My friends in the freedom movement here interrogated me endlessly over the past year about what I thought would happen in the disastrous wake of Covid.
How bad would it be?
What are we going to do if they try to pull another phony pandemic on us?
What’s going to happen to the world?
How can we get out of this?
Will all our freedoms be taken away?
Will wars dominate our future?
Will they continue to try to jab us to death?
Etc.
I must have sounded like the proverbial broken record because I inevitably replied that our chances for a Better World Order hinged on the election of Trump, and that we would have a clear idea by May 2025 about our odds to turn the tide.
“Wait until May,” I advised, relieved that Trump had defeated the worst Presidential candidate in American history and that he had to overcome the obstacles of massive election rigging to do so.
“Why May?”
“Because Trump will need a little time to settle in, and by May the directions of his administration — whether it is genuinely going to be for peace and freedom — should be visible. Wait until May.”
And now the May Days are here and already, in a scant several months, more has happened that I can recount — but the pudding is proving itself.
The orchestrated invasion of the United States by illegals has been stopped dead in its tracks and the plan to use illegal immigrants as a voting base for the Globalist Agenda is being undone. Judges are now being prosecuted for aiding and abetting this invasion.
RFK Jr., after sorting out the pens and pencils in his HHS desk, has delivered a series of powerful blows to the establishment rip-off health tyranny agencies: for the first time in my memory sacrosanct vaccines are being questioned openly and studies are being organized to investigate the autism epidemic, while artificial additives and dyes are being removed from the products of big-ticket foodstuff purveyors.
Tulsi Gabbard is referring intelligence officials for prosecution over leaks of classified information.
Election integrity measures are being introduced to optimize an honest vote — upon which any ongoing viability of the republic hinges.
Tariffs have set off a spate of negotiations and deals.
Big Pharma has been given notice.
Most important, the intricate dance away from war and towards the establishment of a more peaceful world, is bearing fruit in the Ukraine and the Middle East.
Before one may raise a storm of objections about bellicose actions in Yemen and the tragedy of Gaza, I’d like to offer a realist’s perspective on world leaders and geopolitics.
First, every significant world leader will inevitably have blood on his or her hands: it goes with the job, for reasons better left to another essay.
Second, violence and war are inborn attributes of humankind and its organisations.
It is highly unrealistic to expect that with a single stroke peace may be achieved across the martial lines of regional conflicts long in existence. And force must on occasion be met by greater force. It is the parsimonious application of violence that sets apart the more peaceful from the more bellicose leaders.
It is even more unrealistic to expect that the Globalist Cabal, hard at work for decades with their project of perpetual war, population control and massive grift, can be broken by anything but an extraordinarily sagacious series of maneuvers.
President Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia smack in the middle of May gives me enough reason to feel that my hopes for an emerging anti-Globalist world are justified. Remember that politics is invariably dirty, competing interests are invariably vicious, war is always on someone’s horizon, and the tendency towards rank corruption is a hallmark of human institutional activity.
But there is also good within the human breast, and an understanding that mutual benefit may be a counterpoise to mutual enmity.
May Days are here, and the arduous, slow but inevitable movement towards a multi-polar world of amicable sovereign nations has begun. The cessation of hostilities in the Ukraine and the disgracefully violent Middle East are in the offing.
Trump’s speech at the US-Saudi Investment Forum is a fulcrum for much thirsted-for change.
We live in a realm of messy realities, which means that grandiose and infantile expectations must be abandoned, lest we become our own worst enemies, with incessant cries that ‘nothing is happening’ ringing in our ears.
Our world can never be perfect, but it can certainly be better, and the suffocating cloud of Unipolar Tyranny may be dispersed. We now have our opening and our fighting chance, which is exactly what I hoped we might have, no more and no less.
Emanuel E. Garcia, M.D.
May 2025
Just this morning Aseem Malhotra has announced he’s with MAHA and will be seeking to ban the c’vd shots…
NZDSOS has the news on their page and it’s also on X. Sounds like progress to me!
Thank you DOC- I know there are so many naysayers but I also have hope around what is slowly happening- e.g the banning of pharmaceutical advertising…thats going to cripple media in US and I sure hope here in NZ- wonder why we are the only other country besides US who is allowed to advertise drugs!!
These words of hope. This call to choose a positive outlook. So rare in these dark times. They are exactly what we all need. Because this is what it is all about: a choice to be made. Is the glass half empty or half full?
For my part, I believe that only the choice of love by ordinary people can measure up to the darkness of the partisans of the « Unipolar Tyranny ».
Thank you Dr. Garcia for turning on this light.