs were pushed on pregnant women...

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January 29, 2022
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