9/24/2020

An Interview with Leonora Carrington



An Interview with Leonora Carrington


“THERE ARE THINGS THAT ARE NOT SAYABLE. THAT’S WHY WE HAVE ART.”
A good response to someone who says there are no women artists:
“All you have to do is open the door, walk down the passage, and you’ll find the street!”

Leonora Carrington was born into great wealth in 1917. She attended a series of convent schools from which she was expelled for a long list of rebellious acts, including writing backward and attempting to levitate. She rejected her coming-out as a debutante by conceiving and later publishing a short story in which she dressed a hyena in trailing robes and sent the animal to the party in her place. Carrington studied art in London until, at age nineteen, after seeing a Max Ernst painting in a surrealist exhibition catalog, she ran away with Ernst to Paris.

Once among the French surrealists, Carrington refused the role of muse. In 1938, she completed her painting Self-Portrait (Inn of the Dawn Horse), which hung from a tree branch alongside Ernst’s work as part of an art auction; it is now included in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She was one of only two women whose writing was included in Breton’s 1939 Anthology of Black Humor. (She typically wrote in French.) A year after the outbreak of World War II, Carrington suffered a breakdown after Ernst was sent to an internment camp, which she later wrote about in her memoir, Down Below (1944).

Carrington escaped the asylum and sailed for New York, settling in Mexico City, where she worked for the next seven decades, painting and writing short stories and novels, including the new Penguin classic The Hearing Trumpet (1976). Her work from this time was populated by women and half-human beasts floating in dreamscape images, which were drawn from myth, folklore, religious ritual, and the occult. In the 1970s, she painted posters for Mexican women’s liberation, pairing the saints and their miraculous actions with a feminist consciousness. Her work did not gain widespread international attention until she was in her nineties, and exhibitions were mounted in Mexico City, San Francisco, and London shortly before her death, in 2011.

In August 2009, I traveled with artist and writer Alisha Piercy and photographer Natalie Matutschovsky to Mexico City, where we were collaborating on a project for which we staged picnics throughout the city, inspired in part by Carrington’s iconography. We set out to find her, and by some small miracle—armed only with the telephone number of a hair salon—we did. (I ignored journalistic protocol and did not contact her in advance, as we’d heard she no longer gave interviews.)

We spent two afternoons speaking in her dark, chilly home—sparely furnished, though a tree grew through it. Striking, with an oval face and black eyes, she spoke slowly in her well-bred English, without sentimentality. When our conversation was through, I walked out her door, into the bright Mexican sunlight—the same door over which her friend the collector Edward James had once written, “This is the house of the Sphinx.”

—Heidi Sopinka

I. GARDEN

THE BELIEVER: What are you thinking about right now?

LEONORA CARRINGTON: I don’t discuss that.

BLVR: If you are not working on anything, what occupies you?

LC: Surviving. I’m not well. I think about death a lot.

BLVR: What do you think about?

LC: Well, you become closer to death, so that really tends to dominate everything else.

BLVR: Have you reached an acceptance?

LC: No, I have not. How can one accept the totally unknown? [Agitated] We know nothing whatever about it, even if it happens to everyone, to everybody! Animals, vegetables, minerals—everything dies. How can you reconcile with something you know nothing about? Is there anything else? What do you want to know?

BLVR: I have this longing for myths, for ritual, which you yourself have explored. There is no model for the passing-down of what has been collected in the interior life, that isn’t simply the collection of biographical facts. It’s difficult, as there are no words for what I’m looking for.

LC: There are things that are not sayable. That’s why we have art.

II. CIGARETTE

LC: I’ll do it. [She lights her own cigarette.] God, I don’t know who he is. [A man walks by and appears to be landscaping in her courtyard.]

BLVR: I am working on an art project in Mexico City that’s inspired by your work. Part of our project was to try and come and meet you. You’re now the same age [ninety-two] that the heroine Marian Leatherby was in your novel The Hearing Trumpet. I am currently writing a novel with a heroine who is also ninety-two. It felt like the right time to come and meet you.

