History will not forget what has been done here.
There is a reason why they let old people die en masse:
- Seniors currently compose 17.6 percent of Ontario’s population, and their share of the province’s population will continue to grow and reach nearly 24 percent by 2043.
- This will drive increases in health care spending and slow the growth in revenues, which will impose adverse effects on the provincial economy. The risk of future recessions, rising interest rates, and other unexpected events will only compound problems further.
- Health care expenditures are estimated to increase by approximately 4.1 percent annually from now until 2040/41. Put differently, Ontario’s health care spending will increase from 7.1 percent of GDP in 2019 to 7.6 percent in 2040.
- The aging population will exacerbate challenges for Ontario government finances and projections suggest that at the current trajectory the province will not see a balanced budget before 2040.
- Ontario is expected to run primary deficits (excluding interest costs) equivalent to between 0.3 and 0.4 percent of GDP, unless it makes changes to its spending or tax policies.
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- Seniors currently compose 19.2 percent of British Columbia’s population, and their share of the province’s population will continue to grow and reach nearly 26.0 percent by 2043.
- This will drive increases in health care spending and slow growth in revenues, while imposing adverse effects on the provincial economy. The risk of future recessions, rising interest rates, and other unexpected events will only compound problems further.
- Health care expenditures are estimated to increase by approximately 4.2 percent annually from now until 2040/41. Put differently, BC’s health care spending will increase from 7.6 percent of GDP in 2019 to 8.6 percent in 2040.
- The aging population will exacerbate challenges for BC government finances and projections suggest the province will not see a balanced budget before 2040 at the current trajectory.
- BC is expected to run primary deficits (excluding interest costs) equivalent to between 0.2 and 0.7 percent of GDP, absent a change in spending or tax policy.
The children also need to go:
For starters, while NACI doesn’t make any public policy pronouncements, they clearly don’t support extending the passport system to kids. “It is essential that children aged 5-11 years and their parents are supported and respected in their decisions regarding COVID-19 vaccinations for their children, whatever decisions they make, and are not stigmatized for accepting, or not accepting, the vaccination offer,” the report states.
In fact, when it comes to approving the vaccine, all they say is that it “may be” now offered to kids. They explain that “[g]iven the short- term uncertainties surrounding pediatric vaccination at this time, children and their parents or guardians should be supported and respected in their decisions.”
One of the uncertainties they’re referring to is potential hospitalizations for vaccine-related myocarditis. The report points out that the fact the kids’ doses are a third of the volume will hopefully minimize these problems, but they state how “[t]he overall safety and effectiveness data are limited for children.”
(Sidebar: Sick Kids Hospital in Toronto was preparing for cases of myocarditis and pericarditis. Such is their faith in these experimental jabs.)
A lot of parents likely don’t realize that the trial size for kids was quite small, and the NACI report explains that: “Any uncommon, rare, or very rare [side effect] that occurs at the frequency less often than 1 in 1,000 would not be detected with this trial size.” Keep in mind that Ontario health officials now recommend against young males taking Moderna due to a myocarditis rate that was 1 in 5,000.
Pick another country: “93% vaccinated Ireland has gone into partial lockdown, including midnight curfew.” This recent headline too, “COVID surge in Singapore despite 80 percent vaccination.” Or from the U.K. where the Spectator reported, “The rates of Covid infection per 100,000 are now higher among the vaxxed than the unvaxxed.”
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But there is now “increasing evidence that vaccinated individuals continue to have a relevant role in transmission” in COVID-19, the illness caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, Kampf wrote in his paper, dated Nov. 2o.
A study in July suggested that about 469 new COVID-19 cases were found in Massachusetts in July, with 74 percent of the cases among individuals who were partially or fully vaccinated, which Kampf cited to make his argument. Seventy-nine percent of those were also symptomatic.
“In Germany, 55·4 percent of symptomatic COVID-19 cases in patients aged 60 years or older were in fully vaccinated individuals, and this proportion is increasing each week,” he continued, citing another study.
New cases reported in an outbreak in Munster occurred in 22 percent of 380 people who were fully vaccinated or who had recovered from COVID-19 and who attended a nightclub, he noted, citing a German study.
