Expect Canadians are starting to wake up and take to the streets; this was Moncton this afternoon! Last week, the New Brunswick Health Minister advised businesses to enforce the mandatory vaccine policy at their discretion.

The Canadian state-funded media, unelected public health officials and politicians want you to feel alone, that no one else feels the same way you do. Expect Canadians are starting to wake up and take to the streets; this was Moncton this afternoon! Last week, the New Brunswick Health Minister advised businesses to enforce the mandatory vaccine policy at their discretion. So again, power-hungry citizens are now choosing to deny essential services, which is against everything our democracy is founded on. We, the people, have the power to change the direction, together we can! Do not give up!

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[Documentary] Vaccine-Injured Individuals & Health Professionals Speak Out: I Am Not Misinformation

[Documentary] Vaccine-Injured Individuals & Health Professionals Speak Out: I Am Not Misinformation

Big Pharma CorruptionVaccine Adverse Events, Injuries & DeathsVaccine FailureWhat the Experts Say / By Gord Parks / December 11, 2021

[DOCUMENTARY] Vaccine-injured individuals & health professionals courageously speak up and out against the narrative that Covid-19 “vaccines” are safe “in an effort to educate the public on the issues that the mainstream media overtly refuse to cover.”

Documentary by Dan Peruzzo (www.dsee.ca)

Watch here:https://brightlightnews.com/documentary-vaccine-injured-individuals-health-professionals-speak-out-i-am-not-misinformation/?fbclid=IwAR1FvCUfWUFn9fTOMvM2VP_sRTUefSWZ2jwGYGUF8h1zHYp64_uU71VOsb0

Legality of asking vaccine status to get public services being investigated

Daniel Therrien said it’s currently unclear

Author of the article:Postmedia News

Publishing date:Dec 10, 2021  •  

Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien takes part in a news conference in Ottawa, April 25, 2019.
Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien takes part in a news conference in Ottawa, April 25, 2019. PHOTO BY CHRIS WATTIE/FILE PHOTO /REUTERS

Sabrina Maddeaux: Worshipping at the altar of COVID science

Following the science should be an intellectual exercise, but it’s become one in which regular people seek comfort and affirmation during an undeniably difficult time

Author of the article:Sabrina Maddeaux

Publishing date:Dec 10, 2021  •  22 hours ago  •  3 minute read  •   61 Comments

Bars
PHOTO BY JACK BOLAND/TORONTO SUN/POSTMEDIA NETWORK

Over the course of the pandemic, we’ve heard one refrain over and over again: “follow the science.” It’s a well-intentioned line that’s hard to refute and generally serves as good advice. But somewhere along the way, levelheadedness turned emotional, and quests for transparency and truth turned dogmatic. Many people’s dedication to science began to resemble something decidedly unscientific: religion.

Following the science should be an intellectual exercise, but it’s become one in which regular people seek comfort and affirmation during an undeniably difficult time. Like traditional religions, that comfort is found in rituals, personal and collective sacrifice, and moral judgments on purity. Anyone who questions or critiques public health responses –– which may be based on science, but are subjective decisions –– are often cast as heretics.

Rigorously cleaning and sanitizing surfaces we’ve long known aren’t major sources of transmission is largely a comfort ritual. Erecting plastic barriers that may actually worsen ventilation is also often about psychological reassurance.

Wearing masks as you walk to your table in a small restaurant, but not for the next two hours as you eat, drink and socialize, is not just ritualistic, but a theatrical display. The same goes for QR code menus and directional stickers in aisles. These things may look like science, sound like science, and even feel like science, but they’re stretching what science actually demands.

On social media, what began as an honest pursuit of knowledge and hard data created new communities and infallible idols during a period of isolation. One of the fundamental roles of churches and other places of worship is to provide social organization and connection. Pews are replaced with follower counts, and collective hymns with retweets and memes.

The main connection between these communities and their newly popular leaders is an often uncritical dedication to following the so-called science and demanding others adhere to it. Straying from the flock is discouraged; “doing your own research” has become something to mock.

Historically, religions thrive during times of crisis. Polling shows that the faith of many religious Americans was strengthened during the pandemic, even as their places of worship closed. Google searches for “prayer” have spiked worldwide.

But the reality is that traditional religion is in decline, and more people than ever consider themselves agnostic, atheist or simply nonpracticing. However, the psychological needs served by religion during crises remain; people still crave comfort, community and a sense of control.

Science became many of these non-believers’ de facto religion; something to cling to, worship and help make sense of it all. There would be little harm in this, if it weren’t for the fact that science is actually important and perverting it to serve our psychological and social needs poses obvious dangers. It risks clouding our collective decision-making and ultimately undermining the trustworthiness of truly objective facts and data.

To be clear, our understanding of science can and should evolve as we learn more. One week’s objective fact may not be next week’s objective fact. But much of the same crowd that lectures others on accepting changing science has a glaring blind spot: the science changes, but their own mindsets and judgments don’t, particularly when it comes to conflating hygiene theatre and moral virtue. Their pandemic approach remains decidedly Old Testament, steeped in sacrifice and a punitive worldview.

We’re convinced we’re in a period of enlightenment, but our reality increasingly hews closer to the Middle Ages, when science was seen as a way to reinforce theological and moral beliefs rather than a pure pursuit of knowledge.

It’s no secret that religions have an unfortunate habit of being hijacked by those with ulterior motives, whether that be political or personal power, or the pursuit of wealth and fame. It’d be naive to think opportunists and bad actors aren’t already trying to capitalize on the blind faith and moral rigidity of the most hardcore “follow the science” worshippers. This is why, going forward, questioning what’s presented to the public as science is more important than ever.

National Post

https://nationalpost.com/opinion/sabrina-maddeaux-worshipping-at-the-altar-of-covid-science?fbclid=IwAR3Rqt7uBCII0gfdlWkQdP13lXinwn7Sd3IJFHmj_9ab8QRmtgvn87ARAjg

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