Today is a national holiday in the USA, Memorial Day, which commemorates those that have died in military actions. It coincidentally is the day the WHO had set for the vote of it's member states on the global plandemic 'agreement' (a treaty would have to be ratified by the US Senate, which would enable it to be not ratified and thus struck down by the USA. Despite the blatant corruption of American legislators, all it took to prevent that potential interference was to use the word agreement rather than treaty. Does that really make the difference between whether Americans are subject to a global totalitarian conquest? 'Welp, they used clever words, Clem. We're just unable to do anything about it, and now we're property instead of free men.' No, that isn't how this works. Not on Memorial Day, and not on any day of the year. Neat thing about America is that the civilians are armed. A lot more Americans have died on hills in their civvies than in fancy dress uniforms like the one that kid in the pic above is wearing).
According to Dr. Robert W. Malone, that vote has failed to attain nominal consensus of the member states, and the WHO is not proceeding to hold the vote. That is not a victory over the plandemic treaty as I understand it, since it has not been voted down, but the vote has merely not taken place, which allows it to be held on another date. However, like most claims of governmental power, I don't think the vote matters at all.
I am sovereign. A vote of me and even hundreds of people I disagree with does not obligate me to some course of action. I am not a democracy. I am a free man, an Autarch, and neither the WHO, the USA, nor anyone else has any authority to tell me to mask up, take jabs, or stand six feet away from other people. No vote on a lot of different things has any legal standing, and I'm not going to comply with any such orders regardless of who is giving those orders.
And, yes that is a hill I'm ready to die on. That's what Memorial Day is all about, theoretically anyway. A lot of Americans have died on hills defending freedoms we have today because they did, and I don't think there's any shortage of Americans prepared to die on this hill either. I will sure not be alone on that hill if it comes down.
It doesn't matter if there's a town hall meeting to decide what color to paint my house, whether I raise chickens in it, or even to house some illegal immigrants in it. It's my house. I get to make those decisions all by myself, and no one has any authority to say anything about it. I reckon that's something folks need to remember on Memorial Day.