LC: I never know if I’m ninety-two or ninety-three. I was born in 1917.

BLVR: The year of the Russian Revolution.

LC: Ah, yes, the Russians. I’ve never been to Russia.

BLVR: I think you would love it.

LC: I doubt it.

BLVR: Why?

LC: I don’t believe in communism.

BLVR: They’ve thrown away communism and wholeheartedly embraced capitalism. But Moscow—the architecture is so unexpected. It’s so large and ornate, it makes you feel small. As though you were in a fairy tale. The scale is huge.

LC: Oh?

BLVR: You have a lot of books. Do you read a lot?

LC: Not now. I have a bad eye.

BLVR: You must miss reading.

LC: Yes, I think I do.

BLVR: Why did you stop writing?

LC: I didn’t really stop. I just don’t deal with publishers anymore.

BLVR: Do you have unpublished writing?

LC: Probably, yes.

III. SURREALISTS

LC: What do you want to know?

BLVR: Are you working on anything right now, or thinking about anything right now?

LC: No. I’m not well. [Pauses] Too many years.

BLVR: You said you’re not working on anything, but if you were feeling better, might you start on something? Do you have any plans?

LC: No. I don’t talk about my plans. Especially as I don’t know what they are.

BLVR: Do you feel like you know less as you grow older, or more?

LC: I feel I know absolutely nothing. We know nothing about death. I think humanity knows very little. We have no idea. There are lots of theories.

BLVR: You’ve studied Zen Buddhism in the past. Does it help? Have they figured something out?

LC: I’m not enlightened, so I wouldn’t know. Do you have a light?

BLVR: Here you are. [Hands Carrington a lighter] Do you remember when you were in your mid-thirties? Did you feel that you knew more then?

LC: I don’t think I ever had the pretension of knowing. Nobody ever knows what death is.

BLVR: We think about it less when we’re younger.

LC: Do you need an ashtray?

BLVR: I can reach, thank you.

BLVR: I’m starting to think about death. A little bit more.

LC: Well, all of the thinking you’ll do, I doubt if you’re going to find out much.

BLVR: Your work continues to influence, and it is unique in how it approaches the accumulation of diverse myth and makes it transmutable to the present tense. The layering of your iconography. No matter who you are, there are lots of ways into your work.

LC: Well, a lot of the things they are doing now are a kind of simplification.

BLVR: Whose work do you admire?

LC: The surrealists. Duchamp, Max Ernst, Picasso. But I don’t see any point in discussing visual art for me. Other people can make their ideas.

BLVR: There is an interest in your work in part because we are currently in somewhat of a mythless culture. That’s part of my attraction to your work.

LC: Contemporary art has gotten so abstract that it’s practically nothing.

BLVR: I’ve been searching for myth, for ritual.

LC: I think ritual has to come on its own. I don’t think you can search for it. Where would you be searching?

BLVR: Within, I suppose.

LC: You’re not interested in Buddhism? I think they are very good.

BLVR: What was it that attracted you to Buddhism, given that you’re not a joiner, that you’re not interested in religion or politics?

LC: A saying, which is not mine: “Form is emptiness and emptiness is form.”

BLVR: How did that affect your work?

LC: I went on waiting for it to appear.

BLVR: Now it is easier for female artists to show their work, have it exhibited, have it accepted. It doesn’t seem as much of a struggle as it was for you.

LC: There was a time when female artists were totally invisible. There have always been female artists, but since females were considered to be an inferior animal, we don’t know too much about them.

BLVR: Were male artists supportive? If they had a great eye, they must have had recognition for female artists.

LC: Few of them, not all of them. One of them once said, “There are no women artists.” So I told him, “All you have to do is open the door, walk down the passage, and you’ll find the street!”

BLVR: Who was that?

LC: I won’t say. I haven’t seen him since.

BLVR: How did the Second World War affect your work?

LC: I was afraid to be trapped by the Nazis. It was a frightening time. We didn’t know that the Nazis weren’t going to take over the world. I lived in the south of France and then was in Spain for a while, but I was in a clinic.

