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    GORGworld conspiracy // 911 // free world order! ... part 5 ::
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    GORG: To je strasidelny tyjo...
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    Dr. James Giordano: Battlescape Brain: Military and Intelligence Use of Neurocognitive Science
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Zp8nHYegqI&feature=youtu.be
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    https://www.news18.com/...ouples-reunion-post-lifting-of-covid-19-curbs-left-many-teary-2684673.html



    https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-53338139

    Relatives of care home residents with dementia should be treated as key workers, leading charities say.

    In a letter to the health secretary, they write that the care given by family members is "essential" to residents' mental and physical health.

    They argue the current limits on visitors have had "damaging consequences".

    They want visits to resume safely, with relatives given the same access to care homes and coronavirus testing as staff.

    Signed by the bosses of leading charities including Dementia UK and the Alzheimer's Society, the letter calls on the government to "urgently" address what it calls the "hidden catastrophe" happening in care homes.

    ...

    The charities say that this "enforced separation" has caused a "deterioration" in residents' mental and physical health, particularly for those living with dementia - who make up more than 70% of the population of care homes.

    They argue that family carers remain "essential members of the residents' care and support network", in providing practical services as well as being their "advocates, voice and memory", and "keeping them connected to the world"

    During the pandemic, there have been 5,404 excess deaths - an increase of 52.2% compared with the five-year average - of people with dementia and Alzheimer's disease in England and Wales, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).


    https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/blog/coronavirus-care-home-restrictions-mum-forgetting-me

    https://www.alzheimers.org.uk/blog/care-home-coronavirus-restrictions-john-story

    https://www.theguardian.com/...14/isolated-uk-care-home-residents-fading-away-say-staff-and-families

    Care home residents confined to their rooms and forbidden visits from loved ones are giving up on life and “fading away”, say staff and families.

    Most care homes across the UK have been in lockdown since early March, with residents isolated in their bedrooms behind closed doors. Many are denied visits from their families, even to see them through their windows.

    “The virus won’t be the killer of these people, it’s the distress and fear of not seeing family that is doing it,” said one carer who asked to remain anonymous but has reported her concerns to the Care Inspectorate in Scotland.

    “Residents who were giggling, happy and active before the crisis now just lie in their beds or sit alone in their rooms with their doors closed,” added the carer. “Many now barely respond when you speak to them.

    “Some shout for their friends and family. Others have given up entirely and are fading away.”


    I was so shocked by mum’s condition,” said Holt, a photojournalist who has worked for the Guardian. “Mum had been isolated in her room for three weeks. She could barely walk, she was not engaging with me, had pressure sores and a urinary tract infection.



    https://www.nbcnews.com/...hidden-covid-19-health-crisis-elderly-people-are-dying-isolation-n1244853

    The lockdowns and visitor restrictions meant to protect nursing home residents from the coronavirus can also threaten their lives.

    ...

    Then in late May, Roberg got another alarming call from the facility. It wasn’t the virus, they said — something else was wrong. “His head was down into his chest, and he was sitting slumped in his wheelchair,” her father’s aide said, according to Roberg. “He was not his perky, chatty self.”

    Roberg later learned that her father, who’d always had a healthy appetite, had been losing weight. Even more isolated in quarantine after his Covid-19 diagnosis, he was becoming quiet and disengaged, even with the staff members who tended to him, a nurse later told her.

    He still had no coronavirus symptoms — he was just withdrawn, according to Roberg and an administrator at Copperfield Hill. Roberg was hopeful that he would bounce back with more hands-on attention from the facility. But four days later, on June 2, she got another call: She should come right away. Her father was dying.

    That morning, Roberg flew in from Wisconsin and met her brother in the parking lot of Copperfield Hill. Together they walked into the entryway of the facility, where they were temperature-checked, and then put on gowns, gloves and face shields. A nurse finally brought them up to her father’s floor and opened the door.

    “Oh wait a minute—” she said, stopping short. “I think he’s gone.”

    Roberg gasped when she saw her father’s gaunt body lying on the bed. After three months of separation, she missed her only chance to see her father by minutes.

    His death certificate listed the cause of death as the progression of Alzheimer’s disease and “social isolation / failure to thrive related to COVID-19 restrictions.”

    Social isolation was listed as a contributing cause of death for at least nine other Minnesotans — almost all long-term care residents — from June to September, according to state death records; no deaths in the previous two years cited social isolation as a cause.

    One of the nurses who treated Peske later described his deterioration as a burning candle with no oxygen left to draw from the air. It was as if a light had gone out, Roberg said: “He couldn’t survive from being isolated.”

    The unseen cost of lockdowns
    The effort to shield elderly, frail and disabled residents from the coronavirus has created another wrenching health crisis: The confinement meant to protect the most vulnerable is also threatening their lives.

    “The isolation is robbing them of whatever good days they have left — it accelerates the aging process,” Joshua Uy, associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, said.

    “You see increased falls, decrease in strength and ability to ambulate. You see an acceleration of dementia, because there is no rhythm to your day. There isn’t a single part of a person’s life that isn’t affected.”

