Thank you, Canadian truckies: a note from the Gulag Down Under
Many Aussies are too scared to oppose forced state injections for fear of losing their jobs, while the vaccine injured are ignored. Here's how they are silenced
Australians are quietly cheering the Canadian trucker convoy that has beautifully massed against forced state injections.
Thousands of trucks remained in downtown Ottawa on Sunday night, parked for another day of protest against covid over-reach in the nation’s capital as Aussie Big Rigs set off on a convoy to Canberra in solidarity.
Aussie truckers raised more than $150,000 on GoFundMe to support the convoy converging at Parliament House on Monday morning and had more than 26,700 supporters on their Telegram channel “2022 Official Convoy to Canberra Terra Australis”.
By noon, the GoFundMe was over $160,000. By Tuesday morning GoFundMe had frozen the account.
Some Australians are vocal on social media and have protested for months - but many more won’t speak up as they are afraid for their jobs, afraid of the government and afraid of the mob that is weaponised against them.
“We never had this conversation,” one lady muttered through her facemask as a blue-smocked covid tester approached my car at a Sydney drive-thru.
She is a health worker, and could lose her career for what she had just said to me - not her job, but her entire career.
In Australia, any health worker that opposes the forced injections faces punishment and possible de-registration as an ‘anti-vaxxer” by their governing professional boards linked under AHPRA - the Australian Health Practitioners Regulatory Agency.
Without a license, they can’t work.
That includes, among others, all doctors, nurses, midwives, chiropractors, dentists, pharmacists, psychologists, midwives, paramedics, chiropractors, osteopaths – not even optometrists are allowed to have their own opinion on the covid vaccines.
The health worker’s sin, as she collected my details, was to agree the government is crazy to act as though immunity from prior infection doesn’t exist, when multiple studies (eg: here, here and here) show it is superior to vaccine immunity (here).
Worse, she said not everyone needs to be protected from covid by a vaccine with side-effects, that interferes with your immune response - and that if you don’t need it, you shouldn’t take it.
This is all true, but a health worker cannot say it publicly in Australia.
AHPRA and the Medical Board of Australia told members this in a joint directive last March.
“There is no place for anti-vaccination messages in professional health practice, and any promotion of anti-vaccination claims including on social media, and advertising may be subject to regulatory action,” spokesman Brett Simmonds said in the statement.
Health workers across all Australian states and territories were forced by law to have covid vaccines to work, purging those who didn’t want them and showing the remainder who’s boss.
Vaccine conformity turns a blind eye to injuries
The silencing of the medical community has discouraged doctors from attributing injuries to the vaccine, much less reporting them, according to multiple health workers who have left.
Pip, a retired RAAF medic and endorsed enrolled nurse from the Blue Mountains west of Sydney, said doctors at her former practice simply refuse to believe any ill effects reported by patients could come from the vaccine.
In one instance, Pip said a pregnant woman turned up with pneumonia-like symptoms 12 hours after her second Pfizer vaccine, to be told by the doctor on duty: “Oh no, it wouldn’t have been the injection”.
“How can you say that without investigating?” Pip said.
“Her baby was later born with harlequin syndrome.”
It’s a global problem. Overseas, patients are sometimes not even told vaccine injury is a possibility.
The Pfizer vaccine killed 26-year-old New Zealand plumber Rory Nairn with a heart attack 12 days after his first injection.
This was confirmed by an autopsy in which pathologist Noelyn Hung found Mr Nairn died of myocarditis caused solely by the Pfizer vaccine.
Fiancée Ashleigh Wilson reveals in the heartbreaking documentary Rory’s Story that the man she was set to marry didn’t want the injection - and when he got it, he wasn’t told of the risks.
That night, Rory complained of a funny feeling in his chest, but the symptoms went away and returned a few days later as ‘heart flutters’ which he put down to anxiety.
“Because they weren’t there all of the time we didn’t think it was going to be something serious,” Ashleigh said.
“He wasn’t told about anything. If he was, he would have went to the hospital straight away.”
Ashleigh has since spoken to at least 10 people who have been diagnosed with myocarditis or pericarditis.
“Why are we not hearing about all these serious injuries? Why are they saying it’s rare, why are they saying it’s mild? They’re downplaying everything and it’s just lies,” she said.
“We shouldn’t be choosing between our jobs and putting something in our bodies … someone has died now.”
Worse, the social media mob whipped up by propaganda have laughed at the tragedy, saying it ‘wasn’t true’ that Rory had died from the vaccine.
In the US state of Idaho, 29-year-old professional mountain bike racer Kyle Warner was injured by his second Pfizer injection in June 2021.