BLVR: I’ve read about that [in Carrington’s Down Below, which academic Marina Warner has called one of the most lucid accounts of going insane]. You never went back to Spain?

LC: No.

BLVR: How do you think you survived that time in the clinic?

LC: I don’t know. I was young. In good health.

BLVR: We know from Down Below that you drew maps. What were the maps about?

LC: There were levels in the clinic. At the top, there were the people they considered to be hopelessly mad, and I was one. Then they moved me to a private cell. I was alone there, with a keeper.

BLVR: They gave you drugs.

LC: There were these terrible injections, from which, out of terror, you stopped being mad—more or less the theory.

BLVR: Your keeper was a man or a woman?

LC: She was a woman, a German with a love for the Nazis.

BLVR: Did she talk to you about that?

LC: No, because I didn’t let her.

BLVR: You said that you are not interested in politics.

LC: Well, I think when there are a great number of humans doing something, I begin to doubt it.

BLVR: You’re a nonconformist.

LC: Exactly. I’ve never been closely connected with politics. Though I more or less liked the anarchists. But I’ve never participated.

BLVR: Or in organized religion.

LC: Well, I’m a Roman Catholic. My mother was Irish, from the South, so, yes, I was put in a convent. After a few months I was expelled. They wrote my father and said, “This child does not collaborate with either work or play.”

BLVR: What were your memories of that time?

LC: I was miserable.

BLVR: Is that when you started to draw?

LC: No, I’ve always drawn.

BLVR: How old were you when you were expelled?

LC: About ten.

BLVR: And did you have any friends?

LC: None! I was very unpopular.

BLVR: Why?

LC: Because I’m not good at anything. I couldn’t play hockey. I was not good at religion.

BLVR: I think children are conformists. When they see a child that doesn’t fit in…

LC: Yes, you’re unpopular.

BLVR: Was there a moment that you felt you did belong? And whom with?

LC: The surrealists.

BLVR: Did you seek them out?

LC: I first heard of the surrealists from my mother, who gave me a book by Herbert Read. I thought, Ah! This I understand.

BLVR: That must have felt so incredible after many years of feeling isolated. And then you met the surrealists and became one?

LC: I already was one.

BLVR: Was there any point at which you felt you weren’t rebelling?

LC: When I met the surrealists.

BLVR: And now?

LC: Now I’m over ninety, and so I think a lot about my old age and what I cannot do and so on and so forth.

BLVR: Are there any gifts that come with loss, with old age?

LC: Not that I know of. [Laughs] What I’m doing right now is surviving. [Lights a cigarette] I’m addicted.

BLVR: You’ve smoked since you were at the convent?

LC: Yes, but hidden. There was a big garden and we hid under the bushes.

BLVR: How did you get cigarettes in a convent?

LC: That’s a good question. We seemed to get them all right. I probably brought them, and hid them.

BLVR: When you’re in a convent, you sleep there—there are no parents?

LC: You see them once every three months for a short time. It was terrible.

BLVR: And your brothers?

LC: They went to a Jesuit school.

BLVR: And your sons, did they go to school? They lived here with you, right?

LC: Yes. My husband [Emerico “Chiki” Weisz] was a photojournalist in Mexico. He had a theory that if he left Mexico they would put him in a concentration camp. He was Jewish and a Hungarian. He more or less despised his work, which is not very good. He just thought it was just a job.

BLVR: Was that difficult? You are so realized with your work, and he—

LC: What marriage is not difficult? You tell me.

BLVR: There is always some kind of conflict. But yours lasted a very long time [over fifty years].

LC: Yes.

BLVR: Your husband died quite recently. What was his condition near the end? Was he talkative?

LC: He just sat. He didn’t talk.

BLVR: In your younger years, did you talk? Were you a talkative couple?

LC: I don’t remember! I don’t think so. He never talked much. And I don’t speak Hungarian. We talked mostly in French.

IV. STUDIO

LC: My studio is upstairs, and it’s difficult for me to go up there now [gestures around the room]. These are all my paintings, as well as the horror comics.