    While there is no comprehensive tally of elderly people dying from causes linked to social isolation and confinement, evidence is mounting that restrictions related to Covid-19 are taking a toll on their health, according to a review of recent research and interviews with medical experts and dozens of families across the country. The phenomenon is far harder to track than the number of Covid-19 deaths linked to long-term care facilities — 84,000 as of early October, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation — as it is unusual to list isolation as an official cause of death. But the harms are still real, experts say.

    One recent study of a Chicago-area nursing home found that from December 2019 to the end of April 2020, two-thirds of the residents had lost weight, in some cases dramatically — a change that researchers attributed to reduced social interaction, the cessation of family visits and schedule changes due to the pandemic.

    Confinement, social isolation and the lack of external stimulation are also fueling cognitive decline and depression, which in turn increase the risk of high blood pressure, heart disease and stroke, according to Dr. Louise Aronson, a geriatrician and professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

    Syndication: Rochester
    With help from staff members, a nursing home resident stands to wave to family members below at St. John's Home in Rochester, N.Y., on April 24.Tina MacIntyre-Yee / Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
    “Sometimes the doors to their rooms are open, and you just see someone sitting in a chair with tears running down their face,” Aronson, who is assisting San Francisco’s response to the pandemic in long-term care facilities, said. “People ask me, ‘Is this the rest of my life? If so, I don’t want to go on.’”

    Do you have a tip to share about nursing homes and Covid-19? Contact us

    While most states have begun allowing some form of routine in-person visits for long-term care facilities, the guidelines vary widely, and many restrictions remain — not only to protect residents, but also vulnerable front-line staff members, many of whom are low-wage Black and Hispanic workers. Some states and facilities are only allowing limited indoor visits, and colder weather is already curtailing outdoor visits. Many nursing homes have resumed communal dining and group activities, but still require residents to remain distanced from one another. And a single case of the virus can put a facility back on lockdown for weeks.

    The threat from the pandemic has not receded: On Friday, the U.S. hit a new record number of Covid-19 cases, and nursing homes from Massachusetts to Wisconsin are reporting new outbreaks. At the same time, policymakers need to weigh the competing risks, said David Grabowski, a health policy professor at Harvard Medical School, who recently served on an independent federal commission that recommended expanding in-person visitation at long-term care facilities.

    “We’ve locked these older adults in their rooms in the name of safety without thinking about the unintended consequences here,” Grabowski said. “In many respects, the side effects are worse than the potential harm of a slightly higher risk of infection.”

    Gloria DeSoto, 92, visits with her family in their car through a window of the Hebrew Home at Riverdale in Bronx, N.Y., on June 11.Seth Wenig / AP file
    Strict, prolonged lockdowns can dramatically alter residents’ health. Uy said that he saw some patients rapidly lose the ability to perform basic tasks — such as standing, feeding themselves and swallowing safely — while confined to their rooms. Physical therapy and other rehabilitation services have also been cut back because of the pandemic.

    “Until the pandemic, ‘sudden frailty’ would have been an oxymoron,” Aronson said. “Normally, it would take months to years, and we are now seeing it in weeks.”

    But while deadly coronavirus outbreaks at nursing homes tend to grab headlines, the slower-moving health crisis inside these facilities caused by social isolation and confinement remains largely invisible.

    Unlike cases of Covid-19, it is not always clear when a resident’s health is deteriorating because of pandemic-related restrictions, given the complex medical issues that brought them to the facilities in the first place. “Failure to thrive,” for instance, is often characterized by weight loss, reduced appetite and lower activity levels — symptoms that could also be linked to other underlying health conditions. But the biggest marker is psychological, and closely linked to isolation.

    “It means, they give up,” said Dr. Joseph Ouslander, a professor at Florida Atlantic University’s Charles Schmidt College of Medicine. “You do everything to get them to participate, to get them to eat, and despite that they continue to go downhill.”

    ‘I would do anything to get away’
    Beverly Noody used to drop by her mother’s assisted living facility in upstate New York at least twice a week. The first thing she would do: Walk over to her mother’s chair to see that her feet were propped up.

    Barbara White, 94, had congestive heart failure, so her limbs tended to swell from fluid buildup. She was supposed to keep her legs elevated when she was sitting down, and to get up and about a few times a day. But her daughter knew that wouldn’t always happen unless she made sure it did. “She never had her feet up when I came to visit,” Noody said. “If her ankles and knees were swollen, I would have noticed it.”

    Two months into the pandemic, Noody got a call that her mother was en route to the hospital because of dangerous swelling in her legs. She recovered, but the same thing happened again in June, Noody said. She could no longer use her walker to get around safely, as she kept falling. Her condition ultimately deteriorated so much that she was moved out of assisted living and into the adjoining nursing home, Premier Genesee, where she could be supervised around the clock.

    Noody had always thought of her mother as the no-nonsense type, true to her German roots. But in July, when she was helping to move her mother’s possessions into the nursing home, she found a letter that White had written during the pandemic, but hadn’t given her.

    "Beverly, I want to come home for good. I don’t know how to get out of here,” her mother wrote. “I would do anything to get away. I was told today this was forever. Do you know how I can get away?”

    Barbara White with her daughter Beverly, her grandson Brad, and her great-granddaughter Hunter.Courtesy of Beverly Noody
    New York was the first state to ban visitors from nursing homes in mid-March, and other states quickly followed suit. The virus has still taken a devastating toll on residents, many of whom were highly vulnerable because of their advanced age and underlying health conditions. At least 6,600 long-term care residents in New York have died from Covid-19, an undercount that doesn’t include those who died after they were taken to the hospital.

