Photos of pandemic life rarely come as instantly iconic as these: a group of high school band students practicing together in a rehearsal room, each playing in an individual green tent, their faces and instruments visible only through a narrow plastic window.
Just like with climate change, the driver is not science and logic, but fuzzy feelings and a globalist agenda that must be adhered to or face the avenging wrath of the true believers and adherents of this weird end times religion. Think of it like the 'hands up, don't shoot!' of the virologists, doesn't matter if it's not true, just keep repeating the mantra.
The amount of people who have died from COVID-19 pales in comparison with other global outbreaks like the Spanish Influenza Panic of 1918 where 50,000,000 people died from contracting the flu. To date, 2.5 million people have died worldwide from COVID-19, more than 95% less than those that died in 1918, yet we are treating it like it's the worst outbreak in modern times, it certainly is not. What it is is the rise of the New World Order, nothing more and nothing less.
I will not wear a mask, I will not take the jab, and I will never allow them to put me in a 'safety pod' like lunch menu items at the Horn & Hardart automat. Remember that all this primarily a spiritual battle and a war on your mind to get your to change you thinking. It is the spirit of Antichrist that is right now preparing the way for the appearance of the man of sin.
IT’S TIME TO OPEN YOUR EYES TO THE FACT THAT THE SPIRIT OF ANTICHRIST IS NOW HERE AND THAT WE ARE AT WAR WHETHER YOU WANT TO BE OR NOT
The pictures were taken by Don Seabrook, photo editor at local newspaper the Wenatchee World, for a report published Wednesday on how students at local high schools were adjusting to in-person learning during the pandemic.
FROM SLATE: The Wenatchee High School bands’ performance space has gained wide attention not only within the city of Wenatchee, Washington, but nationwide, reaching outlets from the BBC to Jimmy Kimmel Live! The photos—including one of a student crammed inside his small tent with a sousaphone, which couldn’t be comfortable—have led some observers to speculate that these kids were forced into this situation and that this is surely a sign of the apocalypse.
Could It Be Any Creepier? Just Wait.
As a former high school sousaphone and tuba player, I wanted to hear from the band kids themselves. So I reached out to the high school’s band conductor, who put me in touch with two of his students: Lars Sorom, a 16-year-old junior, and Henry Bergey, a 15-year-old sophomore (who also told me it “would be epic” if I linked to his YouTube channel). Both are trumpet players in classical and jazz ensembles at the school, and they were apparently slightly involved themselves with making this green arrangement happen. I spoke with Sorom and Bergey over Zoom on Friday, in the middle of the school day, about how the tent situation came to be (they call them “pods”), what it’s like to rehearse in such strange circumstances, and how they’ve managed to pursue their passions for music in the middle of a pandemic.
Nitish Pahwa: How do the pods work with rehearsing? When you all are in the pods, are you all able to listen to one another? Is your conductor also in a pod?
Lars Sorom: No, he stands out in the middle and we all turn and face him. And the rehearsing works really, really well. It’s pretty exciting because obviously earlier in this semester, when we weren’t in person, we all tried to rehearse over Zoom. But that just doesn’t work at all. So now that we’re set up in these pods, it’s so exciting to be able to play together. Any interaction is welcome, especially because the pods work so well.
Henry Bergey: Yeah, I think the pods are amazing. We spent half of our year being online. Being able to play with other people and make music is phenomenal and I love it. But the biggest, hardest hurdle to overcome in rehearsals is actually our a.m. and p.m. time slots because our day is cut in half [because of hybrid schedules during the pandemic]. So we have so little time to learn music. READ MORE
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