Speaking to popular YouTuber Dr John Campbell, Kyle said two weeks later he noticed strange racing-heart symptoms.
He went to the emergency department for help but as soon as he mentioned it might be myocarditis after the vaccine, the doctor on duty said: “No, that’s very rare, you’re having anxiety.”
Kyle insisted that his heart rate was abnormally high, so the doctor told him he was psychotic and he would refer him to a psychiatrist.
“He thought I was imagining things and being an anti-vaxxer conspiracy theorist,” Kyle said.
Four days later the symptoms returned and a cardiologist at a different hospital diagnosed him with pericarditis, a dangerous swelling of the pericardium that surrounds the heart.
A support website called Real Not Rare has been started to help vaccine injured people tell their stories online and get support, as they are being ignored and censored everywhere else.
A 12-year-old volunteer in Pfizer’s own trials, Maddie de Garay, was paralysed with excruciating pain hours after the second shot.
The Cincinnati Children’s Hospital where the trial was being held, told the family Maddie’s symptoms were psychological and claimed it was unrelated to the vaccine.
Pfizer listed it only as ‘functional abdominal pain’ in its report to the US regulator, the Food and Drug Administration.
Functional abdominal pain is jargon for a stomach ache.
Maddie de Garay remains in a wheelchair. Her story has been blacked out by corporate media.
Pfizer was convicted of criminal fraud and fined US$2.3 billion in 2009.
The company expects to make US$65 billion from selling covid vaccines in 2021 and 2022.
The UK’s most respected peer-reviewed medical journal, the British Medical Journal (BMJ), has raised concerns about the conduct of the Pfizer vaccine trials by subcontractor Ventavia after whistleblowers revealed poor practices including unmasking double-blinded trials halfway through, and failure to follow up adverse events.
More problems were found by academics including in Pfizer’s basic trial design for children which analyst Toby Rogers says was shoddy and designed to hide problems.
Australia’s regulator the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) says it thoroughly reviewed the Pfizer vaccine for safety - but reveals on its website that it relied on a report of the clinical trials authored by Pfizer itself.
The BMJ reported on January 19 that Pfizer has not even released the raw data from it’s pivotal covid vaccine trial.
Pfizer and its contract research organisations hold all the data on the trial that was funded, designed, run and analysed by Pfizer employees, the BMJ reports.
“Pharmaceutical companies are reaping vast profits without adequate independent scrutiny of their scientific claims,” the BMJ wrote in its report.
In Australia there inadequate scrutiny, media censorship, regulatory threats silencing health workers and government propaganda: a horrible combination leading to awful public ignorance.
Deluded people now compare the covid vaccines to the crushing of polio and smallpox, egged on by mainstream disinformation.
One of Australia’s biggest newspapers, The Age, repeated false claims this month that the vaccines can stop the pandemic without context or correction.
Vaccines are “the only way to stop this pandemic”, tennis star Rafael Nadal said and the once-respectable broadsheet trumpeted it in a headline on January 6 as if this ignorant untruth were a statement of fact.
The vaccines do nothing to stop Omicron spreading, this has been known for months.
It is unfamiliar and terrifying to see false claims published as pro-vaccination propaganda in Australia’s corporate news, while stories of victims are suppressed.
Australia’s public health messaging has strangled debate by aggressively pushing blanket vaccination across all age groups over 5 years, regardless of side-effects and despite statistics showing healthy young people have almost zero risk of severe covid.
So thank you, Canadian truckers, from a nation crushed Down Under.
Notes on responses from sources
Pip, the endorsed enrolled nurse from a Sydney protest against forced injections on January 15, has asked to remain anonymous.
Letters From Australia contacted the healthcare network Pip worked for, which has more than 50 centres across five states in regional Australia, but did not receive a response in time for publication.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners which represents GPs also did not respond to questions about whether doctors have been discouraged by vaccine compliance culture from reporting vaccine injuries.
A spokesperson for AHPRA and National Boards said via email there was nothing in their March statement that should discourage the reporting of vaccine injuries.
The spokesperson said vaccination is a crucial part of the public health response to the covid pandemic and that health practitioners had an obligation to provide evidence-based information “in line with the best available health advice” and “consistent with public health messaging”.
UPDATE: This story was updated Tuesday February 1 to reflect that GoFundMe has frozen the account to support the Aussie trucker Convoy to Canberra until a detailed plan for funds disbursement is provided.
CORRECTION: This story was updated February 13 to correct Pip’s qualification from “registered nurse” to “endorsed enrolled nurse”. It was updated again on March 9 to correct “US senator” to “Queensland senator”.