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Forum Orandia - Radio-Québec Menace pour la Démocratie http://orandia.com/forum/ Forum affilié à www.esoterisme-exp.com fr Radio-Québec Menace pour la Démocratie (réponse) Pour la dernière émission de Radio-Québec.... la chaîne ''complotisssssssse'':-D

https://radioquebec.tv/#dernier-direct

Parodie Premier Ministre du Canada:

Maintenant que les élections sont terminés, voici le lapin qui se cachait dans le chapeau électorale...

Le Canada devient une Vaccinocratie où seuls les vaccinés ont des droits et liberté...

Je ne vous ai pas mentionné ce petit détail en campagne électorale, sinon j'aurais perdu les quelques% de votes nécessaire afin de m'accrocher au pouvoir afin d'éviter une enquête publique sur les origines du Covid-19...''
:-D

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http://orandia.com/forum/index.php?id=194224 http://orandia.com/forum/index.php?id=194224 Fri, 12 Nov 2021 18:23:28 +0000 Jeromec
Une crise sanitaire causé par une pénurie de main d'oeuvre (réponse) La pénurie de main-d'œuvre au Québec a joué un rôle clé dans les décès en CHSLD''- Dr. Arruda

le Dr. Arruda confirme que la plupart des décès ont été causé dans les Centre hospitalier de longue durée par la PÉNURIE DE MAIN D'OEUVRE....

L'État d'urgence est perpétué artificiellement depuis...

Les masques
La campagne de vaccination expérimentale...
Le passeport vaccinal
et... devinez la suite..... où ils veulent en arriver... (voir le texte précédent) en quatimini...:-|

Et les enfants sont pris en otages avec les masques dans les écoles en attendant de se faire ''adéCOUACMENT'' vaccinnés même si les chiffres ne justifient plus du tout l'urgence sanitaire...

https://www.inspq.qc.ca/



https://montrealgazette.com/news/local-news/dr-richard-masse-testifies-at-inquiry-into-...
''La pénurie de main-d'œuvre au Québec a joué un rôle clé dans les décès en CHSLD,''
Quebec's labour shortage played key role in CHSLD deaths, Arruda tells inquiry
Masks were not given to workers in long-term care homes at first because Quebec had a severe shortage, Dr Horacio Arruda said Thursday.

Author of the article:René Bruemmer
Publishing date:Nov 11, 2021 • 13 hours ago • 4 minute read • Join the conversation
As the director of public health for the province, Horacio Arruda's testimony on Thursday was keenly anticipated at the inquest into the deaths at Quebec's long-term care homes. He will resume his testimony on Monday.
As the director of public health for the province, Horacio Arruda's testimony on Thursday was keenly anticipated at the inquest into the deaths at Quebec's long-term care homes. He will resume his testimony on Monday. PHOTO BY JACQUES BOISSINOT /The Canadian Press
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Beset by labour shortages, a fragile health-care network and infected workers, Quebec’s senior care centres were hit with a perfect storm of negative circumstances during COVID-19’s first wave, Horacio Arruda told a coroner’s inquiry on Thursday.

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But considering that Quebec had detailed plans on how to protect itself against pandemics that identified those issues and presented solutions like conscripting essential service workers, coroner Géhane Kamel said, questions remain as to how the province fared so badly at protecting its senior citizens.

Quebec to offer booster shot to everyone 70 and older
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“As a human, there is something in us that needs to ask: ‘How is it that the train crashed into us like this?’ ”

As the director of public health for the province, Arruda’s testimony was keenly anticipated at the inquest into the deaths at Quebec’s long-term care homes (CHSLDs). More than 5,000 seniors died in the province’s care centres between March and August 2020 , which was among the highest-fatality rate in seniors’ care facilities in the world.

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On Thursday afternoon, testifying for three and a half hours at the inquiry whose intent is to find solutions as opposed to guilty parties, Arruda outlined in a 48-page presentation the many ways in which Quebec was prepared for COVID-19. As head of public health in the province since 2012, he has been through numerous pandemics already, he said.