BLVR: Horror comics?

LC: [Laughs] That’s what I call detective stories. But I’m interested in who the recent writers are.

BLVR: Should we stay for one more cigarette?

LC: Stay for one more. [Lights cigarette] I don’t like reading invented worlds. I like real.

BLVR: You have Malcolm Gladwell’s Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking.

LC: That’s quite intelligent.

BLVR: He says some of the most important decisions we make in our life happen without us thinking at all.

LC: Well, I don’t know if that’s true.

BLVR: He has another book about luck—how do happy and successful people get that way? How much is luck and how much is them working at it?

LC: I think there’s more luck than we think.

BLVR: Do you think things are predetermined?

LC: I’ve no idea. I think there are some things that happen because a person’s a certain way.

BLVR: You mean because you’re open to things?

LC: I think the only good idea Hitler ever had was to commit suicide—if he did.

BLVR: I think you can never escape the landscape of your childhood. Are there some things you miss?

LC: I like the seasons.

BLVR: You went to Paris last year for a retrospective of your work, at ninety-one. Do you think you will ever get back to England?

LC: I’m not a prophet.

 

 

 


The Female Persuasion


The Female Persuasion


Three Rings



A stranger arrives in an unknown city after a long voyage. He has been separated from his family for some time; somewhere there is a wife, perhaps a child. The journey has been a troubled one, and the stranger is tired. . . He moves with difficulty, his shoulders hunched by the weight of the bags he is carrying. Their contents are everything he owns, now. He has had to pack quickly. What do they contain? Why has he come?

So begins Daniel Mendelsohn's new book Three Rings: A Tale of Exile, Narrative, and Fate (University of Virginia Press, 2020). Mendelsohn, a classics scholar and humanities professor, is a natural story-teller and he has managed to turn a multi-century saga of literary criticism and history into an immensely entertaining, readable, and short(!) book. Three Rings originated as the Page-Barbour Lectures, which Mendelsohn delivered at the University of Virginia in 2019, and if only more literary criticism (and scholarship, in general) were delivered this way, it would have a much greater audience and impact.

There are actually three "strangers" or "rings" in Mendelsohn's book, as we shall see, but his story begins with Odysseus.

In Book 19 of Homer's Odyssey, the hero Odysseus has finally returned to Ithaca. Disguised, he has entered his own home, determined to murder his wife's suitors and announce himself to her after many years of wandering. An old woman from the household offers him the traditional welcome of washing his feet and she recognizes a scar on his thigh. It should be a moment of great suspense and excitement—the great Odysseus is home at last! But instead, Homer begins a long digression into the past. As Mendelsohn puts it, Homer does the unexpected. He delays. And then he delays some more.

At this suspenseful moment the poet chooses not to proceed to an emotional scene of reunion between the old woman and her long-lost master. Instead, Homer brings the narrative of that encounter to a halt as he begins to circle back into the past: of how Odysseus got his scar in the first place. . . But this ring turns out to require another, since (the author of the Odyssey assumes) we must understand why Odysseus happened to be visiting his grandfather [at whose house he received the wound] in the first place. And so the poet traces a second circle, spiraling even further back into time.

Eventually, Homer works his way back to the moment when the old woman recognizes Odysseus's scar and the narrative proceeds once again. These digressions into the past are ring compositions, a technique in which the narrative appears to stray away from its obvious direction only to eventually return to the point where it originally left off. "The material encompassed by such rings could be a single self-contained digression or a more elaborate series of interlocked narratives, each nested within another in the manner of Chinese boxes or Russian dolls."

Auerbach Mimesis

Mendelsohn says that he got the idea for this book during the writing of his previous book An Odyssey: A Father, A Son, and An Epic, when he was thinking about Eric Auerbach (1892-1957), a German Jewish scholar who left Germany in 1935 to live in Istanbul for more than a decade. It was there that Auerbach wrote his masterpiece Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature, which was first published in 1946 and remains in print today. (I still have the copy I studied in college fifty years ago.) Mendelsohn started to wonder about "the connections between political exile and narrative digression" in connection with Auerbach, and so Auerbach becomes the first of the three "rings" in his book.

