Scottish, UK and Geopolitics, reviewing the policies and personalities, speaking out and up for those whose voices needs to be heard.
Wednesday, 9 November 2022
The Laird Report Episode 20 Public Health Messaging in Scotland is Unethical, refuse covid boosters, it seems political decisions by the SNP Government take priority over clincal need and duty of care of the general public
Takes a lot to stand up in society and say No to authority, but as more and more evidence emerges regarding the safety of Covid drugs, forced and coerced on the public, by Drug companies, Governments, politicians, mainstream media, big tech and celebrities, we have reached a tipping point. Covid drugs are unsafe, they represent a real and present threat to the health of general populations in countries. As continuous data comes to light of harm, this information has no relevance to governments. Why is that? Why did so many governments and organisations all adopt the same narrative? Why did mainstream media silence alternative views from medical professionals? Why did big tech introduced suppression of freedom of speech? Why was evidence hidden from the public of danger? Why was informed consent replaced by diktat and ignored?
In doing my 20th episode, I reference a video by Dr. John Campbell, he started as someone who believed the data from drug companies because he thought they acted in the public good, and in good faith. As new evidence emerged his videos on youtube changed because peer reviewed data doesn't lie. In his video, you can see his alarm, although he cannot speak freely due to youtube censorship, reading between the lines, he is thinking the unthinkable, regarding what covid drugs are doing to the population. People need to made a choice, blindly obey authority without question, or stop and question, listen to what is being said, and then listen for what should have been said but wasn't. People need to refuse Covid vaccine boosters because evidence has been hidden, governments, politicans, media and drug companies have broken the public trust.
The people who caused so much suffering are talking about forgiveness and forgetting, too many people are dead, seriously injured or will have covid vaccination injury for life. Should we forgive people who disregarded the fundamental principles of medical ethics, or governments and politicians who caused serious harm, along with social influencers who demonised those brave enough to say no? The answer is no, we should not forgive or forget, we need Nuremberg 2.0, the crimes are too great, and those involved need to be brought to justice, every single one of them, no matter how high or low their status in society. Please watch this video by Dr. John Campbell and listen carefully.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMMA9bwDklQ&t=11s
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I had my booster yesterday and the way I look at it these days is that you either accept or you don't and either way it is OK with me. A lot was said about heard immunity at the time and it was discredited back in the day but we are at the stage now where heard immunity actually works. Enough people have been vaccinated already and so, even if you are not vaccinated, the risks to you are much reduced, as are the risks of mutant forms of the virus developing in the population. The problem with Andrew Neil is that he thinks that he is always right and every question he asks is through the prism of he is right and whoever he is questioning has been given a chance to prove if they are as smart as him. I like the guy, but that is an annoying problem he has and it makes his appeal limited among the public.
ReplyDeleteYou're living in the wrong country if you are looking for and expecting justice. Neither exists in Scotland. The present Covid-19 Inquiry has been running for 6 or 8 weeks in England and they will get through it and publish the results. It will be like the Grenfell Inquiry.
ReplyDeleteIn Scotland, we have another legal cover-up where John Swinney and Nicola Sturgeon get to select the presiding judge and the legal teams. Their remit being: 'Don't blame any of it on us'. If they don't accept the remit then they don't get the work and that has happened already.
The cases of Millie Main and Andrew Slorance show that Scotland doesn't do justice any longer - we do political cover-ups. Best of luck to you, George - but you have no chance whatsoever.
Holyrood was established to identify and resolve Scottish problems in Scotland. It is doing the opposite and if you want good impartial legal advice, or any other kind of advice, you need to ask outside Scotland because everyone here has been got-at. You described this in your article of course. No doubt it is a problem everywhere, but all that I am saying is that I personally notice it here in Scotland and it has been in the last 10-years.
In the meantime, Nicola Sturgeon and Liz Lloyd are in Sharm El Sheikh and I hear that Keith Brown is in the Falkland Islands. Fuck knows what any of that has to do with the responsibilities of a devolved regional assembly, but that's the way it is in Scotland.
Do we still have an NHS because I've been waiting three years for a hip replacement? Also, I told my doctor one month ago that my left hand was semi-paralyzed, and I'm still waiting to see a specialist. I haven't had a dental appointment since 2019. As I said, do we really have an NHS, or am I just imagining all this?
ReplyDeleteYou have strong feelings on this subject and have read-up on it. I do not have strong feelings on it and I don't want to start an argument as I suspect I would lose that. However, permit me to make the following point: I live in a small honky-tonk joint where hardly anyone else lives. The place is stuck in the 18th century and is for hermits really. In the early days of Covid and during the first lock down I can remember neighbours would refuse to speak to each other in case they caught the virus. That said, the local bowling club held a birthday party for one of my neighbours. It was completely against the rules of course but their chances of being caught or reported were next to zero and so the party went ahead anyway. Believe it or not, something like 16 or 18 people caught the virus at that party. All of them recovered. However, the chap who was the barman visited his parents the following weekend and unbeknown to him he passed the virus on to them and they both died within days of each other; one in a hospital in Paisley and the other at a hospital in Glasgow. So, that experience has taught everyone around here a lesson and I personally take the vaccine and the booster and so does my wife.
ReplyDeleteTake the time to scroll the tweets of this guy.
Deletehttps://twitter.com/DrJamesOlsson
He is one of many who speak out about people who took the vaccine then either died or had a serious problem. Many people talk about how they had it and it did them no harm. This generalised opinion is dangerous without a full medical, testing for everything. Cancers can take years to surface, during that time, a person can feel healthy, but they aren't. Who knows what will come to light, one thing is that stats show excessive deaths. They show the Health Service overwhelmed. This is because, 3 distinct groups have joined it as patients along with the general workload. People who have covid, people who have various serious illness not treated as NHS shutdown, and people who are vaccine injured. Some people call it 'long covid', this is a made up nonsense with no real medical basis. Long Covid Clinics are really covid vaccine injury clinics. They are like GPs, a waypoint to send people onward to other departments.
I remember a few things about the beginnings of the Covid vaccine. The first ones to be produced were by Pfizer Biontec and Oxford Astra Zeneca. The OAZ vaccine was a not-for-profit vaccine, it was therefore incredibly cheap and it could be stored in a normal refrigerator. The PB vaccine required super-low temperatures and so was really unsuitable for many parts of the world that needed it.
ReplyDeleteSo, there was a great enthusiasm for the Oxford Astra-Zeneca vaccine. That's the one I was given and I remember I could hardly wait for my appointment.
We should remember that, at this time, people were carrying out cremations of the dead in car-parks in India, bodies were floating down the Nile and the Ganges and so-on and so there was a great deal of panic around.
In France and Germany, Merkel and Macron said that the Oxford Astra-Zeneca vaccine was unproven in the over 50's. The medical teams in the UK didn't know what they were talking about but, nevertheless, millions of over 50's in both countries refused the vaccine and many died as a result of that. I cannot remember the figure, but it was tens of thousands. All for politics.
One of the most impressive guys I remember listening to on this subject was Professor Bell of Oxford University and his view was very pragmatic - there are risks but the risks of not taking it are many, many times greater.
Times have moved-on since then and there is nothing like the same dependence on the vaccine. We have immunity now amongst the vast majority of the population which means that even if the virus affects you in the future, it is likely to be a very much weaker strain of the virus which is very unlikely to kill you.
That's the way I see it now.
I take the booster, but if I forgot my appointment and missed it, I wouldn't be too bothered by that.
I suppose that it depends a lot on the way people live and the capacity of the health system to cope and all the rest of it, but Sweden went for a completely different response to Covid. It seemed to me like they were waiting for heard immunity there, although no-one expressed it as such. There were no lock-downs and their populations were had access to the vaccines if they wanted them but there was no pressure, or not the same pressure anyway, to be vaccinated. What I can say is that Sweden did pretty well and their approach worked. There was none of this 'track and trace' garbage that cost us so much, no fascination with PPE either. Our health care system is hanging by a thread and so any increase in patient numbers puts it into immediate crisis and so that may have promoted our panicked response to Covid.
ReplyDeleteThe trouble you have with the NHS in Scotland is that it is autonomously run by the SNP. Andrew Neil once famously said that Scotland was turning into a banana republic without the bananas. He was talking about the Fabiani Inquiry at the time, but it could apply to NHS Inquiries, Edinburgh Trams Inquiries, Childrens' Homes Abuse Inquiries or any of the other bogus Inquiries set up by Holyrood and run by the Scottish legal profession. The Covid Inquiry is the latest and anyone in Scotland bar the few simpletons we have here know that it is set-up to fail to deliver. The NHS, like Education, has been presided over by the best the SNP have got over the years and that is bad news for all of the rest of us. Sturgeon was Health Minister, then Robison, Freeman and now Yousaf. My God. The only SNP high-ranking spoof which has been missed is Swinney himself. NHS Inquiries take place in England where their Covid Inquiry is already underway, but they have had Inquiries into gender re-assignment, baby deaths and all the rest of it. Everything is examined in the open. Juries aren't 'selected' by Rish Sunak or anyone else and the law is allowed to run as a separate entity. That's the way it should be done and it was the way it was done here too before Holyrood was invented. We can trace just about everything that has gone wrong in Scotland back to Holyrood. It's been a feckin nightmare for all of us. Scotland has turned into somewhere which hardly belongs in the UK any longer and, if anyone thinks that is a good idea, just wait until its effects begin to affect you and your family. Scotland doesn't need a Scottish legal Inquiry into anything, it needs a full audit by UK authorities into our bent politicians and even more bent lawyers.
ReplyDeletePretty much sums it up
DeleteThree things I remember about the height of the pandemic and they are all from overseas:
ReplyDelete1. Folk that had the virus being padlocked inside their houses by Chinese police.
2. In Russia, ambulances with Covid patients queuing for as far as the eye could see in front of a hospital already packed to overflowing with Covid patients.
3. Bottles of medical oxygen being sold on street corners in India.
I never got vaccinated as I relied on natural immunity. I caught COVID in December 2020. Nothing much and certainly not like a bad flu, only disturbing things, and they lasted about one week. I lost my sense of smell and went stone deaf in my right ear. I do hope these vaccinations are safe and not as nasty as some are saying on the internet.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I heard or read about at the start of the pandemic was that in China, there was such a panic in the big cities that Covid patients were removed from hospitals before they had expired and were zipped in body-bags and put in crematorium ovens. A horrifying story if true. Sadly, the horrifying stories out of China very often are true. You've got to wonder at what the outcome could have been had vaccines not been introduced when they were. I remember great fear being replaced with optimism that the light was at the end of the tunnel, finally.
ReplyDeleteI had a Covid booster in one arm and a flu jab in the other arm. So, people are becoming more relaxed about it all. No-one I was aware of refused the Covid booster and accepted the flu jab; they just went for both. I do not have a clue what the relative risks are, flu against Covid and I happen to believe that Covid has dropped down the league of scary viruses and is not one that terrifies me any longer.
ReplyDeleteGeorge - the Friday meeting that I have been trying to arrange since May is finally taking place tomorrow and so I, and ergo you too, may be close to a result at last. Your website has been a great help to me over the years and I am almost certain that I wouldn't have succeeded without it. Don't forget that this has been done in the public interest - something that Holyrood should be doing for us. I'll let you know how it goes.
ReplyDeleteThe SNP love me so much they want to find something to repay me, which is why they keep tabs on me. Plus, I have turfed some of Nicola's pals back on the breadline. They wait in the shadows.
DeleteI notice your fellow blogger Stuart Campbell is getting back in the saddle again. He retired about a year ago and he's coming back due to boredom and the fact that our press are now so crap that all at Holyrood just do anything they like now and get away with it. His type of journalism is very precise. He is able to quote who said what and when they said it. Interestingly, he says that the SNP and Labour are set-against him coming back. I wonder why?
ReplyDeleteHe paints a brutal truth, the SNP fell into the same work practices as New Labour, fuck the voters. Here is an example, SNP saying they support something, do no work, don't attend meetings, but turn up for the photo ops. In this case, the chancer was thrown out.
Deletehttps://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/23139843.snps-graham-campbell-expelled-meeting-drug-deaths-charity/
Labour introduced a minimum wage in 1999. It was only £3.60 per hour. Lots of people were getting double that, and they all got sacked, and if they wanted to work, all they were offered was the minimum wage. Labour was cruel to the poorest between 1999 and 2010. They forced people to work for their benefits plus £10, with no opposition from unions or Sheridan types. The minimum wage was only £4.73 when the Tories came to power in 2010.
ReplyDeleteThe minimum wage has now been raised to £10.20. Along with inflation, all benefits are increasing. The pension for the upcoming year is £203. Does anyone who remembers a Libour government believe it would be any better? My recollection of labour tells me that under them it would be far worse. Say what you want about the Tories, they are still preferable to Islington's neo-liberal Libour.
They say that the UK will not recover to pre-Covid levels of prosperity for decades and that is because of incorrect policy decisions made by the Tories. That said, I agree with you and I think most others do too and Labour are far from a shoe-in at the next election.
ReplyDeleteI've spent the majority of my working life in austerity. Since 1982, I can only recall these as good years. 88-90.95. 2004-2007.
ReplyDeleteThe banking crisis caused the National Debt to double from 1Trillion to 2 Trillion. That's a debt mountain that we will never see paid-down. Covid has added no doubt a few hundred Billion to that figure and it is hard not to come to the conclusion that the Fred Goodwins and all the rest of them that caused these crashes, have not really suffered as a result of them whereas almost everyone else has. Look at how long it took us to pay down the debt incurred during the second world war. The banking crash cost us more than that and so it is an exaggeration to say it will never be paid down, but 100 years to pay it down may not be an exaggeration.
ReplyDeleteThe 2008 financial crisis served as a pretext for further budget cuts, and it provided the elite with an opportunity to defend the property ponsi scheme. We still have a property ponsi scheme that has now blown into monstrous proportions.
ReplyDeleteI don't believe Nicoliar likes drug addicts; we have another 1300 dead from drug abuse in Scotland, with 60% under 40. That is 750 persons under the age of 40 who have passed away, and nobody seems to be concerned.
ReplyDeleteSturgeon doesn't care about anyone, she is a viper
DeleteIt looks like Nicoliar doesn't like the homeless. The most recent homeless deaths in Scotland were 221; 60% of them were under 45, which is three times the average in England.
ReplyDelete