Amusing video shows a brave man wading into a herd of maskers during a rally to drop uncomfortable truths about the COVID hysteria.
Footage shows the man walking around with a bullhorn bringing up the fact that wearing masks outside is unnecessary when suddenly several maskers in the crowd begin to accost him.
“You don’t have to wear a mask outside,” the man said through the bullhorn. “COVID is a hoax.”
Man bravely walks through crowd of masked people telling them to takeoff their mask… The zombie slowly start grabbing him so weird.. pic.twitter.com/94BZo86WSm
— (What's Up) (@MkMrMny) January 15, 2022
“January 6 was a setup by the FBI,” he continued.
A dozen masked people in the crowd grabbed and hurled insults at the man, with one of the maskers even calling him a racist!
Does wandering through a crowd bullhorning about masks warrant unhinged responses like this?
Users on social media noted the bizarre display of supposedly germaphobic maskers quickly grabbing at and touching a man without a mask.
What’s weird is the fact that they are grabbing him … aren’t they afraid of catching his Covid cooties? Why aren’t they following their beloved 6 feet social distancing rule?
— Canyon Traveler (@CanyonTrvlr22) January 15, 2022
They assault him for telling them to be free. This is where we are now.
— BigAngryMoose (@BigAngryMoose) January 16, 2022
The lady that called him a racist at the end is the best…
— Baizuo…. (@Paperbagguy) January 15, 2022
I have it on good authority that there’s no such thing as mass formation psychosis.
Experts have said so and fact- checkers have confirmed it.
— Cincinnatus1775 (@Cincinnatus1775) January 16, 2022
Mass hypnosis.
— Seventh Sun (@gimineecricket) January 15, 2022
This is just further evidence of the societal damage caused by mass formation psychosis, as mentioned by Dr. Robert Malone.
“The conditions to set up mass formation psychosis include lack of social connectedness and sensemaking as well as large amounts of latent anxiety and passive aggression,” Malone wrote in his SubStack. “When people are inundated with a narrative that presents a plausible ‘object of anxiety’ and strategy for coping with it, then many individuals group together to battle the object with a collective singlemindedness.”