In Auerbach's "epic journey through the literature of the West" there are "two cultural pillars" or styles into which all of literature could be divided: the Homeric or Greek technique, in which everything can be known and there exists, through the gods, a supernatural connection between all things; or the Hebrew style, which acknowledges that it is impossible to know everything and that the world is subject to interpretation. Mimesis, in part, tracks the ??? of these two styles throughout literary history.

Fenelon_Telemachus_Curll_1715

Mendelsohn's second "ring" is the story of François de Salignac de La Mothe-Fénélon (1651-1715), a Catholic archbishop and writer, whose 1699 book The Adventures of Telemachus he calls "a fan-fiction sequel to the Odyssey." Fénélon's Adventures were originally constructed as "ethically instructive tales based on Homer's Odyssey" that he used to teach the son of the Duke of Burgundy (and eventual heir to France's Louis XIV), but which evolved into a fantastically convoluted series of digressions loosely based on Homer's exploits.  Unfortunately for Fénélon, his "fantasia on Homeric themes" contained a number of lectures on good kingship, which Louis XIV took as an insulting critique of his own rule, and he banished the archbishop to an obscure post in far northern France.

Nevertheless, the Adventures became hugely popular and Mendelsohn speculates that it might have been the most widely read book in Europe throughout the eighteenth century until Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther came along in 1774. Not only that, but the Adventures was so widely received in the nineteenth century that it was translated into "Turkish, Tatar, Bulgarian, Romanian, Armenian, Albanian, Georgian, Kurdish, and Arabic, among many other languages." In the twentieth century, Fénélon deeply influenced Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time, a novel which suggests to Mendelsohn "that a vast series of digressions could themselves form the largest imaginable ring, one that embraces all of human experience."

Mendelsohn's third "ring" is W.G. Sebald. "The circles in Sebald's restless narration lead us to a series of locked doors to which there is no key." For Mendelsohn, Sebald is the embodiment of Auerbach's preference for the Hebrew approach over the Greek, for the style that "refuses to reveal" over the one that is "all-illuminating."

Auerbach's distrust of the Greek technique raises a larger question about the problems of representation in literature, about the means by which writers make their subjects seem "realistic." Naturally this question has plagued all kinds of artists as they have struggled with difficult subjects, one of the greatest and most difficult of these being, in our own time, the event that landed Auerbach in Istanbul: the German plan to exterminate the Jews of Europe during World War II. The difficulty of representation posed by this unimaginably destructive vent was most famously, if controversially, expressed in the oft-quoted dictum of Auerbach's fellow German refugee Theodore Adorno: "nach Auschwitz ein Gedicht ze schreiben, ist barbarisch," "to write a poem after Auschwitz is barbaric."                                                                                                                                          

In this section, Mendelsohn traces his personal attachment to each of Sebald's four key books of prose fiction, but focuses on The Rings of Saturn as "the most emblematic of this author's strange style." "The narrative rings, circles, digressions, and wanderings. . . we find in Sebald seem designed to confuse, entangling his characters in meanderings from which they cannot extricate themselves and which have no clear destinations." While Homer's rings eventually lead back to where they left off and to a new beginning, for Sebald "the twisting history of the world is written by the hiders."

Three Rings is a book you must read for yourself, to witness Mendelsohn as he unravels and lays bare the connections between Homer, Auerbach, Fénélon, Sebald, and others. In a way, it's ironic that Mendelsohn relates so intimately with those who believe in the "irretrievability of the past," because for him the stories of the past are vital to understanding the present. What he transmits so magically in Three Rings is his infectious passion for learning and sharing with others.

