The fevered push to get shots into arms saw the government change regulatory due process and rush these novel products to market. As a result, an untold number of people were left injured or dead and entirely forgotten by the system.
At the heart of this lawsuit is Carrie Sakamoto, a young mother from Lethbridge whose personal $10.5 million vaccine injury lawsuit pivoted into a class action, representing potentially thousands of Albertans facing debilitating, long-term effects from the widely promoted but highly controversial COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.
They recently joined me for an interview to explain how the Alberta government took part in "unlawful, negligent, inadequate, improper, unfair, and deceptive practices" to convince people to put their health, safety, and employment on the line under the guise of the greater good.
There is a lot of censorship going on in Canada. All mainstream media and newspaper are controlled by Trudeau.
The ONLY independent Canadian news media are Rebel News and Epoch Times.
Click here to watch the entire interview by Rebel News.
Rath pointed out that the government of Alberta, including Health Officer Deena Hinshaw, ignored important safety data before the rollout of these shots:
"[Pfizer] clearly demonstrated that if you put these shots into the arms of children, that the vaccines themselves would kill more children than COVID."
This lawsuit is more than just a legal battle — it's an urgent call for accountability and a potential precedent for future public health responses. As legal action unfolds, will this be Canadians' only hope for the government to take responsibility for the widespread harm caused by their hasty vaccine rollout?
You can find updates on this lawsuit and our other facts-based reports on this issue at NoMoreShots.ca.
On that website, we've also set up a petition you can sign demanding our government immediately revoke market authorization for these shots.
Tamara Ugolini
Marking the legacy of the so-called pandemic was the widespread suspension of our civil liberties and the establishment of a bio-security nanny state that forcefully pushed mass vaccinations on every man, woman and child to the benefit of Big Pharma and their bureaucratic accomplices inside all levels of government.
The fevered push to get shots into arms saw the government change regulatory due process and rush these novel products to market. As a result, an untold number of people were left injured or dead and entirely forgotten by the system.
At the heart of this lawsuit is Carrie Sakamoto, a young mother from Lethbridge whose personal $10.5 million vaccine injury lawsuit pivoted into a class action, representing potentially thousands of Albertans facing debilitating, long-term effects from the widely promoted but highly controversial COVID-19 mRNA vaccines.
Lawyers Jeff Rath and Eva Chipiuk from the firm Rath and Co. are the lawyers behind this massive lawsuit. They recently joined me for an interview to explain how the Alberta government took part in "unlawful, negligent, inadequate, improper, unfair, and deceptive practices" to convince people to put their health, safety, and employment on the line under the guise of the greater good.
Click here to watch.
Rath pointed out that the government of Alberta, including Health Officer Deena Hinshaw, ignored important safety data before the rollout of these shots:
"[Pfizer] clearly demonstrated that if you put these shots into the arms of children, that the vaccines themselves would kill more children than COVID."
This lawsuit is more than just a legal battle — it's an urgent call for accountability and a potential precedent for future public health responses. As legal action unfolds, will this be Canadians' only hope for the government to take responsibility for the widespread harm caused by their hasty vaccine rollout?
You can find updates on this lawsuit and our other facts-based reports on this issue at NoMoreShots.ca.
On that website, we've also set up a petition you can sign demanding our government immediately revoke market authorization for these shots.
Tamara Ugolini