Covid vaccine queue jumping at University Health Network

Covid vaccine queue jumping at University Health Network

‘SPOTS TAKEN’: Warning about vaccine queue jumping sent to University Health Network staff

Individuals associated with University Health Network (UHN) in Toronto attempted to jump the COVID-19 vaccine queue by inappropriately accessing an online scheduling tool, a notice to staff says.

“Unfortunately, we have learned that in spite of very clear messaging, some staff and learners have provided access to the COVID-19 vaccine scheduling tool and posted links to the tool on social media and via email,” a notice sent out to staff last week by the vaccination committee says.

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Long pandemic could add to ̷e̷x̷t̷r̷e̷m̷i̷s̷m̷,̷ ̷d̷e̷c̷l̷i̷n̷e̷ ̷i̷n̷ citizens demand for democracy: Defence Department report

Long pandemic could add to  ̷e̷x̷t̷r̷e̷m̷i̷s̷m̷,̷ ̷d̷e̷c̷l̷i̷n̷e̷ ̷i̷n̷  citizens demand for democracy: Defence Department report

A new research report by the Department of National Defence suggests the longer the COVID-19 pandemic rages, the stronger right-wing extremism and other threats in Canada and around the world are likely to become.

The report prepared by the Defence Department’s research arm lays out a range of political, economic and security challenges that could emerge — or become more prominent — depending on how long the pandemic remains.

To that end, it looks at what may happen in a best-case scenario that would see COVID-19 brought under control by the end of this year, as well as the potential ramifications should the pandemic last past 2023 and — as a worst case — 2025.

The only extremism has been by governments and their thugs.

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Ontario reports 3,266 new Covid cases

Ontario reports 3,266 new Covid cases

Ontario is reporting more than 3,000 new cases of the novel coronavirus for a third consecutive day as hospitalizations continue to surge.

The province reported 3,266 new infections of COVID-19 on Wednesday and 37 additional deaths.

Ontario logged 3,128 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday, 3,270 on Monday and 2,964 on Sunday.


Premier Ford considering overnight curfew in Ontario: ‘Let’s see where the numbers go’

Could a curfew be under consideration in Ontario?

With Quebec in talks to make a final decision on the safety measure, Premier Doug Ford said he wants to see where COVID-19 cases go in the next little while before implementing something similar for the province.

“Everything is on the table but let’s see where the numbers go,” the Premier said on Tuesday. “I’ll have a discussion over the next day or so with Premier [Francois] Legault.”

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Member of Ontario’s COVID-19 advisory table booted from role after vacationing in Dominican over holidays

An Ontario hospital CEO who serves on the province’s COVID-19 science table has been booted from his advisory role after it was revealed that he vacationed in the Dominican Republic as Ontario went into a province-wide lockdown over the holidays.

In a statement Tuesday evening, St. Joseph’s Health System confirmed that its CEO, Dr. Tom Stewart, was out of the country on vacation from Dec. 18 – Jan.5.

Fun Fact! St. Jo’s Hospital is currently battling a Covid outbreak!

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Quebec Goes FULL DRACONIAN COVID-19(84) With (Expected) 9pm Curfew Following “INSANE” HOME INVASION!!!

The province of Quebec is expected to announce on Wednesday that they will be implementing an 8-9pm curfew with strict new lockdown rules! Amazingly this announcement comes on the heels of a viral video which showed the Gatineau police aggressively arresting and fining a family of 6 for gathering at home for New Years Eve.

Restricting times and locations people can shop concentrates them, resulting in more virus transmission.

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KNIGHT: This government overreach needs to end

I have spent the bulk of my working life in and around policing. Ordinarily, I would publicly defend the police — especially in cases of citizen journalism. I put context to what we are seeing and silence the baying hounds.

However, after viewing the video of Gatineau Police responding to a neighbour’s complaint of members of a family holding a New Year’s Eve gathering, I cannot defend it for a number of reasons.

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The Lab-Leak Hypothesis

The Lab-Leak Hypothesis

For decades, scientists have been hot-wiring viruses in hopes of preventing a pandemic, not causing one. But what if …?

What happened was fairly simple, I’ve come to believe. It was an accident. A virus spent some time in a laboratory, and eventually it got out. SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, began its existence inside a bat, then it learned how to infect people in a claustrophobic mine shaft, and then it was made more infectious in one or more laboratories, perhaps as part of a scientist’s well-intentioned but risky effort to create a broad-spectrum vaccine. SARS-2 was not designed as a biological weapon. But it was, I think, designed. Many thoughtful people dismiss this notion, and they may be right. They sincerely believe that the coronavirus arose naturally, “zoonotically,” from animals, without having been previously studied, or hybridized, or sluiced through cell cultures, or otherwise worked on by trained professionals. They hold that a bat, carrying a coronavirus, infected some other creature, perhaps a pangolin, and that the pangolin may have already been sick with a different coronavirus disease, and out of the conjunction and commingling of those two diseases within the pangolin, a new disease, highly infectious to humans, evolved. Or they hypothesize that two coronaviruses recombined in a bat, and this new virus spread to other bats, and then the bats infected a person directly — in a rural setting, perhaps — and that this person caused a simmering undetected outbreak of respiratory disease, which over a period of months or years evolved to become virulent and highly transmissible but was not noticed until it appeared in Wuhan.

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Are The Vaccines Already (Partially) Obsolete?

A few weeks ago I compared the emergence of the British variant of coronavirus to the twist at the end of a “Twilight Zone” episode. The entire planet spent 2020 waiting for a cure to the plague, and then it arrived to global jubilation just before New Year’s — only to be followed immediately by ominous news that a new strain of the virus had begun to circulate widely.

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LILLEY: Think tank suggests one more harsh lockdown, but will anybody buy it?

LILLEY: Think tank suggests one more harsh lockdown, but will anybody buy it?

At the best of times, anybody trying to sell a hard national lockdown is going to have their work cut out for them — and this week would be even harder.

The public is rightly skeptical of the political class telling them to stay home, that would be just ‘for a few weeks’ and we’re all in this together — all while they’re jetting off to a beach.

The Star is Gung Ho – To avoid COVID’s third wave, embrace longer lockdowns, gradual relaxing of restrictions, group urges provinces

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The Sunshine Exodus: New York license plates increasingly stand out on Florida roads.

“Cuomo and de Blasio are destroying the city,” cried a local restaurateur in a recent radio ad calling on people to visit his homey Italian eatery, where they can “fuggedaboudit.” The sentiment would have fit well in New York, where countless restaurants are struggling to pay rent, and where indoor dining is again banned. The Brooklyn accent griping from my car radio seemed out of place, however, as the Palm Beach trees flew by. The restaurant is in Jupiter, Florida. I’ve never been tempted to make the half-hour drive north from Palm Beach to dine there, but deserting New York for Florida’s warmer climes is easier to understand these days.

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Data suggests Canada is rolling out COVID-19 vaccines at a slower rate than peers

Data suggests Canada is rolling out COVID-19 vaccines at a slower rate than peers

Speed up immunizations – that’s the message from some doctors in Canada – as no province has administered more than 50 percent of the COVID-19 doses it has received so far.

Data compiled from the COVID-19 Canada Open Data Working Group reveals the country is administering vaccines at a slower pace than some of its peer countries.

Israel, Britain, the United States and Germany have all inoculated a larger share of their populations, despite Canada being one of the first to start authorizing vaccines.

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