 

Terry | September 21, 2020 at 11:50 am |


https://sebald.wordpress.com/

9/23/2020

COVID19: Débunkage du narratif officiel

 

 

COVID19: Débunkage du narratif officiel

 

Chers amis et compagnons de ré-information,

Je vous propose 10 points de débunkage à propos du narratif officiel de la crise sanitaire et des croyances du grand public autour du Covid :

 

1) Le covid19 est un virus dangereux

Le Sars-cov2, alias Covid19, est potentiellement dangereux pour certaines catégories de la population (tout comme les autres infections respiratoires), sinon,... pas tant que ça. Du moins, pas autant que ce que l’on a cru au début.

Le taux de mortalité est évalué entre 0,2 et 0,65% [1]. C’est 5 à 15 fois moins que les 3% donnés en début de pandémie. De plus, la mortalité par tranche d’âge est éloquente [2] : seules les personnes âgées payent, malheureusement, un lourd tribut à cette maladie.

Sans parler du fait que beaucoup de « morts covid » (probablement en majorité) sont en fait des décès de patients déjà très faibles chez qui le virus a joué un rôle marginal [3].

Les cas graves chez les personnes en dessous 50 ans et en bonne santé sont totalement anecdotiques ! En tout et pour tout, on observe une large proportion d’asymptomatiques [4] ou peu symptomatiques (l’équivalent d’un rhume ou d’un état grippal), moins de 5% de patients covid+ doivent être hospitalisés, et 1 à 2% de cas graves [5,6] pour l’ensemble des contaminés qui sont en majorité des personnes âgées et fragiles.

Avec près de 80% d’asymptomatiques [7] et une médiane des décès à plus de 80 ans [8]… On peut trouver pire comme affection.

 

2) Le virus est inconnu

Ce virus est nouveau, mais on ne peut plus dire qu’il soit inconnu à l’heure actuelle. C’est un cousin du 1erSRAS, identifié en Chine en 2002, et bien documenté. Après quasiment 1 an d’observations, c’est le sujet pour lequel il y a eu le plus de publications médicales scientifiques en 2020.

Ce virus, bien qu’il reste quelques zones d’ombres autour de lui, on commence à bien le connaitre…

 

3) Il n’y a pas de traitements

Faux ! L’orthodoxie méthodologique protocolaire des milieux académiques acoquinés au monde de l’industrie pharmaceutique s’attache aux essais statistiques randomisés en double aveugle. Mais ce n’est ni de la médecine, ni de la science. La médecine c’est soigner les gens, quant à la science elle consiste principalement en l’observation… Et dans ce domaine, l’observation faite par les praticiens de terrain à travers le monde  a mis en évidence plusieurs associations qui donnent de bons résultats [9] : l’association Hydroxychloroquine/Azithromycine/Zinc [10] ou l’association Macrolide/Céphalosporine/Zinc [11] semblent éviter les formes graves à condition d’être prises tôt dans l’infection. Utilisée en Afrique, l’Artemisia annua semble aussi avoir une efficacité contre le covid [12].

Aux stades plus avancés, l’on peut recourir aux corticoïdes comme la dexaméthasone [13], les anticoagulants[14] pour éviter les phénomènes de thromboses, ou encore l’oxygénothérapie [15].

L’on n’aura peut-être plus besoin d’intuber les patients en soins intensifs, qui en réalité étaient arrivés à l’hôpital à des stades très avancés de la maladie car on avait choisi de ne pas soigner les gens durant l’épidémie !

 

4) Toutes les personnes touchées ont des séquelles

Tout d’abord, un grand nombre de viroses peuvent engendrer des séquelles organiques à des niveaux divers, y compris cardiaques ou neurologiques [16,17] .

Ici, il est impossible de se prononcer sans avoir plus de recul. Mais ce tableau semble loin de représenter la réalité.

Selon l’académie française de médecine [18], 30% des patients hospitalisés présentent diverses séquelles 6 semaines après la rémission.

Ces séquelles vont de la fatigue aux difficultés respiratoires en passant par des troubles neurologiques, rénaux ou cardiaques. Il semblerait que ces séquelles soient potentiellement réversibles, mais encore une fois il est trop tôt pour être catégorique.

Donc il s’agirait d’un tiers des patients hospitalisés (qui sont déjà une minorité des cas- 5%) qui présenteraient des séquelles à des degrés divers.

