Tuesday, May 28, 2024

It Was Never About A Virus

Indeed:

A leaked video recording shows the Public Health Agency of Canada’s (CPAC) health chief Theresa Tam and BC health authority Bonnie Henry laughing as they discuss lawsuits filed by Canadian mink farmers. 

Tam hosted a roundtable meeting over Zoom to discuss the H5N1 Avian flu and where to test for it with several provincial health officials and PHAC staff. 

Public health agencies, along with the legacy media apparatus, have been pointing to H5N1 as the latest potential pandemic, and in the meeting discussed how they would portray the situation to Canadians through “messaging” and making “pandemic preparedness” plans.

Private researcher and biostatistician Christine Massey, who unexpectedly received an invitation to the call, posted the one-hour video online in its entirety. 

Tam discussed the “messaging” specifically surrounding non-pasteurized milk, which health officials have flagged as dangerous to both people and pets as they say it may carry the flu virus. 

She said not to feed any pets raw milk, but especially “cats don't do well.”

“Do not feed your cats with raw milk products. I'm assuming farm cats are pets so we do have to think about that as well in terms of messaging,” said Tam, laughing.

Henry then cut Tam off and said “on a positive note, we shut down mink farms in BC as you may know.”

“Ontario, be aware, you still have them. They launched a lawsuit against us, that was just thrown out yesterday so one last thing to deal with,” said Henry, laughing.

** 

“The CAF did not conduct a pre-policy risk analysis since CDS, based on solid medical advice, decided to accept any impacts this policy would/could have brought to bear,” wrote then-Brigadier-General Erick Simoneau in a May 2022 email.

**

Nearly $10 billion worth of COVID pandemic relief payments were sent to ineligible applicants, and to date, less than 20 percent of the amount has been recovered, a report by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) recently confirmed.

 In a brief submitted to the Senate national finance committee on May 14, the CRA broke down that total amount into two categories, indicating that it was based on 544,000 cases the agency had audited up until the 2023 year-end of people who received federal COVID-related benefits.

 “As it relates to individual programs, the CRA had completed reviews and thus far had found that $7.96B in payments had been ineligible (all amounts as of December 31, 2023),” the agency told Sen. Pierre Dalphond in the brief in a response to the senator’s questions on the matter, as first reported by Blacklock’s Reporter.

 **

At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made a multi-million dollar funding commitment to build a vaccine plant in Montreal to churn out Canadian-made COVID-19 shots by the end of 2020.

Four years later, not a single vial of usable vaccine has rolled off the line.

The publicly owned Biologics Manufacturing Centre (BMC) was built quickly on National Research Council-owned land at the site of a former animal vaccines plant, thanks to a cash injection of nearly $130 million from the federal government.

While construction was mostly complete by June 2021 and certified by Health Canada as compliant with its regulations in July 2022, the taxpayer-funded facility hasn't yet done what it was intended to do — produce vials of vaccines at scale for patient use.

Meanwhile, the National Research Council (NRC) is still bankrolling the facility with $17 million in annual funding to help keep about 100 employees working on site, according to figures provided by the NRC, the federal government's research and development arm.

 **

Normally, this sort of thing would raise red flags:

An Ottawa Police Service detective accused of discreditable conduct after probing into the COVID-19 vaccination status of the mothers of deceased infants testified at her hearing that she was upholding her oath as an officer when conducting the investigations.

“My duty as a police officer is to preserve life and property, to preserve the peace. And if I see any one of those situations arising where I need to step in and preserve life, I will do something. And that’s what I did, in good faith, as a police officer,” Constable Helen Grus testified at the Ottawa Police Service (OPS) building in Stittsville on May 27.

 Const. Grus, a detective with the OPS sexual assault and child abuse unit, is accused of discreditable conduct for conducting an “unauthorized project” between June 2020 and January 2022 by probing into the sudden deaths of nine infants. Const. Grus is alleged to have accessed Ottawa police files and then contacted the coroner’s office to learn the COVID-19 vaccination status of the parents, as she believed there could be an association between the two.

 On Jan. 30, 2022, Const. Grus also allegedly contacted the father of a deceased infant to inquire into the COVID-19 vaccination status of its mother, without the knowledge of the lead detective. While Const. Grus was suspended without pay from the OPS on Feb. 4, 2022, she was ordered to return to work with restrictions during an Oct. 11, 2022, OPS internal hearing.

 During her testimony on May 27, Const. Grus said she had been concerned after being informed of a “doubling if not tripling of baby deaths” that happened after the rollout of the COVID-19 vaccines. Const. Grus said two detectives had also told her of incidents where “fully alert and healthy babies” had suddenly died in their mothers’ arms.


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