    While nursing home cases and deaths have ebbed since the spring, New York has remained cautious about reopening long-term care facilities to visitors. In July, the state announced that limited outdoor visits and residential activities could resume, but only after facilities were free of Covid-19 cases for 28 days.


    Premier Genesee was preparing to begin outdoor visits under the state’s new guidelines when a staff member tested positive in late July, pushing back the reopening, as required by the state. Noody and other angry family members held a local rally in early September protesting the state’s visitation restrictions; other grassroots groups have held similar protests elsewhere in New York and other states.

    “If she got Covid and she passed away, I would be heartbroken,” Noody said of her mother. “But do I want her to live walled up in a room? Absolutely not. It’s not fair. Nobody wants to live like that, but they're not even given a choice.”

    Under mounting pressure, New York officials relented in mid-September and lowered the threshold for in-person visits to 14 days without a coronavirus case. They also added a requirement for visitors to have a verified negative Covid-19 test. There are still strict caps on the number of visitors allowed in the facility, as well as social distancing and mask requirements.

    New York officials say the restrictions are critical to protecting residents and front-line workers at these facilities. “This pandemic is not over,” Jill Montag, a spokeswoman for the state health department, said in a statement. “Our decisions will continue to be driven by data and science, and now is not the time for anybody to let their guard down.”

    A tent is set up near the windows where visitors can see residents at the Premier Genesee Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation in Batavia, N.Y., on Oct. 9.Mariana Henninger / NBC News
    Diminishing quality of life
    The Covid-19 restrictions are especially painful when residents themselves can’t understand why their family members have stopped coming to visit. More than half of nursing home residents have moderate or severe cognitive impairment from Alzheimer’s, dementia and other conditions, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

    Before the pandemic, Adele Billig constantly circulated throughout her nursing home in Delray Beach, Florida, always showing up for bingo, poker night and karaoke, where she loved belting Frank Sinatra. “I’m never in my room, so don’t call my room, because you’re not going to get me,” the 95-year-old often told her daughter, Melinda.

    Under lockdown, Adele’s social life disappeared. Mostly confined to her room, she had little to keep her engaged: She had trouble following television programs, and phone calls could be difficult, as her hearing aids regularly went missing. “She’d say, ‘I can’t hear you, I can’t hear you.’ Then she’d just give up,” Melinda said. Sometimes when Melinda called, her mother assumed that her daughter was in the building, waiting to come up for a visit, and was crestfallen when she learned she wasn’t there.

    Adele began sleeping more and more, even falling asleep during their phone calls, which had never happened before, Melinda said. By June, she was developing wounds that were not healing — a serious sign that her body was breaking down. But the most upsetting part for Melinda was the feeling that her mother didn’t fully grasp why she had stopped visiting, as her memory was spotty.

    “I wish I could be there with you,” Melinda told her mother in July.

    “If you say so,” her mother responded flatly.

    It was the last conversation they had. The next week, the nursing home called to tell Melinda that her mother had died. The official cause of death was heart failure, but Melinda doesn’t think that conveys the full story.


    “Part of why she died,” she said, “is that her quality of life had diminished to such a point that there wasn’t any.”

    ‘Why can’t I hold her hand?’
    Even when family visits resume, there are usually significant restrictions in place. When Gelsey Randazzo Markese went to see her grandmother Rose Violet Randazzo for the first time in seven months, the rules made her almost regret showing up at all.

    It was the last week of September when she arrived at the Edna Tina Wilson Living Center in Rochester, New York, with her grandfather Vincent Randazzo, who had been married to her grandmother for 69 years. Markese had been raised by her grandparents, who adopted her as a baby, so it was especially hard to be separated from Rose Violet for so long.

    Vincent Randazzo and his wife, Rose Violet Randazzo.Mariana Henninger / NBC News
    When a staff member brought her out in a wheelchair, Rose Violet, 91, instinctively stretched out both arms to touch Markese, then broke down sobbing when the aide told her that they had to remain at least 6 feet apart.

    “My baby, my baby...” she wept, her arms still reaching for her granddaughter, who was also in tears. “She’s my baby.”

    It was a wrenching experience for Markese, who was seven months pregnant and had been waiting to tell her grandmother in person. “To me it was almost more tortuous being there, so close but not being able to touch,” she said. “It was like being punched in the stomach.”

    Markese and other family members are now pushing New York officials to create a program that would enable them to be recognized as “essential caregivers” — a designation that would allow them to provide hands-on assistance and companionship for loved ones in long-term care facilities.

    In June, Indiana became the first state to permit essential caregiver visits for family members who had tended to residents at least two times a week prior to the pandemic, subjecting them to the same Covid-19 testing requirements as staff members. Minnesota, New Jersey, Florida, Texas and other states have made similar accommodations for family members, stressing their role in monitoring their loved ones and advocating on their behalf. Florida recently announced that facilities can allow outdoor visits even if they have recently reported coronavirus cases.

    Download the NBC News app for full coverage and alerts about the coronavirus outbreak

    Markese knows how deadly Covid-19 can be; 11 residents and one staff member have died of the virus at her grandmother’s nursing home, according to federal data. But she believes that visits without social distancing can be done safely.