Quant aux graves atteintes pulmonaires peu réversibles, on les observe surtout dans les stades très avancés [19], et les intubations, dont l’utilité médicale est remise en question [20], y ont fortement contribué.

 

5) Il va y avoir/ on assiste à une deuxième vague

Le concept de deuxième vague ne repose sur aucun modèle épidémiologique d’infections virales. Il se base sur l’épisode de la pandémie de grippe espagnole il y a un siècle [21], mais non transposable aux conditions actuelles.

L’on nous a prédit, voire annoncé, cette deuxième vague à de nombreuses reprises depuis la fin du pic épidémique européen d’avril, mais ce fut à chaque fois des pétards mouillés.

Nul ne peut prédire l’avenir, mais les modèles épidémiologiques viraux observent des constantes [22] : un pic épidémique où l’infection est très virulente, puis s’estompe. Ensuite, soit le pathogène disparaît (comme ce fut le cas du 1er SRAS) soit il mute, s’adapte à son hôte et devient cyclique/saisonnier (comme c’est le cas de la grippe et d’autres virus endémiques [23]).

A ce jour, en Europe, aucune reprise observable en terme clinique ou de hausse significative de la mortalité n’a été observée [24].

Nous ne savons pas de quoi l’avenir est fait, en revanche, les spéculations catastrophistes vont bon train !

 

6) Il y a une augmentation des « cas »

Il ne s’agit pas de « cas » au sens médical ou clinique du terme. Ce qu’il se passe dans de nombreux pays d’Europe, c’est que les capacités et les politiques de test ont été élargies [25].

Ce que les autorités, ainsi que la presse, recensent sont uniquement des tests sérologiques (prise de sang) ou PCR (écouvillon dans le nez) protocolaires où l’on détermine si un individu a été en contact avec le virus. Mais cela ne signifie pas nécessairement que la personne est malade ni contagieuse [26]. D’autant que 75% des positifs sont asymptomatiques [27], cela signifie, au pire qu’ils sont en période d’incubation, ou que leur système immunitaire a géré le virus et que le patient est potentiellement immunisé.

Voilà comment faire passer de bonnes nouvelles pour des mauvaises !

Sans compter que les tests PCR sont très sensibles et font sortir jusqu'à 90% de "cas" sans infection en cours ni contagiosité ! [28] Et à raison de 3% sur l'ensemble des tests... cela correspond à la moyenne en termes de taux de positivité en France et en Belgique notamment depuis l’élargissement des campagnes de testing… [29]

 

7) Il faut imposer des règles à tout le monde pour protéger les personnes vulnérables

Il s’agit du sophisme sur lequel repose toute la politique sanitaire coercitive si l’on tient compte des données épidémiologiques par tranche d’âge.

Oui, les personnes âgées et/ou présentant des facteurs de risque sont invités à se protéger. Mais le reste de la population n’a pas à maintenir toutes ces règles sanitaires étant donné qu’elles présentent peu de risques et sont donc potentiellement un vivier pour construire l’immunité collective de la population. Et cette immunité collective, c’est réellement le meilleur moyen de protéger les personnes à risque à moyen terme [30].

Au début de l’épidémie, on a imposé toutes les mesures sanitaires car l’on n’avait pas encore d’immunité collective, aujourd’hui les mesures qui sont prisent empêchent de l’atteindre. Comme pour l’affaire des masques, c’est à n’y rien comprendre…

 

8) Le vaccin est LA panacée, notre « seule chance »

Tout d’abord, il n’est pas certain qu’il puisse aboutir, ni qu’il soit totalement efficace.

Quand bien même, quel intérêt y a-t-il à vacciner toute une population pour une affection aussi peu létale dans les tranches d’âges qui correspondent à la population active ?

Il faut également signaler que les vaccins contre les ribovirus, comme le covid, sont extrêmement compliqués à élaborer dans la mesure où ces virus mutent très vite [31].

