Twilight Zone: Thailand Dystopia
"It was a lunatic asylum. It still is." Nick Creed will be forever grateful to his friends who persisted until he saw behind the theatre curtain.
Nick Creed has lived in Thailand on and off for 10 years, and he and his wife provide valuable insights into sweeping changes that have come across what was once a carefree, highly sociable and family-oriented country, his by adoption, hers by birth. For the last six years, Nick has been working in the security industry, and is currently a freelance security consultant with fluent Thai. He has been on Substack since April 2022, all his content is available for free.
Thailand has always been a vibrant, carefree place, affectionately known as ‘The land of smiles’. Before 2020, mask-wearing had never been commonplace, with germophobia being practically non-existent in society, unlike some other Asian countries. Thai people are well known for their love of sharing feasts of spicy dishes with friends and family, serving up communal plates of food for everyone at the table to dig into.
But now, in July 2023, it is commonplace to see groups of voluntarily masked people in restaurants. They are masked until the very minute the food arrives and, after the last morsel has been inhaled, their faces are quickly hidden away from view. How did we get here? Why has the nation adopted mask-wearing as a national mental illness?
The impact of seeing these changes caused me to write my first-ever article, A Brief Exploration of COVID-Induced Mass Psychosis, explaining how my wife and I also spent the months of March and April 2020 wearing a mask, wiping down door handles, and carrying out other cringeworthy rituals. I felt angry seeing people unmasked, simply because they weren’t following the rules. The fear was pervasive, but went quickly beyond the normal short-term and instinctual life-saving response into a prolonged, toxic mind-warp that caused people to act irrationally, forsake their moral compass, betray their humanity, and pay the highest price of sacrificing their children.
I will be forever grateful to my friends who persisted until I saw behind the theatre curtain.
Biosecurity paradigm shift
In 2020, when I was employed as a security manager, I took care of multiple sites across several industries: manufacturing, logistics, hospitality, schools, and office buildings. Maintaining vigilant teams of security officers was always a challenge, due to the monotonous and repetitive nature of their guarding responsibilities, the long 12-hour shifts, and the paltry minimum wage that Thais earn in this line of work. I was shocked in this time at the pace at which biosecurity measures were suddenly implemented and adhered to. Previously blasé attitudes towards visitor management, perimeter security, and other tasks, were usurped by preventative Covid measures. The dedication towards enforcing these rules was obsessive and unhinged. Warehouses and factories copied each other’s policies, creating similar entry requirements to each site. Tripod-mounted temperature taking sensors were installed at entrances. A QR-code based disclaimer had to be scanned and filled out, asking if you had been in contact with anyone who had tested PCR positive, if you had travelled internationally, and if you had any symptoms. Access to the facility was granted with a sticker.
Poor souls who tested PCR positive on-site were sent straight to hospital and banished from returning to work for weeks. To avoid this fate, I quickly obtained a mask exemption certificate from a doctor, and I was always the only facial nudist at every single site. Although I was able to observe and advise clients on their security measures, Covid was unmentionable. I consistently pointed out the illogical aspects of Covid hysteria that actually led to security vulnerabilities: for instance, the fear was at such a peak that all companies without exception did not want masks removed for identification purposes when checking ID cards and this even applied to third party vendors and contractors. Instead, clients were more concerned with A and B shift teams avoiding contact with one another and spent massive resources having surfaces cleaned every few hours. This was a taster of what was about to be implemented throughout public areas in Bangkok.
It was a lunatic asylum. It still is.
Hounded in public and at home
Covid derangement syndrome peaked in mid-2021. I experienced several bizarre incidents within a short span of time, making me realise how dangerous this mass psychosis was.
Whilst out having a stroll in my leafy, bird-song-filled neighbourhood in central Bangkok, I gave a masked elderly lady sweeping up leaves on her drive the traditional ‘wai’ greeting by pressing my palms together and cheerily said “sawadee krap” (hello). She regarded me with suspicion and angrily demanded that I put on a mask immediately–not wearing one came with a 20,000 THB ($600 USD) price tag.