Word of a worrisome virus in China was received in Quebec by Dec. 30, he said. When Canada’s chief public health officer informed authorities on Jan. 2, directives were soon sent to public health directors in the province. By Jan. 23, when 221 cases and two deaths had been reported in four countries, all regional health authorities were alerted, as well as the province’s civil security organizations, Arruda said.

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On March 12, the day before a health emergency was announced in the province, among the first directives given was for returning travellers to avoid CHSLDs for 14 days, he said. “Because it flares up if it enters a CHSLD.”

“Seniors were always at the top of our priorities,” Arruda said. “Whether it was in the community, in CHSLDs or private residences. Even if we didn’t have all the epidemiological information yet, we knew that severe respiratory diseases generally hit the … the most aged. They are the most vulnerable.”

Declaring a health emergency and shutting down Quebec society “is one of the decisions, I am convinced, that saved a lot of lives, as much in the community as in CHSLDs,” because it limited contacts, he said.

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People over 70 were advised to stay home, bingos were cancelled and instructions on washing hands and wearing masks were sent out. Part of the problem, Arruda said, was not everyone heeded instructions.

Personal caregivers were barred from old-age homes, a move criticized because it might have robbed seniors in understaffed CHSLDs from receiving any care. Arruda said the government couldn’t take the chance initially because caregivers tend to be older and were at risk.

Coroner Kamel noted that Quebec studies going back to 2006 on flu pandemics predicted more than 30 per cent of staff might be missing, and governments would have to be proactive in buying protective equipment like masks because there would be global competition.

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http://orandia.com/forum/index.php?id=194218 http://orandia.com/forum/index.php?id=194218 Fri, 12 Nov 2021 15:49:30 +0000 Jeromec
N. Elgrably Citoyenneté numérique: la méfiance s’impose

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2021/11/12/citoyennete-numerique-la-mefiance-simpose

Citoyenneté numérique: la méfiance s’impose


NATHALIE ELGRABLY
Vendredi, 12 novembre 2021 05:00
MISE À JOUR Vendredi, 12 novembre 2021 05:00
François Legault annonçait récemment la création du ministère de la Cybersécurité et du numérique. Son intention est de créer une identité numérique avec éventuellement une identification biométrique.

Cette forme de citoyenneté numérique viserait à stocker nos documents officiels et peut-être, par la suite, une panoplie d’autres documents comme les cartes de crédit ou bancaires. Elle pourrait alors également être utilisée pour s’identifier au moment de louer une voiture, de s’inscrire à des cours ou simplement d’entrer au resto.


Bisounours

Cette nouvelle technologie est présentée comme un outil pratique qui simplifiera l’accès aux services de l’État. Soit !

Mais nous ne vivons pas dans un monde de Bisounours. Même si les intentions premières de Québec sont louables, la méfiance s’impose. Car vu l’immense potentiel de l’identité numérique, elle peut facilement devenir un redoutable outil de surveillance et de contrôle pour l’assoiffé de pouvoir ou l’idéologue fanatique.

Dans ce contexte, monsieur Legault aurait dû accompagner son annonce d’une police d’assurance en titane protégeant les Québécois des dérapages liberticides. Mais il en a tristement fait l’économie !

La loi 6 annonce les droits du futur ministère de la Cybersécurité. En revanche, rien ne délimite son périmètre d’action, rien ne précise comment il utilisera nos données personnelles, et rien ne stipule le souci des libertés individuelles.

N’oublions pas que l’irrespirable système de Crédit social chinois repose sur l’identité numérique. Grâce à ce système de notation des citoyens, la Chine a construit une société orwellienne où celui qui mange dans le métro peut perdre la place en garderie de son enfant.

Formalité

Certes, le Québec n’est pas la Chine. Mais mieux vaut prévenir que guérir, car de l’identité numérique au Crédit social, il n’y a qu’une formalité.

Pour protéger notre démocratie, il importe de réviser la loi 6 pour qu’elle bride fermement le futur ministère, car dès que nous aurons mis les doigts dans l’engrenage de l’identité numérique, tout retour en arrière deviendra impossible !''

