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COVID-19

Heritage Lanes frustrated by province’s decision to continue lockdown measures

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4 minute read

For some of us, lockdown measures are an inconvenience.  Wearing a mask and standing in a line (longer than usual) may be the way we remember this period (if it ends that is).  Meanwhile, others wish they could just have a chance to open their businesses.  They wish they could allow people with masks to come in.  They wish they could rush around with sanitizer cleaning up after customers.  Even if there aren’t as many allowed in as usual.  That’s the case for a favourite local bowling alley in Red Deer.  Here’s how Heritage Lanes reacted to this weeks announcement that lockdown measures would continue despite the fact there are under 300 people in hospital with COVID in the province of Alberta. For now Heritage Lanes remains closed, hoping they will somehow hold on until people are allowed to bowl again.

To all those suffering the loss of a loved one or worried about the potential threat of COVID 19 to your life, we feel for you.  And to all those who are restricted from attempting to (protect and to) serve your customers and earn a living for yourself and your employees, we feel for you too.

Here’s a message from Heritage Lanes

From the Facebook page of Heritage Lanes 

To all our Valued Customers and Friends,

The greatly anticipated date of March 22nd has come and gone and the only message given by our Provincial Government leaves us once again with disappointment and confusion. We aren’t the only Bowling Center in the province feeling this frustration and the struggle is very real for all of us.
Our best wishes go out to all the centers across Alberta, hoping we can all hang in there a bit longer and see this through. However, with some big box retail outlets having record setting years, the whole “We’re in this together” doesn’t seem appropriate and I’m sure has lost its meaning to all the struggling proprietors. It would be a shame to see some centers closing their doors permanently when bowling is such a huge part of so many people’s lives within our communities. Bowling is so important for the mental health and happiness for so many people and we really just want the chance to provide this again in a safe and secure environment. Just give us a chance!
That being said, without a reopen or new announcement date provided, we currently can’t confirm any information at this time, however, it is our plan to complete 2020-2021 League Play season with a 4 -6 week wrap up, and then roll right into spring and summer league, your support would be greatly appreciated moving forward this summer and into next fall. Don’t for get about our Kids Bowl FREE All Summer program @ kidsbowlfree.com We miss everyone and look forward to sharing laughs and creating memories with all of you again in the near future.
The Heritage Lanes Team

After 15 years as a TV reporter with Global and CBC and as news director of RDTV in Red Deer, Duane set out on his own 2008 as a visual storyteller. During this period, he became fascinated with a burgeoning online world and how it could better serve local communities. This fascination led to Todayville, launched in 2016.

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COVID-19

Emails Show Gates Foundation Introduced NIH Official to BioNTech CEO Before Pandemic Was Even Declared

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News release from the Informed Consent Action Network

As ICAN supporters will recall, Dr. Barney Graham was formerly the Deputy Director of NIH’s Vaccine Research Center (VRC) and chief of the Viral Pathogenesis Laboratory. Back in 2020, ICAN sued NIH to get access to his emails during the pandemic and won. We’ve been reviewing the emails as batches come in and you can read previous reports herehere, and here.

Lead Counsel, Aaron Siri, Esq., lays out the details here:

The latest batch contains a very interesting email in which a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation official introduces Graham at NIH to Ugur Sahin, CEO of BioNTech on February 2, 2020, stating, “I wanted to take a moment to introduce you to each other regarding 2019-nCoV.” In response, Graham says, “Thank you for your interest in our antigen design effort for CoV vaccines,” and the two immediately set up a phone call.

We know that the Gates Foundation bought shares in BioNTech back in September 2019 and so it is interesting to see it actively making connections for BioNTech so quickly. These emails occurred just 13 days after the first case of SARS-CoV-2 was found in the U.S. and over a month before the WHO declared a pandemic. In a follow-up email just three weeks later, BioNTech tells Graham that its “vaccine efforts are well under way” and that it is ready to discuss a “corresponding license agreement.”

