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COVID-19

Red Deer College exercising an “abundance of caution” after person in college community tests positive for COVID-19

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From Red Deer College

The latest on RDC’s response to COVID-19

Red Deer College continues to work with Alberta Health Services (AHS) and the Government of Alberta to ensure we follow their advice and protocols.

Sunday we learned of a person within our College community who has tested positive for COVID- 19. Given the size of RDC’s community, this news is unfortunate, but not entirely unexpected. We have implemented a variety of measures to help keep our campuses as safe as possible with this rapidly changing situation.

Below are more details:

Confirmed Case of COVID-19

• The individual who tested positive for COVID-19 did not display any symptoms when they last attended RDC’s downtown campus (on March 13) and Gary W. Harris Canada Games Centre (on March 18).

• Out of an abundance of caution, RDC’s janitorial staff are completing a thorough and enhanced cleaning of known areas in which this individual last visited at the College.

• Following AHS guidelines, everyone in the College community is encouraged to monitor their health for any potential symptoms of COVID-19.

o AHS directly contacts any individual who is considered exposed to confirmed cases of COVID-19. These individuals are provided further direction, including being asked to self-isolate and to be tested for COVID-19. Only those contacted directly by AHS are considered exposed to this virus. If they are not contacted directly by AHS, they are not considered exposed and should instead continue to monitor themselves for COVID-19 symptoms.

• We remind everyone to be vigilant in their efforts to practice physical distancing, good hygiene, and to stay home if ill.

To help reduce the potential spread of COVID-19 on our campuses, RDC continues to follow AHS and government protocols including:

  • online course delivery starting March 18
  • connecting with students through phone and online service delivery
  • ensuring physical distancing by those who remain at RDC for work
  • using enhanced disinfecting and cleaning products and regimes

“On behalf of the entire College community, I wish this individual well and hope they have a speedy recovery and good health in the near future. It’s at times like this that we should all come together, and it is important that we share our compassion and patience for one another,” says Dr. Peter Nunoda, RDC President. “The health and safety of our students, faculty, staff and visitors are of the utmost importance. I encourage everyone to take necessary precautions to help ensure good health and to use the available resources from RDC, AHS and the Alberta Government as we support each other during this unprecedented time.”

News about RDC’s response to COVID-19 is available at: rdc.ab.ca/coronavirus.

#RedDeerStrong – Group focussed fitness studio F45 offers fitness opportunities for isolated athletes

After 15 years as a TV reporter with Global and CBC and as news director of RDTV in Red Deer, Duane set out on his own 2008 as a visual storyteller. During this period, he became fascinated with a burgeoning online world and how it could better serve local communities. This fascination led to Todayville, launched in 2016.

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COVID-19

WHO Official Admits the Truth About Passports

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From the Brownstone Institute

BY Paul ThackerPAUL THACKER

The World Health Organization’s Dr. Hanna Nohynek testified in court that she advised her government that vaccine passports were not needed but was ignored, despite explaining that the Covid vaccines did not stop virus transmission and the passports gave a false sense of security. The stunning revelations came to light in a Helsinki courtroom where Finnish citizen Mika Vauhkala is suing after he was denied entry to a café for not having a vaccine passport.

Dr. Nohynek is chief physician at the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare and serves as the WHO’s chair of Strategic Group of Experts on immunization. Testifying yesterday, she stated that the Finnish Institute for Health knew by the summer of 2021 that the Covid-19 vaccines did not stop virus transmission

During that same 2021 time period, the WHO said it was working to “create an international trusted framework” for safe travel while EU members states began rolling out Covid passports. The EU Digital COVID Certificate Regulation passed in July 2021 and more than 2.3 billion certificates were later issued. Visitors to France were banned if they did not have a valid vaccine passport which citizens had to carry to buy food at stores or to use public transport.