Problème-Réaction-Solution

Le passeport vaccinal réduit considérablement le chiffre d'affaire de certains commerces
Réaction : On veut une autre solution..
solution : proposée l'identité numérique

Bonjour Chinada

https://www.wsj.com/articles/justin-trudeaus-plan-to-control-the-internet-11621375979

Justin Trudeau’s Plan to Control the Internet
His government seeks to erect a great firewall of Canada.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has a plan to regulate speech on the internet by placing it under the control of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. His bill is so awful that Peter Menzies, a former vice chairman of the commission, said it “doesn’t just infringe on free expression, it constitutes a full-blown assault upon it and, through it, the foundations of democracy.”''

https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/trudeau-calls-for-clearing-cyberspace-of-hate-di...

Justin Trudeau calls for clearing cyberspace of hate, disinformation at internet panel
'From disinformation on vaccines to online extremism, we've also seen the threat it can pose to our democratic values, systems and our citizens'
"De la désinformation sur les vaccins à l'extrémisme en ligne, nous avons également vu la menace que cela peut représenter pour nos valeurs démocratiques, nos systèmes et nos citoyens"''

Author of the article:The Canadian Press
The Canadian Press
Mike Blanchfield
Publishing date:Nov 11, 2021 • 16 hours ago • 3 minute read • 591 Comments
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a Liberal caucus meeting on November 8, 2021.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a Liberal caucus meeting on November 8,
OTTAWA — Hate speech, disinformation and online extremism can’t be allowed to prevent people from enjoying the freedom that cyberspace offers, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday at an international discussion on the internet.''

https://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/how-canadas-cansino-covid-19-vaccine-deal-with-chin...

How Canada's CanSino COVID-19 vaccine deal with China collapsed
''Comment l'accord du Canada sur le vaccin CanSino COVID-19 avec la Chine s'est effondré''
Politics Insider for Oct. 15, 2021: The made-in-Canada vaccine breakdown; cabinet talk; and a CPC suspension

By Stephen Maher
October 15, 2021
(Zhang Wenzong/Xinhua via ZUMA Press)
(Zhang Wenzong/Xinhua via ZUMA Press)

Welcome to a sneak peek of the Maclean’s Politics Insider newsletter. Sign up to get it delivered straight to your inbox in the morning.

The Fifth Estate released an investigation Thursday that shed new light on the Trudeau government’s failed collaboration with a vaccine manufacturing company in China, CanSino, that led to a two-year delay in creating a made-in-Canada COVID-19 vaccine.

Government documents “show that Canadian officials wasted months waiting for a proposed vaccine to arrive from China for further testing and spent millions upgrading a production facility that never made a single dose of COVID-19 vaccine.”

The reporting shows that Canada’s plan appears to have been stymied by Chinese political interference related to the Meng Wanzhou case.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the deal to Canadians on May 16, 2020. But a federal government memo later that same month reveals the Canadian Embassy in Beijing was still working to get the vaccine cleared by China’s customs. “CanSino vaccines are still with customs in China,” the memo said. “Embassy has a [meeting] tomorrow. Assuming they get through customs [tomorrow], they can be put on a flight on the 27th.” But the vaccine candidate was not put on a plane on May 27. That same day, Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou — a high-profile tech executive in China — lost an appeal to the B.C. Supreme Court arguing against her arrest in Canada. Meng had been detained in Vancouver in 2018 on U.S. bank fraud charges.

Planning continued until August while the Trudeau government kept the difficulties secret. It has never explained what happened and did not help Fifth Estate with its report.

The Prime Minister’s Office did not answer when asked to explain the discrepancy between the promised production numbers and what happened. The prime minister and his ministers also declined interview requests about Canada’s early vaccine production plans, including with the NRC and CanSino. The NRC has said the U.S.-based vaccine developer Novavax will be its new partner for this facility, but Health Canada has not approved its vaccine yet.

The CanSino project was not the only partnership that the NRC was pursuing at the time, Justin Ling reported in Maclean’s earlier this year.