In another email on March 13, 2020, a market research company reached out to Graham saying that stock markets were plunging and asking him to answer some questions to help them “understand the market sentiment of the vaccines industry towards COVID-19 vaccines.” Graham forwarded the email to the VRC Director and said, “FYI. I never answer inquiries like this, but do you think it might be appropriate for people like us to speak to the investor world and try to calm things down?

Both these incidences show how the NIH acts just like a for-profit corporation with a vested interest in forming partnerships and worrying about financial markets—perhaps because the agency and many of its employees stand to profit from the success of the vaccines they develop, just like Graham did from the Moderna vaccine.

ICAN will continue to report on the Graham emails as more batches come in.

To support future legal actions like this, click here to donate!

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COVID-19

Federal bill would require US colleges to compensate students injured by COVID shots

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From LifeSiteNews

By Matt Lamb

Congressman Matt Rosendale’s new bill would make colleges that mandated the experimental,  COVID shots financially liable for injuries caused by them, such as myocarditis and pericarditis.

Universities that required students to take COVID-19 shots would be held liable for the medical suffering caused by them, under proposed federal legislation.

Republican congressman Matt Rosendale introduced the “University Forced Vaccination Student Injury Mitigation Act of 2024” recently, along with Reps. Eli Crane and Bill Posey.

Universities would be required to pay the medical costs for students who suffered at least one jab injury, specifically listing myocarditis, pericarditis, thrombosis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, and “[a]ny other disease with a positive association with the COVID–19 vaccine which the Secretary of Education determines to be warranted.”

The abortion-tainted COVID jabs have been linked to a variety of medical consequences, including those listed in the legislation.

“If you are not prepared to face the consequences, you should have never committed the act,” Rosendale stated in a news release. “Colleges and universities forced students to inject themselves with an experimental vaccine knowing it was not going to prevent COVID-19 while potentially simultaneously causing life-threatening health defects like Guillian-Barre Syndrome and myocarditis.

“It is now time for schools to be held accountable for their brazen disregard for students’ health and pay for the issues they are responsible for causing,” he stated.

The legislation could impact hundreds of colleges – the New York Times reported in 2021 that more than 400 higher education institutions had COVID jab mandates.

Only 17 colleges still require the COVID jab, according to No College Mandates, which supports the legislation.

The group is “grateful” for the legislation and said it will “hold colleges accountable for the injuries their unnecessary, unethical and unscientific policies have caused for without such legislation, these students and their families would have no other recourse.”

The problems with the COVID shots have been extensively documented by LifeSiteNews and elsewhere. Documented adverse reactions include deathstrokemyocarditis, and Guillain-Barré syndrome, among others.

The documented problems with the COVID shots and myocarditis, which is inflammation of the heart, led a vaccine advisor for the Food and Drug Administration to warn against young men taking the jabs.

Dr. Doran Fink convinced the agency in June 2021 to add a warning about myocarditis and pericarditis to the Pfizer and Moderna shots. Fink reiterated his concerns during a September 17, 2021, FDA meeting on the safety of the jabs. He said that adults 40 years old and younger are at a greater risk of severe reactions from the jabs than they are from COVID itself.

College students specifically have been harmed by the COVID-19 shots, including one who died after the injection.

“If it wasn’t for the vaccine … He wouldn’t have, he wouldn’t more than likely have passed away now,” Bradford County Coroner Timothy Cahill concluded in 2021, based on his autopsy of George Watts. The 24-year-old male student took the jab as required by Corning Community College in the state of New York.

Northwestern University student Simone Scott also appeared to have died due to heart inflammation linked to the COVID jab, though she received it prior to the school’s mandate.

A Johns Hopkins University medical school professor also endorsed the legislation.

“I had to make efforts to prevent my own high school and college age children from receiving COVID-19 booster shots that they did not want or need,” Dr. Joseph Marine stated. “It seems reasonable to me that institutions that implemented such policies without a sound medical or scientific rationale should take responsibility for any proven medical harm that they caused.”

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