    “If we follow the same protocols in place as the staff members do — the staff members who bathe my grandmother and help toilet her and help comfort her by holding her hand — then why can't I hold her hand? Why can't I give her a hug?” Markese said. “Why can't my grandfather embrace her when she's crying out to touch him?”

    Vincent Randazzo holds a frame containing photos of him and his wife, Rose Violet Randazzo.Mariana Henninger / NBC News
    To address the impact of prolonged isolation, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued new guidance in September to help expand “compassion care” visits in nursing homes. In addition to allowing end-of-life visits, facilities could also permit families to visit residents who are losing weight or dehydrated and need encouragement to eat or drink, as well as residents who are “experiencing emotional distress, seldom speaking, or crying more frequently,” the new guidance said.

    State and local governments, however, can still impose stricter rules for nursing home visits and usually give facilities considerable leeway in deciding when to reopen. The push for more visitation is also coming amid signs that the pandemic could reach a dangerous new crisis point in the fall and winter, increasing the risk of community spread.

    Nearly eight months into the pandemic, some long-term care facilities are still struggling to protect themselves from Covid-19. Nursing homes across the country continue to report a lack of reliable testing and personal protective equipment, as well as staffing shortages. Without adequate protections in place, in-person visits could put both residents and staff members at greater risk.

    Industry lobbyists are now pushing Congress for more money for facilities to prepare for the next wave of the virus, while admitting there is a tough trade-off when it comes to protecting residents.

    “We too are concerned about prolonged social isolation for our residents,” the American Health Care Association, which represents for-profit long-term care facilities, said in a statement. “With cases rising in many parts of the country, we must be vigilant about protecting our nation’s most vulnerable, but balance that with the need to stay connected with loved ones.”

    ‘It didn’t have to happen’
    Tammy Roberg is still haunted by the circumstances of her father’s death. Shocked by the weight he had lost at the end, she asked the staff to show the logs of what he ate at every meal, only to be told there weren’t any. A nurse later told Roberg that isolation often prompts deep depression among Alzheimer’s patients, which helped explain why her father had deteriorated so quickly.

    Ashley Fjelstad, a spokeswoman for Copperfield Hill, said that Peske’s health had not declined dramatically until his final days. She said the facility typically only notes if residents refuse to eat at all, not the portions they eat at each meal. And she noted that changes in routine are especially disruptive for those with Alzheimer’s disease: The common areas of the facility, where residents can socialize and do activities together, “are the heart and soul of memory care,” she said.

    On the morning of her father’s death, Roberg sat down beside his body and took his hand in her own. She prayed and told her father that she loved him. But she couldn’t shake how he looked lying there. “Why was he so skinny?” she wondered. “When did he last eat?”

    Several weeks after his death, Minnesota enacted a policy allowing essential family caregiver visits in long-term care facilities, including Copperfield Hill.

    Roberg never got that time. Months later, she keeps holding onto the same thought: “It didn’t have to happen.”

    // uz skoro rok na tenhle aspekt zkousim upozornovat. v covid auditku tyhle linky vubec nechteli, az me teda vystipali uplne.
    RIVA
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    Poměrně šokující článek z Izraele, který přirovnává ortodoxní Židy k teroristům:

    Deradicalize Israel's COVID insurgents before they incite a civil war - Israel News - Haaretz.com
    https://www.haaretz.com/...calize-israel-s-covid-insurgents-before-they-incite-a-civil-war-1.9529626
    MTO
    MTO --- ---
    Cena Brexitu v zlatom ekvivalente
    http://www.zvedavec.org/komentare/2021/02/8608-cena-brexitu-v-zlatom-ekvivalente.htm

    “K tomu zostáva dodať jedno. Seriál Brexit je v skutočnosti iba časťou seriálu s názvom "Zlatá čistka Európy".

    V rokoch 1938-1941 nacistické Nemecko okupovalo rad európskych krajín. Súčasne zlaté rezervy týchto štátov boli prepravované do USA a Veľkej Británie. Keď vojna skončila a Európania požadovali svoje zlato späť, dostali podmienku. Bankári v Londýne a New Yorku ponúkli pôžičky zabezpečené zlatom. Keď Európania súhlasili, uvrhli ich do dlhovej pasce. Odvtedy začala zlatá epopej, ktorá sa nezastavuje ani dnes.

    Celú tú dobu bankári z New Yorku a Londýna predávali Európanom ich vlastné zlato, ktoré si nechali v "úložnom priestore". Nakoniec, aby rozšírili objem operácií, rozhodli sa zraziť európske krajiny do kŕdľa.
    Vytvorili Európsku úniu

    Jedným z problémov je, že sa Európska únia nevyhnutne začala premieňať v ekonomického konkurenta USA. Preto sa EÚ skôr alebo neskôr musela stať predmetom konkurenčnej vojny. A Briti sa rozhodli utiecť. A zároveň si zlato vziať so sebou.