I told her: “The secret to existence is freedom from fear.” She dropped the broom she had been shaking at me and ran indoors to call the police. I left.
Not long after, I was followed around a shopping mall by a group of security guards that swelled to twelve people. They refused my mask exemption certificate and presented me with boxes of N95 masks, arms outstretched, and threatened to call the police. I left.
That same evening I was stopped by two police officers on a motorbike who asked if I was ‘vaccinated’. I indicated it was none of their business. After surprisingly accepting my mask exemption certificate, they let me go.
The worst incident was later that week when my condominium sent me a letter citing complaints made about me for not wearing a mask, including CCTV screenshots, and threatening to ‘suspend service’.
I had sensed something approaching, as the entire building was filled with double-masked, medical glove-wearing, and liberal hand sanitiser users. It was the only condominium building–to my knowledge–that had implemented a swimming pool booking system during the pandemic. Although the 25m x 6m rooftop pool was big enough for at least 5 adults to swim laps, clipboards had suddenly popped up in the lobby for one-at-a-time pool or gym bookings. The entire sun lounger area had been cordoned off with red and white tape, like a crime scene. Swimming and exercising regardless, I had only had one incident where another resident practically frothed at the mouth to get me out of the pool. I mumbled about a double booking. Perhaps–out of exasperation–my choice of words was a little harsh, but I had befriended reality by then. I decided to confront the manager.
“I’ve just read your letter, and I think it is ridiculous that you referred to me not wearing a mask as an ‘investigation’! Are you here to look after the tenants, or are you now the police?”
“You make nothing but trouble for us. Everyone else in the condo follows the rules. They wear a mask in the common areas, in the carpark, and in the elevator. Many people complain about you. If you do not start wearing a mask today, we will call the police to arrest you!” the lady snarled at me.
“One day, maybe a year from now, or many years from now, you will remember your actions today, and you will be ashamed and embarrassed to remember how crazily you acted. When you do bad deeds, bad things will come back to you (Thai proverb). Go ahead and call the police. I’m moving out of this new normal prison.”
I moved out within 72 hours.
Heartless ‘healthcare’
In early 2022 a friend of my wife went to hospital to see her gravely ill grandfather. As May scanned the ward, she noticed a young boy no more than 6 years old weeping uncontrollably, his arms outstretched flailing around against the prison partition Plexiglas safety screen. The boy was calling out to his sickly mother. She could only gesture and raise a weak smile behind bloodshot, tear-streamed eyes, choking out a few words of reassurance and comfort through a microphone, watched by the prison-guard nurse. In May’s case, as an unvaccinated person, she was denied access even to the Plexiglas screen. She was unable to say goodbye to her grandfather.
Later on, an American friend had a bad motorbike accident, breaking multiple bones. In hospital, he was left in limbo for a couple of hours in unbearable pain, with no water or help despite a negative PCR test result. With the help of his wife, he had then pleaded with the doctors to perform surgery on a badly broken femur. The next day, in order to carry out further surgery on a broken tibia and collarbone, the surgical team told them that the extra layer of PPE for the op was too “inconvenient”, and to “go home for 10-14 days until COVID is done with, then come back."
This unbelievable, callous and unethical proposal could have led to the permanent non-healing of his bones–in the great age of follow The Science.
Covid-19 gene therapy rollout
Thailand began mass injections on 14th June 2021. The government announced shortages and supply problems, possibly to boost demand–very successfully, resulting in several protests. It even led to widespread vaccine tourism among wealthier Thais and foreigners seeking their shot of mRNA wherever they could get it. Businesses were in a race to proudly announce themselves as 100% vaccinated. The mainstream media churned out articles hailing the miraculous injections, and seemed especially keen on targeting pregnant women.
Meanwhile, there were sporadic lockdowns and curfews with varied enforcement, principally tricky at inter-provincial travel checkpoints. Announcements were ‘flip-flop’ in nature, changing from one day to the next in terms of entry requirements to other provinces.
