Question Development Team

Context

Many people blindly believe whatever the media or health bureaucrats tell them.

A lot of the information concerning the COVID narrative is false. Such as:

  • COVID is a great risk to the whole population
  • Everyone will eventually catch COVID
  • The risks of dying from COVID are high
  • There are no effective early treatments. (Stay at home and hope for the best. If things get bad then go to the hospital).
  • The vaccines are “safe and effective”

The purpose of this team is to develop simple questions to create a “spark of curiosity” that will make people think and look for the real answers for themselves.

There is nothing more powerful than the “emotion of the inventor” 1). i.e. the emotion one gets when one discovers a new idea or insight by oneself. Giving people answers will rob them of this emotion. So…

Don't give answers. Develop questions that will create a spark of curiosity. Plant the seed and let it grow on its own.

Purpose

Reach as many people as possible, even random people we meet each day, by asking them questions that will cause them to rethink their position concerning the COVID narrative.

The questions can be extremely simple. They should never be confrontational.

They may be (potential) conversations starters, if people respond to them positively.

We will develop different questions for different:

  • Contexts
  • Audiences
    • Random (unknown) person. (Teller, clerk, etc…)
    • Close family or friend
    • Work colleague
  • Conversations
    • In passing
    • Casual
    • In depth

Outcomes

Develop and refine questions for different situations, that will cause people to rethink their position regarding the COVID narrative.

Review and refine the questions on a weekly basis. (Refine the style, structure and wording of the questions.)

Team members may keep daily notes to record which questions work best in which situations, and which ones produce the best conversations, to ultimately cause people to change their views.

Some of the questions should be linked to specific wiki pages that we can send people to, in order to find more information?

Proposed Questions

  1. why are some vaccines approved in one country, but not others? If they approved by the WHO, shouldn't they be approved worldwide? (Examples: moderna under age 30, astra zeneca, covaxin, sinovac, novavax)
  2. why are toddlers kicked off airplanes for not wearing a mask?
  3. what would be a tolerable level of severe adverse events caused by Covid-19 vaccines?
  4. Dr. Fauci and Dr. Wollensky said that VAERS numbers are unreliable because it includes people who died in car accidents. How many people Whom died in car accidents are listed in VAERS?
  5. why is the COVID case fatality rate so much lower in Asia and Africa compared to the West?
  6. why did Fauci decline a promotion to remain the NIAID director?
  7. how many COVID patients had Dr. Fauci treated?
  8. If some people will suffer a severe adverse event from COVID vaccination, then is it ethical to mandate vaccination?
  9. why doesn't the CDC recommend losing weight?
  10. how often should children change their mask during the school day?
  11. isn't it strange that the childhood COVID death rate is not significantly higher in Europe where the school children were not required to wear masks?

Resources

Anyone is free to join.

  • Team
    • Robin
    • Kalev
    • Brian
  • NocoDB
    • Grid View (NOTE: hover over a cell to view a tooltip, which makes it easier to read the content. Also, you can see new submissions in the grid view, by clicking on the “reload” button.)
  • Wiki (This page)

Timeframe

Ongoing.

References

(Fill in)

1)
“What is this thing called Theory of Constraints and how should it be implemented” by Eliyahu M. Goldratt
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