    Šance krajín Európskej únie na návrat zlata v blízkej budúcnosti sú teda prakticky nulové, zdôraznil politológ Jurij Gorodnenko

    ... Najzaujímavejšie epizódy seriálu "Zlatá čistka Európy" teda ešte len príde.“

    - tak tady v cechach si uz to moc nevezmou, kdyz mame min nez slovensko :-]
    RIVA
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    The Light | An Independently Distributed Truthpaper
    https://thelightpaper.co.uk/
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    Facing another retirement home lockdown, 90-year-old chooses medically assisted death | CTV News
    https://www.ctvnews.ca/...ement-home-lockdown-90-year-old-chooses-medically-assisted-death-1.5197140

    TORONTO -- When 90-year-old Nancy Russell died last month, she was surrounded by friends and family.

    They clustered around her bed, singing a song she had chosen to send her off, as a doctor helped her through a medically-assisted death.

    It was the exact opposite of the lonely months of lockdown Russell had suffered through in the retirement home where Russell had lived for several years -- that was the whole point.

    Nancy Russell's obituary
    Across Canada, long-term care homes and retirement homes are seeing rising cases of COVID-19 and deaths yet again, a worrisome trend that is leading to more restrictions for the residents.

    But these lockdowns are taking another toll among those who don’t get COVID-19.

    Residents eat meals in their rooms, have activities and social gatherings cancelled, family visits curtailed or eliminated. Sometimes they are in isolation in their small rooms for days. These measures, aimed at saving lives, can sometimes be detrimental enough to the overall health of residents that they find themselves looking into other options.

    Russell, described by her family as exceptionally social and spry, was one such person. Her family says she chose a medically-assisted death (MAID) after she declined so sharply during lockdown that she didn’t want to go through more isolation this winter.

    “My mother was extremely curious, and she was very interested in every person she met and every idea that she came across so she was constantly reading, going to different shows and talks. [She] was frequently talking about people she met and their life stories, very curious, open minded. So for 90, she was exceptional.”

    But the first wave of COVID-19 restrictions in March ended her daily walks, library visits and all the activities in her Toronto retirement home. Her daughter says they had plastic dividers in the dining rooms and supervised visits in the garden.

    “She, almost overnight, went from a very active lifestyle to a very limited life, and they had, very early on, a complete two week confinement just to her room,” Tory said.

    During those two weeks, since she couldn’t exercise by walking to the library or doing her own shopping, Russell would stand up and sit down, again and again in her room, counting the times, her daughter said.

    “In that two weeks, all of us were phoning and she learned Zoom and got up to speed, but she felt extremely restricted, naturally, as did everybody.”

    Tory said that her mother didn’t blame the care home in any way, and that she “fully understood why that rule had to be in place.”

    Care homes were hit hard during the first wave of the pandemic -- a report by the Canadian Institute for Health Information found that as of May 25, 80 per cent of the deaths in the country had been people in long-term care facilities and retirement homes.

    More than 70 per cent of those who have died of COVID-19 in Canada are those over the age of 80.

    “[My mother] understood the fragility of the people in the building and the importance of protecting them, so it was just a very difficult time,” Tory said.

    It was during that more restricted, two-week confinement to Russell’s room that her family saw the decline.

    “She was just drooping,” Tory said. “It was contact with people that was like food to her, it was like, oxygen. She would be just tired all the time because she was under stimulated.”

    Russell had been a supporter of dying with dignity long before the pandemic, her family says.

    “I do want to underscore the fact that she wanted medical assistance in dying at some point,” her daughter stressed. “And she had told her family doctor that, but the application was hastened by the impact of the lockdown measures.”

    Tory said that Russell, still sharp at 90, had a clearer view of the future than many officials at the time, predicting early on in the pandemic that things would continue into 2021.

    “She would always say, the COVID is in charge, you know, no matter what the politicians say, the virus is in charge,” Tory said. “That did hasten her desire to apply for medical assistance in dying, and another factor for her is the fact that medical assistance and dying legislation is a work in progress, and she wanted very much to be sure that she could apply while she had all her marbles, so to speak, so that she could provide that consent.”

    The first doctor she applied to said no.

    “My mom told me he said to her, you've got too much to live for,” Tory said.

    In Canada, you do not need to have a fatal or terminal condition to apply for MAID, but you must have a serious condition, be in an advanced stage of irreversible decline, be experiencing mental of physical suffering that cannot be relieved and be at the point where “your natural death has become reasonably foreseeable,” according to Health Canada.

    Russell bought new tablets and tried to prepare for winter, her daughter said. But her condition was steadily getting worse.

    By the time she applied a second time, “more concrete medical health” issues had developed, her daughter said.

    This time, doctors approved her. Russell would not have to go through another lockdown in her care home.

    “She just truly did not believe that she wanted to try another one of those two-week confinements into her room,” her daughter said.

    Dr. Samir Sinha, a geriatric specialist at Mount Sinai Hospital, commends the family for telling their mother’s story.

    “I do appreciate that this family has come forward, especially when the balance of evidence out there actually says that these restrictions, in too many circumstances, are overly restrictive and actually causing unnecessary harm,” Sinha told CTV News.

    Researchers have noted rising rates of loneliness and despondence among residents in in senior homes during COVID-19 lockdowns, something they call confinement syndrome.

    “When you stick someone alone and deprive them of the usual things that bring them interest in joy, that can be an incredibly isolating, lonely, depressing experience,” Sinha said.

    “And frankly, when you can't look forward to getting out of your room, to having meals or doing activities with others, to even seeing your own families and loved ones, you can imagine for a person in the last few years of their life where these are the basic things that actually bring them joy and really defined what they would call their own quality of life, when you actually deprive a human being of these things, you can imagine that that can have significant psychological consequences that can really give people no real will to live anymore.”

