Comment: Please don’t try to classify us into two groups and interpret what our intentions or reasons are. You are wrong! I am 72 and have quite good immune system. I believe that I had Covid-19 (or whatever it is that we call Covid-19) in the Fall of 2020. I recovered, so I have a full natural immunity against this “virus”, regardless of whether it is natural or artificial. But I also had a hearth attack and a quadruple bypass surgery, followed by some complications and a heart condition. I am not stupid, I can read and use by brain. I am reading expert opinions on so called adverse events caused by the mRNA vaccines. These include blood clotting, myocardiatis, pericarditis, heart attacks and deaths that are listed and confirmed by VAERS and similar European databases. I also read data and expert opinions suggesting that mRNA vaccines don’t prevent infection or transmission. In this situation, I decided that it is safer for me to face the virus than the adverse events. It is my decision and nobody can overwrite it, not even a communist government invoking “collective safety” vs. individual rights. Please find the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights and check Article 3, which reads:
Article 3 – Human dignity and human rights
1. Human dignity, human rights and fundamental freedoms are to be fully respected.
2. The interests and welfare of the individual should have priority over the sole interest of science or society.
The Universal Declaration was adopted by the UN General Assembly as UN Resolution A/RES/217(III)[A] on 10 December 1948 in Palais de Chaillot, Paris. Of the 58 UN members at the time, 48 voted in favour, (including Canada), none against, eight abstained, and Honduras and Yemen failed to vote or abstain.
The British delegation, while voting in favor of the Declaration, expressed frustration that the proposed document had moral obligations but lacked legal force; it would not be until 1976 that the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights , [Text] came into force, – (also ratified by Canada) – giving a legal status to most of the Declaration.
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