Letter to Dr. Robert Malone
Do not fight against the right of free speech with a Nazi tactic of demonizing your opponent with the epithet "spreaders of disease"
Dear Sir,
it is with great trepidation that I am penning these lines. I cannot believe that you should use similar language like Joseph Goebbels, who spoke of “Spreaders of Disease” in attempts to incite the German people to get them to follow an evil agenda of Genocide and War.
Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel wrote in 1979 in his accompanying letter to the Report to the President:
[T]he enemy of the Jewish people and of mankind—and it is always the same enemy—succeeded in dividing, in separating, in splitting human society, nation against nation, Christian against Jew, young against old.
So, whatever it is that you are worried about, or even suffer from: please do not revert to hate and incitement! This is not becoming to you, nor to anyone who aspires to be a leading member of the movement fighting to save humanity. Because that is what this is: a fight against the “enemy of mankind”. Transhumanism is what we, the people, are up against. Never Again Is Now Global.
Especially if we hope to overcome the present assault, we should think ahead. We should hold ourselves to the standards which our opposition fails to meet, don’t you think? Why, then, do you seem to be inciting hate yourself in a tweet that supposedly is designed to alert to you being “hated”? Be the Change You Want to See in the World! Let us know: who is hateful against you?
Mind you, though: Hate speech is a term that has been weaponized against “the movement”. Germany, where I come from, has been seeing countless attempts to de-legitimise protest against Government mandates. A movement which has been overwhelmingly peaceful and has included people from all ages, and all walks of life, has been accused by government officials as well as the legacy media to be divisive, inciteful, and leaning towards violence.
The kind of language used in your tweet will serve as a case in point, Dr. Malone, especially if you are applying terms which are immediately attributed to one of the most famous Nazis. How can you, a person of such intellectual capacity and brilliance, not be aware of this?
You have found it necessary to issue law suits against other prominent members of the movement for humanity, such as Dr. Peter Breggin and his wife. So, even though this in itself seems very unusual (comrades in a fight against a common opponent to sue each other): you seem to be aware of how to protect your reputation if needed. Why are you not suing whoever it is you addressed in the tweet above?
Maybe it is that you know (or feel) a court might not rule in your favor because your opponent whom you are calling out in the way you did might have the right of free speech in their favor. Especially if that should be the case: Do not fight against the right of free speech with a Nazi tactic of demonizing your opponent with the epithet "spreaders of disease"!
Sincerely,
Dr. Uwe Alschner
Historian, Germany