But Dr. Nohynek testified yesterday that her institute advised the Finnish government in late 2021 that Covid passports no longer made sense, yet certificates continued to be required. Finnish journalist Ike Novikoff reported the news yesterday after leaving the Helsinki courtroom where Dr. Nohynek spoke.

Dr. Nohynek’s admission that the government ignored scientific advice to terminate vaccine passports proved shocking as she is widely embraced in global medical circles. Besides chairing the WHO’s strategic advisory group on immunizations, Dr. Nohynek is one of Finland’s top vaccine advisors and serves on the boards of Vaccines Together and the International Vaccine Institute.

The EU’s digital Covid-19 certification helped establish the WHO Global Digital Health Certification Network in July 2023. “By using European best practices we contribute to digital health standards and interoperability globally—to the benefit of those most in need,” stated one EU official.

Finnish citizen Mika Vauhkala created a website discussing his case against Finland’s government where he writes that he launched his lawsuit “to defend basic rights” after he was denied breakfast in December 2021 at a Helsinki café because he did not have a Covid passport even though he was healthy. “The constitution of Finland guarantees that any citizen should not be discriminated against based on health conditions among other things,” Vauhkala states on his website.

Vauhkala’s lawsuit continued today in Helsinki district court where British cardiologist Dr. Aseem Malhotra will testify that, during the Covid pandemic, some authorities and medical professionals supported unethical, coercive, and misinformed policies such as vaccine mandates and vaccine passports, which undermined informed patient consent and evidence-based medical practice.

You can read Dr. Malhotra’s testimony here.

Republished from the author’s Substack

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  • Paul Thacker

    Paul D. Thacker is an Investigative Reporter; Former Investigator United States Senate; Former Fellow Safra Ethics Center, Harvard University

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Freedom Convoy

Ottawa spent “excessive” $2.2 million fighting Emergencies Act challenge

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News release from the Canadian Constitution Foundation

Federal Court Justice Richard Mosley found in January that the February 2022 invocation of the Emergencies Act to deal with the Freedom Convoy protests was unreasonable because there was no national emergency nor threats to security of Canada as were required to invoke the Act.

The Canadian Constitution Foundation is shocked to learn that Ottawa spent more than $2 million of taxpayer funds unsuccessfully fighting the legal challenge launched by the CCF and others to the Trudeau government’s illegal invocation of the Emergencies Act in 2022.

The $2,231,000 figure was revealed by the Department of Justice in response to an inquiry from Conservative civil liberties critic Marilyn Gladu.

The hefty figure was first reported in the Globe and Mail. Experienced counsel told the Globe that the amount spent was “excessive.”

The number includes the cost that the government spent fighting the judicial review of the invocation decision in Federal Court. It does not include the cost of Ottawa’s appeal, which is proceeding at the Federal Court of Appeal.

Federal Court Justice Richard Mosley found in January that the February 2022 invocation of the Emergencies Act to deal with the Freedom Convoy protests was unreasonable because there was no national emergency nor threats to security of Canada as were required to invoke the Act.

Justice Mosley also found that regulations made as a result of the invocation violated freedom of expression because they captured people who “simply wanted to join in the protest by standing on Parliament Hill carrying a placard” and the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures because bank accounts were frozen without any sort of judicial pre-authorization.

CCF Litigation Director Joanna Baron was dismayed to learn how much Ottawa spent.

“Civil liberties groups like the CCF rely on regular Canadians who care about rights and freedoms to fund this type of public interest litigation,” she said.

“The fact that the government seems willing to spend whatever it takes to defend its unlawful decision shows what we’re up against when we fight to protect the constitution and the rule of law.”

The CCF is calling on the federal government to drop the appeal of Justice Mosley’s decision.

Canadians who agree with the decision are encouraged to sign the CCF’s online petition calling on the government to drop the appeal. The CCF is also asking Canadians to consider making a tax-deductible charitable donation to the CCF that will assist with fighting the appeal.

The CCF is represented by Sujit Choudhry of Haki Chambers and Janani Shanmuganathan of Goddard & Shanmuganathan.

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