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par Jeromec, lundi 08 novembre 2021, 17:18 (il y a 1641 jours) @ shlomo ar ak am

Tu vas adorer l'image sur le site internet de ton ''Ami''

https://corruptionbc.com/update-another-liberal-cabinet-minister-resigns-calling-justin...

UPDATE: Another Liberal cabinet minister resigns, calling Justin Trudeau corrupt
March 4, 2019 CorruptionBC corruption, FEDERAL CORRUPTION, Politics 0

jail trudeau
March 4th 2019, Jane Philpott, regarded as one of Justin Trudeau’s most competent cabinet ministers, quit. And on her way out, she blasted Trudeau as deeply unethical.

Philpott says Trudeau and his cronies have corrupted Canada’s judicial system, and she can no longer in conscience be a part of his cabinet.

Here’s what she said:

It grieves me to resign from a portfolio where I was at work to deliver an important mandate. I must abide by my core values, my ethical responsibilities, constitutional obligations. There can be a cost to acting on one’s principles, but there is a bigger cost to abandoning them.

trudeau corrupt

This is a stunning development. And it shows that there must be much more than Trudeau’s insiders know, if they’re abandoning ship.

And yet Trudeau’s hand-picked replacement as Attorney General, David Lametti, refuses to call for any public inquiry, let alone for an RCMP investigation.

That’s not good enough for two Liberal cabinet ministers. And more may yet quit.

It’s time the RCMP investigate these most serious charges.

Trudeau can’t be trusted to investigate himself, and neither can Lametti, and neither can his lackeys on Parliament’s Justice Committee.

Only an RCMP investigation — with the power of search warrants — can get to the bottom of this.''

C'est le temps de faire le ménage au Kanada
Les enfants ont assez souffert...

C'est assez de traumatiser les enfants avec des mesures que les ''covidiots'' de politiciens ne suivent même pas le temps d'une photo!!!

https://edmontonjournal.com/news/local-news/childrens-mental-health-becoming-a-crisis-i...

'On edge all the time:' Children's mental health nearing 'crisis' in Alberta's fourth wave, doctors say
Author of the article:Blair McBride
Publishing date:Nov 07, 2021 • 9 minutes ago • 3 minute read • 25 Comments
Dr. Doug Klein poses for a photo outside his Edmonton clinic, Friday, Nov. 5, 2021. Klein believes the COVID-19 pandemic has produced a cumulative effect on youth mental health, and that youth mental health will get worse before it gets better.
Dr. Doug Klein poses for a photo outside his Edmonton clinic, Friday, Nov. 5, 2021. Klein believes the COVID-19 pandemic has produced a cumulative effect on youth mental health, and that youth mental health will get worse before it gets better. PHOTO BY DAVID BLOOM /Postmedia
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Worsening mental health indicators in Alberta children and youth are spurring some doctors to declare a crisis in the fouth wave of the pandemic.

Diagnoses and severity of depression, anxiety and eating disorders have increased by at least 20 percent in the last four months, say doctors, some of whom worry the worst is yet to come.

Although COVID-19 restrictions are looser now than one year ago, mental health issues are being driven by a combination of return-to-school stress, less socializing, excessive screen time and general worry over the pandemic.

More fearful
Dr. Caroline Buzanko, who works with youth aged five to 22 at her Koru Family Psychology clinic in Calgary, said 80 per cent of her clients are currently reporting anxiety, up from 40 per cent in April

“Depressive symptoms are secondary after anxiety, more in older kids,” she said. “There’s been a 20 per cent increase since the summer.”

In her interactions with patients, she finds youth are more fearful in many situations. She described a recent experience where a patient went to Disney World for her 18th birthday.

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'On edge all the time:' Children's mental health nearing 'crisis' in Alberta's fourth wave, doctors say
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“She was mortified that someone would get sick before they went. (Youth) are on edge all the time worrying about what will happen,” she said.

In Calgary, psychiatrist Dr. Chris Wilkes has found a 200 per cent increase in emergency room visits for youth under 18 for anxiety, depression and eating disorders in the last eight months.

“We’ll probably see a worsening or high level of (demand for) mental health services for some time to come,” Wilkes said. “We have a crisis in terms of a demand on our services that is outstripping our resources.”

Dr. Rena LaFrance, a psychiatrist at Misericordia Community Hospital in Edmonton, said the severity of mental health issues she is seeing in patients aged four to 18 has doubled or tripled in the last few months.

The most common issues she’s seeing are anxiety, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, acute stress, ADHD and bereavement among children who lost family members to COVID-19.

“That doesn’t get better when kids go online and back (to in-person learning),” she said

LaFrance attributes the problem to children absorbing the fourth wave anxieties of their parents, more deaths in the news, and uncertainty about kids getting COVID.

For children under 11, who can’t yet be vaccinated, LaFrance said the uncertainty of not feeling fully protected is also contributing to anxiety.

“There’s been fear about bringing it home to their parents and grandparents,” she said.

“They might not be thrilled at getting an actual needle (but) my perception is they are thrilled about protecting their friends and family and themselves.”

Normalcy still a ways off
For Calgary pediatrician Dr. April Elliott, the remaining restrictions in place show youth that normalcy is still a ways off, because kids are missing out on regular social interactions due to masking and distancing.

“Right now they’re being told they can’t do so many things,” she said. “And they’ve also been in an era when screen use is necessary. And it’s hard to withdraw from (screens) when they’re socially necessary.”

On a national level, youth mental health was under-addressed by governments even before the pandemic, according to researchers in the recent FACETS journal article “The impact of COVID-19 on the mental health of Canadian children and youth.”

The authors urged that a school-based national strategy on mental health be developed, as COVID “put a spotlight” on the problem.

They called for new federal funding to be allocated to schools over the next two years to deal with the “growing mental health crisis” among youth. They also want investment in a population-based follow-up of the 2019 Canadian Health Survey on Children and Youth so accurate information can be obtained about how the pandemic has affected young people.

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In Edmonton, local family physician Dr. Doug Klein concurs with the need for more collaboration in schools, as he believes most youth who need help aren’t seeking it, fuelling a crisis that could get worse before it gets better.

“The health-care system and education system and the community need to work together. Children are in our schools for several hours everyday. We need to focus on making sure they’re gaining those life skills that will be protective (of mental health),” he said.

To help youth manage their mental health, Klein suggested that more needs to be done to encourage them to be active, as restrictions have led to an increase of inactivity, and getting more exercise can alleviate anxiety and depression. And LaFrance said giving kids the opportunity to talk about their COVID fears, while also working to maintain a regular home routine, can help them feel more stable amid the pandemic.

bmcbride@postmedia.com

twitter.com/blairmcbride

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