    Some in the field of medically assisted death report more seniors inquiring about assisted death, and that lockdowns are accelerating the timelines among seniors already considering medically assisted deaths.

    “I would say it is an accelerator, not a cause for people's MAID requests,” Dr. Susan Woolhouse, a member of the Canadian Association of MAiD Assessors and Providers, told CTV News.

    “They met the criteria and wanted MAID prior to lockdown but are choosing to die sooner than they would otherwise because the LTC and retirement lockdowns, particularly visitor restrictions, are so miserable.”

    Adding to the complications is the fact that many care homes have seen a huge drop in staff, which can lead to even more health complications for seniors whose needs go ignored due to under staffing -- an issue made even more frustrating if family caregivers who could assist with these needs are unable to visit, as was the case at many long-term care homes during the first wave.

    “Frankly, we’ll find that a lot of the restrictions that are being put in place right now actually violate the rights of the residents themselves, their families, their substitute decision makers, and what really pains me is when I hear stories of people saying, ‘I’d just rather die,’” Sinha said.

    Other jurisdictions, like the Netherlands, quickly recognized the decline in senior residents of long-term care homes, and found balance between precautions and allowing activities and family visits. After a pilot project allowing one visitor per resident at 26 nursing homes did not result in a single new case of COVID-19, the Netherlands officially allowed all nursing homes to adopt those guidelines across the country.

    Similar measures are recommended now in Canada too, but doctors say many regions have not responded.

    “The fact that there can be such a degree of collateral damage by simply isolating people to this extent, this is why I and others have been long advocating for finding a better balance, balancing visitor restrictions, but also the safety and well-being of residents as well,” Sinha said.

    On Oct. 20, Nancy Russell died with her loved ones by her side, honouring her wish for a death on her own terms. Before her death, she spent eight days at the home of one of her children, while family members and friends visited in person or called and emailed. They played games and told stories in the backyard.

    “Her facility was in full lockdown at that time,” her daughter said. “We would not have been able to visit her in her facility. She had to leave. And for a week, with all proper COVID [precautions], we visited.”

    Even after she died, Russell made her voice and passion known; her obituary encourages all “to reflect and act to balance and repair the destructive impacts of extractive industries on water and the life it sustains by supporting practices of Indigenous Sovereignty,” and includes links to several Indigenous charities and movements.

    “Ever adventurous, Nancy departed this world with her wits intact and her expansive curiosity tempered only by a willingness to let the mystery be,” the obituary states.

    Her daughter said it was “definitely a very mixed feeling for everyone because we're losing someone we love, and whose absence is going to be huge.”

    But knowing it was her mother’s choice made all the difference.

    “She was able to direct a peaceful, pain free death on her own time and avoid a great fear of hers, which was to endure winter and lockdowns.”

    So far, there is little evidence of any family caregiver transmission of COVID-19 in long-term care homes, another reason that families believe their right to visit their loved ones should be preserved during any future lockdowns.

    “I worry about seniors, I worry about families who feel helpless. I felt helpless and I believe some other members of my family did at times,” Tory said.
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    Koronavirus změní cestovní ruch zřejmě navždy - CNN Prima NEWS
    https://cnn.iprima.cz/...-nahradi-ockovaci-do-evropy-zamiri-indove-jak-pandemie-zmeni-turismus-19279

    Ať už se ale turismus obnoví příští či přespříští rok, jisté je, že se zřejmě navždy změní způsob, jakým budeme cestovat. Zjednodušeně řečeno koronavirová pandemie je nové 11. září. Zatímco po útoku na Světové obchodní centrum před necelými dvaceti lety došlo k trvalému zpřísnění bezpečnostních standardů v letecké dopravě, covid zpřísní standardy zdravotní, navíc nejen v letectví.

    // Tohle jsme se mohli dočíst na konspiračních dezinformačních webech už před rokem. Rok 2021 se zjevně stane rokem, kdy masmédia takhle pozvolna uvědomí veřejnost, že covidismus má zůstat už navždy. K tomu nám zřejmě dopomůže připravovaný pandemický zákon, který protlačuje "opozice". (ale obecně vidím změnu spíš v typu myšlení)
    Teď byl nouzový stav ilegálně prodloužen..pak se chystají dohodnout na pandemickém zákonu, který umožní podobně věci jako nouzový stav, který už nebude potřeba vyhlašovat.
    Veřejnost to sice může zastavit, ale tak půlce populace, je to asi jedno. Kdo chce bezpečí výměnou za svobodu, nebude mít bezpečí ani svobodu.

    ‚Podraz na občany.‘ Piráti a STAN kritizují, jaký pandemický zákon vláda předložila | iROZHLAS - spolehlivé zprávy
    https://www.irozhlas.cz/...ov/pirati-stan-pandemicky-zakon-vlada-hejtmani-koronavirus_2102152132_kro

    Ve vládním předpisu postrádají Piráti a Starostové parlamentní kontrolu, která by zajišťovala odůvodněnost opatření.