Oct. 25, 26: Trudeau will unveil his new post-election cabinet on Oct. 25 or 26, secret sources told CBC News on Thursday.

Trudeau’s commitment to a gender-balanced cabinet, coupled with his need for new cabinet ministers from Nova Scotia and Alberta, will likely require significant changes to the government’s front bench. The biggest change could come in the defence ministry. Many senior Liberals suggest that Harjit Sajjan will be shuffled to a new portfolio.

Expect gender balance: The Star’s Tonda MacCharles has some knowledgable-sounding speculation about who might end up in Trudeau’s gender-balanced cabinet.

To fill the gender gaps, insiders say Toronto’s Marci Ien, who was re-elected in Toronto Centre after her 2020 byelection entry to Parliament, is expected to be at the top of the list, along with women who have experience in provincial governments. Those could include Lina Metlege Diab, a former provincial cabinet minister from Nova Scotia who is bilingual and a likely replacement for Bernadette Jordan, the fisheries minister who lost her seat; Ottawa-area MP Marie France Lalonde, who held three posts in Ontario as minister for francophone affairs, community safety and correctional services, and government and consumer services; and Markham-Stouffville MP Helena Jaczek, who served as Ontario’s minister of health and long-term care and as minister of community and social services. The latter two were first elected federally in 2019, and have held parliamentary secretary or committee roles and could be up for promotion. Other rookie names floated include Quebec’s Pascale St-Onge who headed a communications union. Trudeau may also take advantage of the opportunity to now do what he wasn’t keen to do before the election: demote cabinet underperformers like Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan or Health Minister Patty Hajdu.

Why so long? At CTV, Don Martin wonders why it is taking so long for Trudeau to get his ducks in a row.

The gap between the election and the cabinet naming in 2015, when Trudeau inherited a caucus of largely untested talent in the aftermath of a shocker majority win, was 17 days. True, it took Trudeau a month to move the boxes for the 2019 lineup, but this year will be the longest yet.

PCR rules stand for now: Chrystia Freeland had no news on plans to scrap PCR test requirement as U.S. border nears reopening, Global reported Thursday. “The rules are the rules,” she said in DC. “Canadians do need a valid PCR test to go back to Canada. I had my test done to go home this afternoon. I really believe that when it comes to finishing the fight against COVID, the Canadian approach, which has been to follow science, to follow the recommendations of public health authorities, and to err on the side of caution has served us really, really well.”

Chen suspended: The national council of the Conservative Party suspended councillor Bert Chen for two months for launching a petition to dump Erin O’Toole, the Hill Times reported Thursday.

“Following complaints by grassroots members of the Conservative Party of Canada about the conduct of national councillor Bert Chen, national council exercised its authority under Article 8.13 of the party’s constitution to suspend Mr. Chen from national council for up to 60 days,” said Conservative Party president Robert Batherson in an emailed statement to The Hill Times. Mr. Chen’s petition, launched a day after the election, had received 5,185 signatures by Oct. 13.

Prairie disaster: In the Globe, Gary Mason angrily points out that Alberta and Saskatchewan have failed to bring the pandemic under control, which is taking a terrible toll.

Mr. Kenney has been under intense criticism for a few months now over his decision-making around the crisis. There have been growing calls for a leadership review within his party. His popularity rating sits at a dismal 22 per cent – the lowest of any provincial leader in the country. The Premier has had to put out a call to the military to help with overburdened hospitals. Patients have been airlifted to hospitals in other provinces. Saskatchewan is in even worse shape. On Thanksgiving Monday, the province’s normal complement of critical care beds were taken up with COVID-19 patients. In the three months since the province reopened, case numbers have shot up 47 per cent. The COVID-19 death rate is 6.62 per 100,000 people – the worst in the country. (Alberta has come in second, at 4.7 per 100,000; Ontario’s rate, by contrast, is 0.67.)

— Stephen Maher

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http://orandia.com/forum/index.php?id=194216 http://orandia.com/forum/index.php?id=194216 Fri, 12 Nov 2021 15:20:00 +0000 Jeromec