“Both the USA and Germany have engendered negative experiences by stigmatizing parts of the population for their skin color or religion,” he concluded, possibly referencing the Holocaust and the North American slave trade.
“I call on high-level officials and scientists to stop the inappropriate stigmatization of unvaccinated people, who include our patients, colleagues, and other fellow citizens, and to put extra effort into bringing society together.”
The rush to inject something that, at best, could be described as experimental, is horrifying.
This:
It is “probably going to be quite difficult” to convince all parents to immunize young children against Covid, says the Public Health Agency. The pandemic is blamed for six deaths among more than 6 million unvaccinated children under age 15: “I have a small child. I’m not happy about injecting him with strange things.”
Also:
The Saskatchewan government has introduced legislation that would ban COVID-19 protests within 50 metres of schools, including on sidewalks, as the province gets ready to roll out vaccination clinics for younger children in schools and other settings.
Imagine a virus so deadly that they let you travel around if they feel like it:
Transport Minister Omar Alghabra confirmed unvaccinated air passengers may seek exemptions from Covid shots under vague rules to take effect next week. Enforcement will fall to individual airline agents under threat of Aeronautics Act fines of $25,000: “Starting November 30 there will be very few exemptions to allow unvaccinated travelers to travel.”
The corrupt legal system was never meant to enforce the rights one should already have:
The unvaccinated, while loudly protesting the purported disregard of their “legal rights,” are losing one legal battle after another.
Their primary complaint is that they are being “forced” or “coerced” to be vaccinated, alleging that this breaches, among other things, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, human rights legislation, the criminal code and, most ludicrously, the Nuremberg Convention. We have said throughout that such arguments are mere piffle.
(Sidebar: piffle, indeed. The Charter was never meant as a serious legal document on the rights of others. It is meant to serve as a governmental cudgel. Using it to appeal for one's self, therefore, is like asking the Devil for help.)
The Ontario Superior Court of Justice has now agreed.
On November 20, Justice Jasmine Akbarali rendered a joint decision involving both Toronto Transit Commission and Sinai Health System, denying an injunction by their unions to block the companies from enforcing its COVID-19 vaccine mandate on their workforces and their right to dismiss unvaccinated workers.
The Superior Court’s decision is a clear indication of how the courts will likely rule going forward. It follows a series of other cases during the pandemic in which the courts have consistently ruled in favour of employers’ safety measures.
What to do? Create a tiered class or fall on one's sword?:
A total 201 federal employees are in Federal Court today to challenge Treasury Board orders that they disclose their vaccination status. No federal judge has yet ruled on whether the November 15 order is constitutional: “They refuse to be vaccinated for reasons that vary.”
Also:
A doctor reprimanded for “inappropriate” tweets about Covid lockdowns and vaccines is appealing the censure. Ontario Superior Court rejected her free speech claim in the case until a 2022 regulatory hearing is complete: “I refuse to live a lie.”
An institution too big to fail:
Robinson said her left breast became dense in September 2020, and called her family doctor asking for a mammogram, realizing she was not notified of her yearly checkup months earlier. She was not able to get an appointment for a mammogram until January 2021. Her results came back abnormal and a second mammogram, done in February, confirmed she had Stage 4 breast cancer.
While doctors were able to get her in for a lumpectomy in early April 2021, Robinson said her recovery was slow and painful. She was experiencing burning across her back and down her legs, was struggling to walk, and developed a sebaceous cyst on her head. This prompted her doctor to order more screens to check if the cancer had spread.
A bone scan confirmed that Robinson's breast cancer had metastasized to her bones. Cancer in the bones is incurable, and the only treatment is to ease pain and slow the progression of the disease.
Screw this social distancing crap!:
Almost half of Canadians plan to abandon social distancing during holiday gatherings and hug, kiss and shake hands with friends and family, a new poll shows.
The poll by Leger in collaboration with The Canadian Press found —that 45 per cent of Canadians say they will “greet others with a handshake, hug or kiss” at Christmas parties and other holiday gatherings.
In Ontario, the number prepared to ditch social distancing over the winter vacation rose to 50 per cent, compared to only 37 per cent in B.C.
But people are fine with firing people who don't get jabbed, so ...
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