Tuesday, June 13, 2023

It Was Never About A Virus

Let's make that clear.

Everything bandied about is now accepted as true by the gatekeepers.

Yet, accountability is so far out of the reach of the common man:

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The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear the appeal of an Alberta woman who was unwilling to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in order to get a life-saving organ transplant.

Annette Lewis was diagnosed with a terminal disease in 2018 and was told she would not survive unless she received an organ transplant.
She was placed on a transplant wait list in 2020, but was informed a year later she would need to get the COVID-19 vaccine to receive the organ.
Lewis said taking the vaccine would offend her conscience and argued the requirement violated her Charter rights to life, conscience, liberty and security of the person.
 
Justice Russell Brown of the Supreme Court stepped down Monday, leaving another vacancy on the country’s top court for another young, progressive-minded judge to be appointed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Facing a misconduct investigation, Brown preferred to end the process rather than endure it. At only 59 years of age, Brown should have had 16 years left (and if he absolutely needed to go earlier, he could have easily lasted until the next Conservative government).
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The Privy Council Office in a confidential August 13, 2021 memo said Liberal and New Democrat voters were more likely to get vaccinated than Conservatives. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called a vaccine mandate election two days later: “We’re a government that is grounded in science.”
 
Now, about that:
The pandemic left Canadians with “increased distrust of government and science,” says a Public Health Agency report. Less than a quarter of people surveyed, 22 percent, said they were more likely to trust federal agencies: “Asked what the remedy might be for restoring trust, participants suggested being honest.”

 

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Rather, he didn't tow the party line:
The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) has permanently suspended the medical licence of Dr. Patrick Brian Phillips after its discipline tribunal found that he was “incompetent” and undermined Canada’s public health response to COVID-19.
“We are dismayed by the deliberate steps you took to undermine the public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic,” the tribunal said in its decision dated June 6.
“As a physician, the information you communicate is trusted by many. Your communications to colleagues, patients, and your thousands of followers on social media regarding COVID-19 and public health response measures, were careless, often offensive and at times, possibly harmful.”
Phillips, who practised medicine in Englehart, was first barred from issuing exemptions for COVID-19 vaccines, masking requirements, and testing—as well as prescribing the antiparasitic medication ivermectin—in September 2021. The CPSO then temporarily suspended Phillips’s medical licence on May 3, 2022, for “holding a medical opinion that is contrary to the public health directives.”
On June 6, 2023, the tribunal found that Phillips “engaged in disgraceful, dishonourable or unprofessional conduct, failed to maintain the standard of practice of the profession, [and] failed to respond appropriately or within a reasonable time to a written inquiry from the College.”
The tribunal also accused Phillips of spreading “misleading, incorrect or inflammatory statements” around COVID-19; attempting to obstruct COVID-19 testing for a 10-month-old infant who had been exposed to the virus; making “inflammatory” statements about public health restrictions; publicly criticizing Canada’s reporting system for adverse vaccine reactions; promoting vaccine exemptions via a website without clinical rationale; and having “heightened public fear during a global public health crisis.”
Additionally, the tribunal said Phillips failed to comply with the college’s investigation and monitoring order it imposed; posted the college’s investigative materials on the internet; and disclosed online a private letter he received from an Associate Medical Officer of Health (AMOH), which opened the AMOH to abusive comments from those who shared Phillips’s views.
In addition to being reprimanded by the panel and having his licence taken away, Phillips was also ordered to pay the college $6,000 in costs by July 6.

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“When the time is right, our government will be very open to examining very thoroughly the response of this country to the COVID-19 crisis,” then health minister Patty Hajdu assured Canadians in April 2021. A year later, a Research Co. poll suggested two-thirds of Canadians were keen on seeing a public inquiry into both the federal and provincial governments’ pandemic responses — and rightly so. The list of questions is practically endless, but most are simply variations on a theme: “Why did you do what you did?”; “Did it work?”; And most crucially, “How do we ensure our health-care and long-term care systems are never so vulnerable again?”
 
This Patty Hajdu: 
It cost taxpayers just over $73,000 for Health Minister Patty Hajdu to travel from Ottawa to Thunder Bay, even as she advised against non-essential travel during the pandemic lockdown.
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Further, effective midnight (11:59 PM EST) February 3, 2021, in addition to proof of a negative pre-departure test, Transport Canada will expand the existing international flight restrictions which funnel scheduled international commercial passenger flights into four Canadian airports: Montréal-Trudeau International Airport, Toronto Pearson International Airport, Calgary International Airport, and Vancouver International Airport. The new restrictions will include scheduled commercial passenger flights arriving from the United States, Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean and South America, which were exempted from the previous restriction. Private/Business and charter flights from all countries will also be required to land at the four airports. Flights from Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon and cargo-only flights will remain exempt.

As soon as possible in the coming weeks, all air travellers arriving in Canada, with very limited exceptions, must reserve a room in a Government of Canada-approved hotel for three nights at their own cost, and take a COVID-19 molecular test on arrival at their own cost. More details will be available in the coming days.

The Government of Canada will introduce a 72-hour pre-arrival testing requirement (molecular test) for travellers seeking entry in land mode, with limited exceptions such as commercial truckers. In addition, we continue to collaborate with partners in the United States to strengthen our border measures and keep our countries safe.

 
So, no, there will be no inquiry as we understand one to be.


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