Friday, November 22, 2024

DANSE MACABRE: An Investigation of "The Dancing Nurses"

 

Just as a "Grand Finale" to a 4th of July Fireworks Show dazzles us with all the fireworks, one after another, and, seemingly, all at once, the "Pandemic" was a Grand Finale of PsyOps. 

The Powers That Be had a PsyOps working on every emotional level, 

Fear (this being the main one), 

Wrath (BLM and blaming Old White Men" for everything),  

"Science" (Fauci IS The Science), 

Anticipation (PCR Tests which told you if you were an acceptable part of society for the next three weeks), 

Financial Stability (they threatned most of our jobs in some way or another), 

Social Interaction (don't go out, you'll Kill Grandma), 

Comfort (We have a New "Vaccine"), and, finally 

HUMAN TRIUMPH IN THE FACE OF ADVERSITY (The Dancing Nurses).

I guess it is not a surprise that The Dancing Nurses might have been just as virulent as every other PsyOp of the time:

When I first saw a video of nurses dancing in an empty hospital corridor, I was almost as baffled as ‘experts’ have been over the cause of all the excess deaths.

It may well have been this one - a nicely choreographed routine to the song ‘Blinding Lights’ by The Weekend.

 https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/apr/09/nhs-staff-performing-tiktok-dance-routines-to-keep-morale-high

The Guardian article (above) was published less than a month into the faux pandemic when hospitals were said to be heaving. After seeing a few of these strange videos, I was heaving too.

Instinctively, I found them instantly sickening. Take a look for yourself.

There they all are, the nursing staff of Ward J19, prancing about in the corridor whilst - I’m presuming - the patients, many allegedly the tragic victims of ‘killer virus’ Covid 19, were dying in adjacent wards. As the music faded, I’m guessing that so too did the lives of multiple patients.

Dr Walayat Hussain, a consultant dermatologist who was been redeployed to work on the ward treating Covid-19 patients, shared the video on Twitter and said: “I’m definitely not a bad influence on the ward...... Fantastic team on J19. Work hard, play hard.”

Was that ostensibly what the whole ‘op’ was about - letting the public know that working hard also meant playing hard? And that playing meant dancing?

After a bit of online investigating, it transpired that this craze for dancing nurse videos started on TikTok, totally out of the blue, just like that, back in 2020. One day there were no videos of dancing nurses and the next, there were loads of them. It was an internet sensation— a very sudden one at that.

I felt unsettled when I first started seeing them - something wasn’t right - so I started to ask around.

...

One PubMed study, after reviewing a number of TikTok videos featuring dancing nurses, concluded that “some of the analysed videos included content that could be construed, in our view, as inappropriate and even sexually suggestive. The concern is that such videos could damage the professional image of nurses and downplay the seriousness of the current pandemic.”

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36384793/

The nurses seemed not to care a jot about their professional reputations, however, and seemingly continue to prance and skip, bump and grind, shimmy, wiggle and even twerk. 

But - bless them! - give them a BREAK! They were just trying to boost morale and stay cheerful as they battled daily on the frontline during a deadly pandemic. It was like a warzone, remember? A battlefield! These heroes deserved to have some fun. And if fun meant stuffing pillows down the back of their pants and jiggling their fake booty about, then so be it! (Never mind what their patients were resting their heads on that night!)

Luckily, it seemed that the overworked and underpaid nurses weren’t too battle-weary to spend days on end choreographing, rehearsing, performing and being filmed. Poor loves, they must have been exhausted! Anyone would think they didn’t have homes to go to. (And you’d think that after a harrowing shift trying to save lives these angels would actually want to go home. But, no, they stayed at their place of work, where they’d probably been slaving for 12 hours or more, just to practise their routines in hospital corridors until their moves were perfect. Of course they did.) 

At one point, back at the start, the videos got truly creepy. This one sticks in my mind… Not so professionally filmed but extremely weird and upsetting enough to get a whole load of complaints. The US Sun ran a story on it.

Sick vid shows dancing nurses carrying ‘corpse’ of coronavirus victim as they copy TikTok pallbearers meme – The US Sun | The US Sun

The Song Lyrics To Jerusalema—The Mystery Deepens and Creepens: Lyrics Say WHAT?

The next development happened as suddenly as the previous ones: They all started dancing to THAT BLOODY SONG, “Jerusalema,” an earworm if ever there was one. 

I wondered what was so special about the tune. It’s lively and uplifting but was there more to it than that? It was repetitive and hypnotic and sung in a soothing language I didn’t recognise. An African language, quite possibly. 

Time to get those lyrics translated! A YouTube video did that for me.

Turns out, it’s a kind of hymn, a song to God, about going ‘home’. It’s a prayer, a chant… or perhaps it’s an incantation or a spell? And which god is it calling on? If you’ve not heard it before, have a listen here: 


X user, @human_frozen had an interesting take on it, saying: “It‘s a macabre nod, helping patients to ‘go home’…The dance routine celebrates seeing them off…”

In a recent social media post, the much- followed and “most cancelled scientist”, Dr. Simon Goddek shared this: 


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

As a R.N. who was not only masked and wearing a face shield during COVID I find this behavior bizarre considering that we claim to be a professional work force. Hospitals should remain quiet corridors of hope, and certainly a place to quietly mourn with those who mourn.

For the same reason nurses do not dress up for Halloween, nurses should choose not to dance down the halls in garish displays that resemble gallows humor.

Tammy Swofford, R.N.