Since the COVID War began last year, the Trends Journal has detailed the devastating socioeconomic and personal impact of the rules imposed by politicians under the guise to kill the coronavirus before the virus kills all of human life.
Back on 28 July, Robert Redfield, head of the CDC, was quoted on a webinar:
“We’re seeing, sadly, far greater suicides now than we are deaths from COVID. We’re seeing far greater deaths from drug overdose that are above excess that we had as background than we are seeing the deaths from COVID. This is why I keep coming back for the overall social being of individuals, is let’s all work together and find out how we can find common ground to get these schools open in a way that people are comfortable and their safe.”
Yet, some eight months later, many schools in the U.S. remain closed to full-time student classes.
Dumbing Down
A new CDC report shows that virtual/remote learning is far more damaging to children’s mental health than learning in classrooms. A survey of over 1,200 parents of kids 5- to 12-years-old shows that those students forced to learn from home are scoring far worse on tests than those attending classes.
Not only are kids suffering mental health breakdowns from forced remote learning, but there is also a spillover effect on their parents. According to the report, “Over four in 10 reported losing work, 26.6 percent had job stability concerns, and 13.5 percent faced child care challenges.”
TRENDPOST: As we have continually reported with facts and scientific data, the virus victims are mostly the elderly and those suffering from preexisting chronic conditions, and, according to the CDC, the recovery rate for those aged 1-20 is 99.997 percent.
Beginning with the call last year to “flatten the curve” and politicians deciding to force nations, states, and cities to “shelter-in-place,” a series of draconian restrictions that continue to be imposed lack scientific data. Indeed, as Gerald Celente has noted this past year, “They’re making this crap up.”
As we have also reported, for a year, the CDC had said students that are in school should be at least six feet apart, but now they shortened the distance to three feet… but they still advocate strongly for a full mask mandate.