    // opozice ale v podstatě jen řeší sice důležité věci, ale principiálně imho jen bojují za menší zlo

    Vláda schválila pandemický zákon i novelu ústavního zákona o bezpečnosti - Legislativa - Advokátní deník
    https://advokatnidenik.cz/...ada-schvalila-pandemicky-zakon-i-novelu-ustavniho-zakona-o-bezpecnosti/

    Na svém zasedání v pondělí 15. února 2021 schválila vláda kromě jiného dva důležité předpisy – návrh pandemického zákona, který by mohl omezit nutnost využívání nouzového stavu v boji proti onemocnění covid-19, a novelu ústavního zákona o bezpečnosti ČR č. 110/1998 Sb. Druhý z uvedených předpisů by měl v budoucnu nalézt využití například při epidemii, suchu či kybernetických útocích, kdy by nebylo ohrožení takové, aby bylo nutné vyhlásit nouzový stav.

    Hamáčkův návrh ústavní novely znovu na stole:
    Podle návrhu novely ústavního zákona o bezpečnosti ČR č. 110/1998 Sb. by nově mohla vláda získat pravomoc vyhlašovat stav nebezpečí na celostátní úrovni.

    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    UK government has decided to introduce Covid ghettos. What next, Covid camps?
    UK government has decided to introduce Covid ghettos. What next, Covid camps? — RT Op-ed
    https://www.rt.com/op-ed/515748-uk-government-covid-ghettos/
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    cryptogon.com » Court Docs Show FBI Can Intercept Encrypted Messages From ‘Signal’ App
    https://www.cryptogon.com/?p=60741
    KUKIDE
    KUKIDE --- ---
    INK_FLO: toto je také moje odpoveď pro tebe v druhém auditku :)
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    Jeste ad

    As GreatGameIndia reported earlier, even the Lancet paper which suggested that coronavirus had a natural origin was orchestrated by Peter Daszak with employees of EcoHealth Alliance.

    EcoHealth Alliance interestingly is the same non-profit group that received millions of dollars of U.S. taxpayer funding to genetically manipulate coronaviruses with scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.


    Dohledával jsem k tomu zdroje. Seems legit i v rámci nedávného závěru studie WHO, že je extrémně nepravpoděobné, že by virus unikl z laborky.

    https://covid19commission.org/peter-daszak

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-55996728

    Dr Peter Daszak, a member of the WHO team, said the focus on where the origins that led to Covid-19 might be, could be shifted to South East Asia.

    https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30418-9/fulltext

    https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02473-4

    Peter Daszak, president of the research organization EcoHealth Alliance, describes how he has been caught in political cross-hairs over his partnership with a virology lab in China.
    ..

    The US National Institutes of Health (NIH) has reinstated a research organization’s multimillion-dollar grant to study how coronaviruses move from bats to people — which it cancelled in a controversial move earlier this year. But as Peter Daszak, the head of the small non-profit organization — EcoHealth Alliance in New York City — found out in early July, the funding can’t be used unless the organization meets what he says are absurd conditions. The demands, detailed in a letter from the NIH, are politically motivated, he says.

    To carry out its research, EcoHealth Alliance partners with the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) in China, which has been at the centre of unfounded rumours that the COVID-19 pandemic was caused by a coronavirus released from its laboratory. The NIH cancelled EcoHealth Alliance’s grant in April, days after US President Donald Trump told a reporter that the United States would stop funding work at the WIV.


    Inside the Chinese lab poised to study world's most dangerous pathogens
    EcoHealth Alliance and Daszak have been working with Shi Zhengli, a virologist at the WIV, for more than 15 years. Since 2014, an NIH grant has funded EcoHealth’s research in China, which involves collecting faeces and other samples from bats, and blood samples from people at risk of infection from bat-origin viruses. Scientific studies suggest that the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus most likely originated in bats, and research on the topic could be crucial to identifying other viruses that might cause future pandemics. The WIV is a subrecipient on the grant.

    The NIH makes seven demands of EcoHealth; these were first reported by the Wall Street Journal this week, and have been viewed by Nature. The agency asks EcoHealth to obtain a vial of the SARS-CoV-2 sample that was used by the WIV to determine the virus’s genetic sequence. It also requests that EcoHealth arranges an inspection of the WIV by US federal officials.

    Daszak calls the demands from the NIH “heinous”, and worries that the funding freeze is delaying vital work to identify and prevent the next pandemic. The NIH declined to comment, saying that the agency does not disclose internal deliberations on a specific grant.

    In an e-mail to Nature, Shi calls the NIH’s demands “outrageous” and echoes Daszak’s assertions that the agency’s demands are unrelated to the WIV’s collaboration with EcoHealth.

    Nature spoke with Daszak about being caught in the political cross-hairs.



    https://www.npr.org/...ent-stopped-funding-a-research-project-on-bats-and-coronaviru?t=1613339997879

    https://www.newsweek.com/...versial-wuhan-lab-millions-us-dollars-risky-coronavirus-research-1500741

    The NIH research consisted of two parts. The first part began in 2014 and involved surveillance of bat coronaviruses, and had a budget of $3.7 million. The program funded Shi Zheng-Li, a virologist at the Wuhan lab, and other researchers to investigate and catalogue bat coronaviruses in the wild. This part of the project was completed in 2019.

