Replying to Avatar Kudzai Kutukwa

Why did choreographed dance routines by nurses emerge simultaneously across continents during a declared global emergency? If hospitals were truly overwhelmed with dying patients, would staff have the time, energy, or emotional capacity for elaborate TikTok videos? Were the dancing nurses a test to identify who would comply, who would stay silent, and who would resist? What happens to a society when questioning observable reality becomes socially punishable? Were the dancing nurses the beginning of a larger social experiment in cognitive obedience?

How could two mutually exclusive realities; “overrun hospitals” and “dancing medical staff”, coexist without public outrage? Did each subsequent contradiction; masks, mandates, lockdowns, vaccines build upon the first one to deepen submission? Have we been conditioned to equate compliance with virtue, and skepticism with selfishness? How does fear make populations easier to manipulate into moral conformity? Why do official acknowledgments of "overreach" or "errors" come years later without accountability?

Were the dancing nurses the state’s way of mocking the very people it was supposedly protecting? How many people laughed, clapped, or shared those videos without realizing they were part of the spectacle? What psychological need is fulfilled by publicly demonstrating compliance? Why did people feel morally superior for following rules that kept changing, rather than questioning why the rules kept changing? Were the dancing nurses a minor curiosity, an irrelevant sideshow in a larger crisis, or were they the moment when power showed its face and most of us chose to look away?

https://blossom.primal.net/c1f6d6033d6c2a739d8d37fee3bde141e47a7e9dbbc57296597c3e7a370e1418.mp4

You have expressed this point well. I like the way you have posed several questions about the motive and symbolism of this event.

At the time I was working as at a school and I explained to the students this was evidence the government had been lying about the severity of covid. They all shouted me down and said the nurses were all overworked (they weren't).

So what it showed me is people just didn't get it and still don't.

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Questions are the easiest way to get to the truth and check one’s understanding. You are also absolutely correct to say that a lot of people don’t see it, and they may never see it. The plandemic was just the separation of those that see from those that don’t