Australian soap opera actress says that the “scamdemic” was single-handedly brought down by Albertan man who proved in court the virus doesn't exist.
Context: I’ve seen a lot of this today on Facebook and Instagram. Basically King contested a social distancing fine last December and tried to serve a subpoena on Alberta’s CMOH Deena Hinshaw. This paper was allegedly part of Alberta’s defense. But it doesn’t admit anything.
It seems to be a motion to quash his subpoena. It argues that Hinshaw has “no material evidence” related to King’s $1200 fine. King complained on the Stew Peters Show that opposing attorneys argued that it was irrelevant. Yeah, that’s their point—not that the virus doesn’t exist.
As far as I can tell, King lost. A week ago he told his TikTok followers the case is over. He complained that the magistrate gave bad advice. But when Alberta announced they were lifting restrictions, I guess he decided to declare victory after the fact. tiktok.com/@canadianpatri…
Wish I could post documents from the case, but as far as I could tell, it requires sending a lot of Canadian dollars to Canada. (I guess that's what I get for ever complaining about PACER.)
In his TikTok, King mentioned distributing them by thumb drive. Will tweet if I get any.
Thread further breaking this down, which QTs and embeds many of King's confused videos.
TLDR: No evidence "material to" and "available" for King's bonkers (quashed) subpoena does not mean the virus has never been isolated. It has been.
Context: U.S. Senator doesn't understand what censorship is. Johnson uses his platform to endorse the next phase of Alex Berenson's grift (milking a one-week Twitter suspension to go on Tucker, etc.)
As context for Alex's recent tweet, arbeit macht frei (“work sets you free”) was put over the entrance of Auschwitz. Impfung macht frei means “vaccination sets you free.” It's a pander to the “vaccine holocaust” theorists and incredibly gross.
Context: It's been a month after the date Berenson says cases exploded, and two weeks since he repeatedly claimed imminent "vaccine failure." It was a weird flex for him to basically turn into a "wait two weeks" doomer, but I did wait and—nope, the vaccines continue to work well.
Plots created by a sheet @Marco_Piani gave me, who has some good observations about Berenson's related misrepresentations.
A lot of people are pointing out the headline is also bad. I agree. Two-fers are a thing, and it's been a bad week for MSM clickbait failing to convey context.
Shemirani was almost certainly referring to *patent* 060606, which is not actually a patent but a publication. Has nothing to do with vaccines. The application was filed in 2018 and abandoned after a final office action (rejection) by USPTO in December.