The New Year is a time when many people refocus on their health goals, whether it’s exercising to get into shape, eating better, or working on de-stressing their lives.
However, as we enter into the third year of “two weeks to flatten the curve”, many more people are now talking about the most important aspect of our own healthcare – bodily autonomy and medical freedom of choice. Or as one Canadian medical ethics professor, who ironically lost her job because she was standing up for the very same ethics that she was supposed to be teaching university students in class, puts it: “we are facing a pandemic not just of a virus but a pandemic of compliance and complacency, in a culture of silence, censorship, and institutionalized bullying”.
A year ago, it was asked what kind of a year was 2021 going to be and concluded that it was probably going to be one of lawsuits and court cases. This turned out to be exactly what happened and it looks like 2022 will be a continuation of more of the same, but with even more intensity.
One of the biggest court cases launched in British Columbia was the class action lawsuit filed last January by the Canadian Society for the Advancement of Science in Public Policy (CSASPP) against the BC government over their illegal and unconstitutional response to the alleged Covid-19 emergency. Despite the government’s attempts to stall and delay the proceedings, it is continuing to make progress with a certification hearing set for this June followed by Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry’s trial in the BC Supreme Court scheduled for next April 2023.
Over 5,000 nurses and other healthcare workers in the province are also being represented by the CSASPP in a court petition scheduled for mid-February. Last year’s heroes, now this year’s unemployed, they were laid off for refusing to partake of the Covid-19 experimental injections which do not prevent people from getting sick or transmitting disease to others. Meanwhile, hospitals and long-term care homes are so critically under-staffed that BC has been considering allowing vaccinated workers to return to work even while they are still sick with Covid-19 symptoms, unlike Alberta Health Services which backed down and recalled all of their vaccine-free staff who had previously been fired or suspended.
An unprecedented number of other employment-related lawsuits are being filed across Canada against employers who will likely end up needing to pay out significant legal and financial settlements for similar cases of wrongful termination of employees who refused to be coerced by vaccine mandates.
As more data and facts continue to surface every day and an increasing number of countries around the world are dropping all Covid-19 related mandates, governments across Canada are having a difficult time trying to prop up their official narrative. A few months ago, the Chief Medical Health Officer of Vancouver Coastal Health stated that vaccine passports were not about health and safety but were being done to “create an incentive” so that more people would submit to taking the Covid-19 experimental injections and the government has finally admitted that up to half of the patients being labelled as Covid-19 hospitalizations were actually there for completely unrelated health complaints.
Pfizer is also being exposed as their own 6 month study shows that their experimental Covid-19 injections actually caused more harm than good and that they pose a greater health risk to children than Covid-19 itself. More safety data will soon be made public due to a recent US federal court ruling that the US Food and Drug Administration is required to release all of their documents relating to the approval of the Pfizer experimental injection within the next 8 months rather than the 75 years that had been requested.
In addition, Reiner Fuellmich, one of the lawyers working on the German Corona Investigative Committee and who is planning on attending Bonnie Henry’s above-mentioned trial, recently announced that they have now collected enough evidence to begin laying criminal charges against the top medical officials around the world and expect to do so within the next month or two.
In the meantime, millions of people across the globe continue to unite for freedom, including tens of thousands of Canadian truckers making history with their Freedom Convoy as they converge onto Ottawa demanding an immediate end to all Covid-19 related government mandates, not just for themselves but for all Canadians.
The ability to ask questions and look for answers, listen to multiple sides of a scientific debate without censorship, and make fully informed and consenting medical decisions and choices – for those of us who value our health, 2022 is shaping up to be the year to take it back into our own hands where it belongs.