Despite no ‘mandate’ issued by the government to disallow the great unjabbed from entering private businesses (except by domestic flight operators for a while), bars, restaurants, and nightspots took it upon themselves to make ‘vax passes’ a pre-requisite for entry. In early 2022, with a large group of friends, we went to Khao San –the famous backpackers road full of bars and clubs, popular with foreigners and locals alike–and we were met by a huge task force of government officials in hazmat suits and police officers. They had cordoned off the wide street into one narrow channel. A vax pass plus negative PCR was required, with the test being administered on the spot. Curiously, more people were being turned away than let in, including us.
Then they came for the children
Thailand followed suit and lowered the age worldwide to include infants. Although I do not have any children of my own I was, and still am, deeply affected by witnessing this.
I scrambled to do something, and had the idea to plaster stickers with QR codes all around Bangkok to link to a video of Dr. Robert Malone’s speech, warning about the dangers of injecting children with mRNA. We uploaded it to Odysee, with Thai subtitles by my wife. I hate what QR codes now stand for within the spectre of the Great Reset and vax passes, but with the masses’ love of the new normal they could appeal. I published Child Abuse by Needle: Thailand’s Toddlers in the Crosshairs, and launched a Thai language section on my Substack.
“Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire.
I struggle every single day in Bangkok with the child abuse: most children, infants, and babies are masked despite end of the mask ‘mandate’ in June 2022. In December 2022, I penned an open letter to the children of Bangkok – maybe they’ll read it when they get older, hopefully after being deprogrammed – in which I express my heartbreak and horror at the confusion, trauma, cognitive damage, and conditioning that these children may suffer, along with the potential for physiological damage and chronic disease ensuing from experimental gene therapy.
I just don’t understand why the media and the government are still fear mongering about Covid in the same breath as conceding that the WHO have declared the ‘pandemic’ to be over.
Insights from my wife
When the pandemic started in 2020 I didn’t really think it was serious and I think most Thais thought the same way as I did too. We didn’t know whether many people had died from Covid at the beginning, so most people were relaxed and didn’t take it seriously. Then the media was updating us every day on the numbers of people who they claim were dying from Covid.
I was never afraid of Covid. It was not scary to me. I haven’t changed my actions much. Except for the wearing of masks. In the very beginning, we both wore masks but it was not yet a law to do so. I think the reason people continue to wear the mask now is because everyone else does, they don’t want to be judged. It is social pressure.
I changed my job in 2020 to work from home full-time, and I have only recently returned to an office since August 2022. In 2021 when the government started to give vaccines to the Thai people, my family wanted me to take it too. After a while they stopped pushing me to take it because it was up to me. Many of my friends know that I didn’t have the vaccine, but they were fine with it. Actually, some of those friends, when they couldn’t make their injection appointments, they offered me their place. Now, when I think about it, it was a very weird request, like offering me a free ticket for a concert or some event that they couldn’t go to!
I think some people might know that it doesn’t help, but perhaps they didn’t know of the harms of the ‘vaccine’ to damage their bodies. Many Thais think of it as a normal vaccine, and that they should just take it once a year. Thais are good at following rules. They also wore masks to enter shopping malls and other places when it was law, and they have carried on doing so out of habit. There is a very low percentage of people that know about the harms and deaths. It is not on the news much about how many have died from the vaccine. It is just non-stop news about Covid and how dangerous it is. But not about how dangerous the vaccine is. There is no vaccine adverse reaction reporting system in Thailand that is made available to the public.
This is why I have translated documents for the World Council for Health. I very much hope that these documents reach more Thai people, that they do their research on the dangers of the vaccine, and find out how they can detox their bodies and hopefully begin to heal.
Nicholas Creed is a Bangkok-based vaccine dissident. Follow Creed Speech on Substack.
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Hasn't the fate of the Kings daughter had any impact on the population?
One day, after the full & unconditional capitulation of the enemy is secured, we will finally be able to divert our efforts from fighting the war and prosecuting the war criminals, to actually researching the mass formation phenomena properly as well as figuring out how to ‘deprogram’ its victims, as well as how to stop this from taking hold ever again.
Human psychology is indeed highly fragile and some aspects of it are extremely easy to abuse.
We have a lot of work to do…