The jabs are gonna bring down governments, which of course is the plan.
— WOLSNED 🇬🇧 (@wolsned) August 26, 202
Barrister Julian Gillespie, Australia, listen to what he says...pic.twitter.com/8q6kDCb1Oz
Due to the scale of the rollouts, it now appears that tens of thousands of practioners have repeatedly performed medical treatments properly termed "gross medical and or professional negligence."
[Remember too: if your company coerced you to take the shot as a condition of employment, they've violated your civil rights and harmed your property. I am sure that your family and friends would prefer that your company had not harmed you. Meaning that it's time to defend your property even if it is too late, defend it.]
With respect to patients receiving the COVID-19 injectables, where each practioner has no immunity from government whatsoever. So, these practioners are therefore personally and professionally liable to actions of medical negligence. From their patients receiving COVID-19 injectables, particularly those patients who subsequently died or suffered adverse side effects from the COVID-19 injectables. Additionally, due to the illegal nature of the AFRA and National Boards Joint Statement, it does also appear that the public offices of AHPRA and the National Boards responsible for the creation and the publication of the 9th March 2021 statement are now legally exposed to the actions of malfeasance in public office. As the harm to COVID-19 vaccine victims was foreseeable in terms of these still remaining experimental gene-based therapies, these vaccine victims and future victims who later developed vaccine related injuries and illnesses can sue the public offices of AHPRA [Australian Health Practioner Regulation Agency] and the National Boards in their personal capacity. A further liability in the same public offices, appears available to those registered practioners who improperly administered the COVID-19 injectables in breach of their code of conduct should those health practioners subsequently sued by their patients and they have to pay damages to their patients, then those health practioners may in turn be able to sue the public offices of AHPRA and the National Boards for coercing and threatening them to ignore their codes of conduct. Such a legal action again would be the tort of malfeasance in public office.
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