China burned Wuhan virus patients alive

“A video has surfaced of a Chinese woman vividly describing patients being bound in body bags and cremated while still alive.”-taiwannews.com.tw 2/26/20. As a patient in a Wuhan hospital “she was in bed number 18, when another patient, a male in his 70’s, was admitted on the morning of January 28th and stayed in bed number 17. She said that by afternoon, a team from Tianjin had arrived and found that the patient was having difficulty inhaling. The woman said she was experiencing the same symptoms, but not as severely as she was younger. She said that the man was weak but was still breathing when medical workers “bound his head and then his hands and feet, which were still moving.” She said: “medical personnel placed the man in a black plastic bag and pulled up the zipper, before placing him in another plastic bag…they then wrapped the man in 2 more layers with an unidentified material.”-taiwannews.com.tw 2/26/20.

Conclusion: I’m sure this wasn’t an isolated incident, but rather standard procedure, amongst other crimes against humanity, that the Chinese are well known. The woman who spoke out on this scenario was very brave, because she knows the ultimate consequences of her words. That’s why most people won’t speak publicly about atrocities they have personally witnessed. All it takes is one story, told to the world, to fathom how barbarous, cruel and without regard to human life, that is the Chinese regime. / Done

By Harvey Staub

I started out a little nothing on Twitter 5 years ago. I always had a love for research, writing, digging for the truth. My very first writing class in Queens College, after I wrote my first paper, my Professor wanted to talk to me after class. Before I even sit down in her office, she says to me: “You’re very talented.” I said thank you, I appreciate that, but I’m also a practical kid. I knew pursuing writing out of college wasn’t a guaranteed job, so I became a Pharmacist. Now, as a Pharmacist for 44 years and an owner for 30 years, I now can devote time to my passion. My very first threaded tweet on Twitter was a hit, about how Sonny Bono was murdered, because even as a kid, I never believed that story that he died by slamming into a tree while skiing. It got a great response on Twitter and motivated me to do more research and writing. I was suspended from Twitter, but I always wrote on paper before writing on Twitter, and kept all my writings. I developed Thawts.net and took almost a year to rewrite everything onto my site. Now, anything I write is new stuff and about any subject of my choice. I hope you enjoy reading as much as I enjoy writing. Sincerely, Harvey Staub 👍🇺🇸

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