Thinking small is thinking big.

16b48a3436269e1a6aa4d5076feca7f1

Thinking small is thinking big.

1.  Medical expenses are high because we we can’t readily measure temperature, blood pressure, blood sugar, white blood cell counts, etc. at home.  We could email necessary photographs and information to a Giant Medical Computer.   Our diagnosis would be emailed to us, prescriptions would be sent by Amazon.   Freedom of Medicine would cut costs and save lives.

Half of all medical problems would be solved for less than ten dollars  ($10.00).  Similar savings may be provided by Freedom of Education.  Babylon protects its favorites by keeping us in bondage.

2.  Moslems are often said to be cruel and barbaric.  But, in the last century, nations thought to be “more civilized” have aborted a billion babies.  Many of them were agonizingly dismembered shortly before birth.  The same “more civilized” nations have also encouraged billions of even tinier babies to be killed by abortion-inducing birth control.

How do Moselms compare?  They have killed a million Armenian Christians in the last hundred years.  They have also killed many Hindus and other Moslems.   Maybe a few illions of unborn babies killed by “Pretend Christians”.   Moslems are a thousand times more Pro-Life than Episcopalians, etc.  Who is “more civilized”?

The vainest Protestants are unable to deal with that fact by becoming Catholic, even as God allows their own nations to be destroyed by Pro-Life Moslem invaders.

3.  Modern slavers invented “Global Freezing”, “Global Warming”, and “Climate Change” to justify taxes, regulation, and control. Now, those Imaginary Problems have been joined by a Great Concern about “Water”.  The usual “intellectuals” are fooled.

Amazingly, those who fret endlessly about Imaginary Problems refuse to recognize that the billions killed by abortion and abortion-inducing birth control are the murdered victims of their life-destroying programs.

4.  Because we do not “think small”, we do not respect the living people that are, in their earliest days, a few growing cells that would fit through the eye of a needle.  Many have no problem killing those no bigger than they once were.

Thinking small is thinking big.

 

 

Related: