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A Silent and Peaceful Protest

Taita College

Dark Jester

A peaceful protest took place outside Taita College on the 22nd-23rd of September. The protest was organised by the Wellington chapter of Voices for Freedom. The protest was in response to the Taita College Vaccine Programme. The protest was silent and peaceful with people offering information about the dangers of the vaccine to any students who wanted it.

The protest organizer told this writer that the protest was peaceful and that the protesters did not block the way or try to disrupt the programme. The organizer then went on to explain that they had no idea why 8-10 police were called in but speculated that the school principal may have told the police the protesters were organizing an incursion into the clinic.

“It was a total overreaction and the police looked bored,” said the organizer.

The Taita College Vaccine programme offered incentives to students rewarding them 10 points to their house if they could prove they had the vaccine. There was even a greater incentive for students to get the vaccine outside of the school, with the school offering 10 points for each shot.

“This protest is about the coercion and setting up of a bullying/intimidation situation for students,” said the organizer.

The protesters were approached by a few students out of sight of the staff who received information pamphlets.

Stack of flyers. Photo credit: Voices for Freedom.

There have been questions over the safety of the Covid vaccine with a growing number of medical professionals warning of the potential dangers including blood clots, transmission of covid and even deaths. Other questions have also arisen over the effectiveness of the vaccine’s protection against the virus and stopping the spread. Dr Peter McCullough recently spoke at a Voices For Freedom video conference talking about the underreporting of vaccine deaths.

“If the mortality rate of a product was even 1%, we would have taken it off the market,” he said.

The vaccination programme continues with 4,867,818 total doses already administered.

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