Jon Rappoport

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Do Chinese ghost cities have a medical purpose?
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Do Chinese ghost cities have a medical purpose?

Jon Rappoport
Jul 26, 2024
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Jon Rappoport
Jon Rappoport
Do Chinese ghost cities have a medical purpose?
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There are between 50 and 100 large ghost cities in China. Fully built, with very low or no populations.

Among their purposes? Wholesale relocation of huge numbers of people. Done quickly.

What better reason to give than: pandemic.

“We’re transporting a million at-risk people to CityX in next three weeks…”

But wait. There’s more.

The STUDY of that massive operation—from the details of the transport; to heavy quarantine and isolation once the new population is settled; to the methods of the ensuing vaccination program; the treatment protocols for the infected and ill; the outcome of all this. Including the parallel operation of normal city functions during the crisis.

Of course, there is no pandemic. There is no virus. But when did that stop anyone?

Stage 2: The Chinese issue a report on their ghost city handling of the pandemic, stressing the beneficial aspects of complete control over the target population.

The World Health Organization, the CDC, and other health agencies around the world are suitably impressed and excited by what the Chinese have accomplished. They begin to recommend the “Chinese protocol” for all nations.

Of course, other nations don’t have ghost cities.

Therefore…

They should.

They should have “alternative spaces” to which they can send infected people. Masses of them.

If this is beginning to sound like a concentration camp operation—bingo.

I’ve been talking and warning about high-level medical ops for more than 35 years.

You don’t move a few hundred thousand people to a new designated area by calling them political dissidents. Which they are. But that’s more than just a little tricky.

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