As British Columbia’s public healthcare system continues to deteriorate with critical hospital staff shortages, frequent emergency room closures throughout the province, long wait times for diagnostic testing and even longer delays for appointments with specialists, thousands of doctors and nurses throughout BC found out last month that they won’t be able to return back to work after being kicked out of the public medical system over 2 years ago.
In a recent judicial review decision from the Supreme Court of BC, the judge dismissed three cases and ruled that BC Provincial Health Officer (PHO) Bonnie Henry was justified in extending the Covid-19 experimental injection mandates for public healthcare workers.
Similar to the investigations currently being conducted in the US, where it was finally exposed that Covid-19 measures including 6-foot “social distancing” rules and mask mandates were made up despite claims of “following the science”, PHO Bonnie Henry was unable to provide the court with actual data or evidence to backup her orders or explain why BC remains the only province within Canada to have ongoing mandates.
Despite this lack of evidence, the judge ended up deferring to the government and ruled that the mandates were reasonable.
As one of the three groups to present their petitions for judicial review, the Canadian Society for Science & Ethics in Medicine (CSSEM) has announced that it is appealing the decision and expects its case to be heard in the BC Court of Appeal sometime later this year.
In the meantime, as more patients share their first-hand experiences of the crumbling healthcare system, perhaps we should all be asking the question why is the science in BC apparently different than in the rest of Canada and the world?