Meta Is Still Fact Checking In NZ
I received a polite email this week from Kiwi journalist George Driver who is an official ‘fact checker’ for Facebook who queried one of my recent posts.
I received a polite email this week from Kiwi journalist George Driver who is an official ‘fact checker’ for Facebook who queried one of my recent posts.
That hasn’t aged well and perhaps ACC should chat to the Medical Council about recovering some of its costs.
Lockdowns were a security state-driven pandemic response rooted in fear, panic, and authoritarianism. They were never mainstream.
The death of Baby O “was avoidable and resulted from suboptimal care”. I won’t name the doctor implicated. Suffice to say he or she is among Letby’s chief accusers.
The bill enables mandatory interventions based on approvals from foreign regulators like the WHO, undermining the NZ Bill of Rights.
The government holds up the prospect of improved public health and economic benefit as its justification, but is there sufficient sound scientific evidence of this? No, absolutely not.
With a January 20 deadline looming, Family First is urging supporters to take five minutes to voice their concerns about puberty blockers.
Patents expert Dr David Martin has stated that there are at least 3,099 patents on H5N1, making bird flu a gold mine for many if a ‘pandemic’ can be generated.
I still get told by fellow doctors that they are not seeing this association. I now know why. Not one doctor had enquired about their vaccine history.
There are too many to name, but you’ll have a good idea of who they are. They expand everyone’s space, sense of determination and resolve.
Is it a stretch to imagine socialized medicine promoting the much less costly designed death over adequate end-of-life care that results in a natural death?
If we give in, we will be providing a helping hand to our ‘friends’ in America who will then toddle off to Europe and ask them to follow suit. “See, New Zealand did it, now it’s your turn.”
Biozest provides an environmentally friendly alternative to biotech drugs such as Bovaea, which is used to reduce methane production in ruminants.
The lack of a labelling requirement speaks volumes about the disregard of public wishes. We need more safeguards than those currently in the HSNO legislation, not their removal as this bill proposes.