Ajoutez à cela que ce vaccin semble être élaboré à la hâte, sans recul, avec des technologies inédites [32]… Faudra y réfléchir à deux fois avant d’accepter une vaccination massive, sachant que selon certaines études, on constate une immunité (croisée) déjà présente chez certains individus allant jusqu’à 50% de la population [33]. Ce qui expliquerait cette large proportion d’asymptomatiques.

Si un vaccin est élaboré, il devra être réservé aux personnes à risque exclusivement. Mais l’imposer ou le conseiller à l’ensemble de la population, à ce stade, c’est une ineptie !

 

9) Le confinement et le port du masque obligatoire sont des solutions efficaces

Le confinement et l’obligation du port du masque sont des mesures politiques et non médicales. Elles ne reposent sur aucune preuve scientifique d’efficacité. ABSOLUMENT RIEN !

D’ailleurs, les pays n’ayant imposés aucune de ces mesures (la Suède, un cas intéressant [34], la Biélorussie) ou de manière allégée (Allemagne, Pays-Bas) ont peu ou prou les mêmes courbes épidémiques [35] sans surmortalité significative, et s’en sortent même mieux que les pays qui ont imposé ces règles de manière drastique (Belgique, France, Italie,Espagne)!

Que l’on soit clair :

Il y a une différence entre dépister, isoler et traiter des malades contagieux (comme il s’est toujours fait en matière d’épidémie), et confiner aveuglément l’ensemble de la population sans discernement et sans prise en charge de proximité. Certaines études ont même montré l’effet inverse de celui escompté [36], sans parler de la mortalité secondaire (suicides, maladies non dépistées) ainsi que des conséquences sociales et économiques catastrophiques.

Il y a aussi une différence entre porter CORRECTEMENT, de manière hygiénique, un masque de protection type FFP2 ou chirurgical dans les lieux clos et bondés en phase de pic épidémique lorsque le risque est grand (on nous avait d’ailleurs dit que c’était inutile à l’époque), et imposer de porter des bouts de tissus ou des masques chirurgicaux mal utilisés, sans règles d’hygiène préalable, y compris en extérieur et en dehors d’un pic épidémique par-dessus le marché. C’est de la grosse foutaise, pardon !

Non définitivement, le confinement aveugle et le port du masque obligatoire entraînent plus d’inconvénients que d’avantages escomptés [37,38].

 

10) Les autorités savent ce qu'elles font

Il est dans certains esprits l’idée que la classe dirigeante a le pouvoir parce qu’elle le mérite ou qu’elle a une capacité à diriger. C’est une croyance qu’il paraît urgent de réviser !

Le système politique et le pouvoir hiérarchique des instances autoritaires en général fonctionnent par conformisme et cooptation, certains disent même médiocratie. [39] C’est-à-dire que les hauts dirigeants choisissent à des postes subalternes des individus plutôt médiocres mais obéissants et reconnaissants.

Dans ce contexte, les personnes qui cherchent à accéder à des postes de pouvoir et de responsabilité sont rarement compétentes, honnêtes ou bienveillantes. Albert Jaccard avait prévenu en 1994 déjà : « Nous sommes en train de sélectionner les gens les plus dangereux » disait-il.

Ce sont des gens qui avouent rarement leurs erreurs, persistent dans leurs fourvoiements et ont leur ambition carriériste comme principal objectif.

Sans parler de leurs conseillers technocrates, souvent en conflits d’intérêts évidents, qui ont des visions totalement déconnectées des réalités et agissent plus par idéologie que pragmatisme.

Un sacré cocktail !

 

C’est pourquoi, en conclusion, il est urgent de mettre fin à cette hystérie politico-médiatique ainsi qu’aux mesures sanitaires contre-productives, anti-démocratiques et sans fondements médicaux ni scientifiques.

 

ANNES BOURIA - Pharmacien

 

Pour plus d’infos-> TRANSPARENCE-CORONAVIRUS.BE ou suivez-nous sur notre page FB Transparence-coronavirus

 

( https://jdmichel.blog.tdg.ch/archive/2020/09/14/covid19-debunkage-du-narratif-officiel-309050.html )

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