    A second phase of the project, beginning that year, included additional surveillance work but also gain-of-function research for the purpose of understanding how bat coronaviruses could mutate to attack humans. The project was run by EcoHealth Alliance, a non-profit research group, under the direction of President Peter Daszak, an expert on disease ecology. NIH canceled the project just this past Friday, April 24th, Politico reported. Daszak did not immediately respond to Newsweek requests for comment.


    The project proposal states: "We will use S protein sequence data, infectious clone technology, in vitro and in vivo infection experiments and analysis of receptor binding to test the hypothesis that % divergence thresholds in S protein sequences predict spillover potential."

    In layman's terms, "spillover potential" refers to the ability of a virus to jump from animals to humans, which requires that the virus be able to attach to receptors in the cells of humans. SARS-CoV-2, for instance, is adept at binding to the ACE2 receptor in human lungs and other organs.

    According to Richard Ebright, an infectious disease expert at Rutgers University, the project description refers to experiments that would enhance the ability of bat coronavirus to infect human cells and laboratory animals using techniques of genetic engineering. In the wake of the pandemic, that is a noteworthy detail.

    Ebright, along with many other scientists, has been a vocal opponent of gain-of-function research because of the risk it presents of creating a pandemic through accidental release from a lab.



    Porovnej s tvrzenim odborniku, ze unik z laboratore je cituji "skoro nemozny". Nemozny? Z laborky proste _nemuze_ nic uniknout?
    INK_FLO
    INK_FLO --- ---
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    https://www.bitchute.com/video/HYQIU7Kt4Q7s

    GASLIGHTING, UNENDING LOCKDOWNS AND CLIMATE CHANGE
    SCHWEPZ
    SCHWEPZ --- ---
    Ruská vakcína změnila názor dezinformátorů. Místo veškerého očkování nově odmítají jen to západní
    https://ct24.ceskatelevize.cz/...bclid=IwAR0sranapvzOy8LN6dJlHceMlNzqlpZObxkiePupiqB5Pul9gopqkI9B8Bc
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    Xi and Putin Stand Up for Humanity at Davos: Closed vs Open System Ideologies Clash Again - Fort Russ
    https://fort-russ.com/...tand-up-for-humanity-at-davos-closed-vs-open-system-ideologies-clash-again/
    KUKIDE
    KUKIDE --- ---
    už nechte tu pandemii na pokoji, nad tím běží linka o které tu nepíšete... patří do toho třeba to že ten kdo vedl ten dav do kapitolu tak má top secret prověrku...
    https://www.scribd.com/document/493950903/gov-uscourts-dcd-226728-10-0-1
    k tomu do páru patří MR. Robot: https://mrrobot.fandom.com/wiki/Five/Nine_Hack

    a teď mi řekněte čeho to měl bejt cover a proč?

    a jestli mi řeknete že nikdo nebyl tak hloupej aby z capitolu něco vynes tak to jsme asi ve špatném auditku...
    GORG
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    Germany Hired Scientists To Develop Fake Coronavirus Model To Justify Strict Lockdown | GreatGameIndia
    https://greatgameindia.com/germany-hired-scientists-fake-coronavirus-model/

    Interner E-Mail-Verkehr: Innenministerium spannte Wissenschaftler ein - WELT
    https://www.welt.de/...597/Interner-E-Mail-Verkehr-Innenministerium-spannte-Wissenschaftler-ein.html



    The German Federal Ministry of the Interior engaged scientists from several research institutes and universities for political purposes in the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic in March 2020.
    It commissioned researchers from the Robert Koch Institute and other institutions to create a calculation model on the basis of which the Minister of the Interior, Horst Seehofer (CSU), wanted to justify tough coronavirus measures.

    The information is contained in more than 200 pages of internal correspondence between the management level of the Ministry of the Interior and the researchers, received by the German newspaper WELT AM SONNTAG.

    A group of German lawyers fought for e-mail in a legal dispute with the Robert Koch Institute that lasted several months.

    In an exchange of e-mails, the State Secretary in the Ministry of the Interior, Markus Kerber, asks the researchers who have been contacted to develop a model on the basis of which “preventive and repressive measures” can be planned.

    According to the correspondence, the scientists worked in close coordination with the ministry in just four days to develop content for a paper that had been declared secret, which was distributed via various media over the following days.

    A “worst-case scenario” was calculated according to which more than a million people in Germany could die of the coronavirus if social life were to continue as it was before the pandemic.


    As GreatGameIndia reported earlier, even the Lancet paper which suggested that coronavirus had a natural origin was orchestrated by Peter Daszak with employees of EcoHealth Alliance.

    EcoHealth Alliance interestingly is the same non-profit group that received millions of dollars of U.S. taxpayer funding to genetically manipulate coronaviruses with scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.


    Recently, a German court in a landmark ruling has declared that COVID19 lockdowns imposed by the government are unconstitutional.

    Thuringia’s spring lockdown was a “catastrophically wrong political decision with dramatic consequences for almost all areas of people’s lives,” the court said, justifying its decision.

    // TL;DR... nekdo z nemecky vlady zadal v utajeni vedcum ukol, at daji dohromady vedecke zduvodneni lockdownu. po necelem roce pravnich bitev se podarilo ty e-maily odtajnit. ano.. i takhle funguje veda. kdy je nejdriv zaver, ke kteremu je potreba se dopracovat
    Kliknutím sem můžete změnit nastavení reklam