The Hardest Truth About the Plannedemic Wasn’t the 'Virus', It Was Watching the People I Love Walk Into It
During the COVID era, like many others who questioned the official narrative, I spent thousands of hours researching. I looked into medical journals, government documents, and interviews with scientists and doctors who weren't getting airtime on the news.
I came away convinced that the vaccine posed serious health dangers—not just for adults, but especially for children and even for future generations.
Anyone who knows me knows what I said back then: if any so-called ‘authority' tried to force that experimental shite into my veins, I'd treat it as an act of war and respond accordingly.
That wasn't a metaphor. That was my line in the sand.
Naturally, I felt it was my duty to warn the people I loved. I spoke up. I shared what I knew. I tried every tone—gentle, firm, factual, passionate—but almost no one listened. And that hurt. Not because I wanted to be right, but because I truly believed I was trying to protect them.
In the past five years, mounting scientific evidence has raised serious, often ignored questions about the true safety and effectiveness of the so-called “safe and effective” products. All-cause mortality has risen in many of the most vaccinated countries.
Young people are facing alarming rates of heart inflammation and autoimmune conditions. Fertility is dropping globally, and some experts now warn that certain populations could be facing demographic collapse within a single century.
But here's the lesson I've finally started to understand:
“You can offer truth, but not force awakening. You can love people, but not rescue them from their karma.”
People weren't ignoring me to be cruel. They were doing what most humans do when faced with uncomfortable information—they shut down or follow the herd. They believed they were doing the right thing, and nothing I said could change that.
That was when I remembered one of Peter Crone's (The Mind Architect) most powerful insights:
“People and situations don't disturb you. Your resistance to what is… does.”
It hit me like a punch to the gut: I wasn't suffering because people didn't listen—I was suffering because I needed them to. Because I loved them. Because I cared. And deep down, I was still trying to control the outcome. I believed their safety depended on my ability to convince them. And when I couldn't… it felt like I had failed them.
But it wasn't failure. It was freedom in disguise.
There's a deep spiritual truth here, one that echoes Buddhist philosophy: attachment causes suffering. And that includes attachment to even the most noble outcomes—like helping others.
This isn't about becoming cold or uncaring. It's about learning how to care without attachment. Buddhism calls this Karuna—compassion without suffering. You can love deeply, but still let go.
“They are on their own journey, and that's okay.”
We each learn life's biggest lessons not through warnings, but through experience. Sometimes painful experience. As hard as it is to witness, no one can be dragged into awareness. They have to arrive on their own. And often, they only get there after bumping into the walls.
So I'm learning to step back. To speak the truth when I feel called—but then release it. Let go of the outcome. Let people do what they will do. It's not apathy. It's respect for their path.
If you've ever felt the same frustration—knowing something that matters and watching the people you love ignore it—here's the mantra I came up with to keep myself grounded:
“I offer the truth I know, and I release the outcome. I do not carry what is not mine.”
It's simple. And powerful.
Truth doesn't need validation. Love doesn't require control. And peace doesn't depend on anyone else agreeing with you.
“You can be free—and still care.”
That, I believe, is real freedom.
About the Author
Scott Oliver, 66, is living well with prostate cancer after dedicating more than 4,000 hours to researching the condition. His first goal is to help men reduce their risk of developing prostate cancer through proven lifestyle strategies.
When diagnosed, his mission is to help men avoid unnecessary prostate surgeries that can lead to devastating complications such as incontinence, bleeding, permanent impotence, and a loss of length.
Scott Oliver is not a doctor and does not offer medical advice; however, he is healthier and fitter than he has been in decades. Through his articles and videos, he shares hard-to-find, uncensored information on proven alternative therapies, effective fitness methods, and repurposed drugs, content that most doctors won’t mention and search engines suppress.
He is an accredited member of the National Writers Union (NWU) and the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the world’s largest organization of professional journalists. Scott is also the author of What If Cancer’s Best Defense Is Free? Sleep as a Defense Against Cancer: A Former Royal Marines Commando’s 4,000-Hour Research Roadmap, where he reveals how sleep repairs DNA, restores immunity, and strengthens the body’s natural defenses against cancer.
You can always contact Scott Oliver here with your questions and suggestions.