Back on December 30, 2021, I submitted this tweet and post informing vaccinated people who were coerced by an employer to hold their employers liable. I meant the company, but now it looks like the more promising suit would be to go after your supervisor who gave the order to get the vaccine. I think I will.
But after reading this comment, I think I'd prefer to go after the supervisor who ordered the employee to get the shot.
Noted attorney Robert Barnes stated, if you own a company, you really should avoid mandating any inoculations. In some cases, you can be held personally liable for damages. Not your company, you personally as an executive.
New “leaks” from China claim to show vast COVID “quarantine camps.” Obviously this is more ridiculous theatre for international consumption, but this kind of terror propaganda shows the darkness of what the CCP wants western governments do to their people. pic.twitter.com/6Fsgplg8ln
If you'd like to see the transcript of this interview released back on May 7, 2020, find it here at the 1:27:29 mark. But anybody who's anybody who has tracked anything about COVID knows that the hospitals have been diagnosing everybody with COVID in 2020 because Medicare paid out on it. And further, if you read the transcript, you'll also see what Elon Musk got wrong.
In fact, the first person that I'd heard tell on this was Dr. Scott Jensen who explained this back on April 10, 2020.
In fact, back then I wrote,
His name is Dr. Scott Jensen, a former Minnesota state senator. Medicare has determined that if you have a COVID-19 diagnosis, the hospital where that diagnosis is made gets $19,000 from Medicare. If a patient is put on a ventilator, that hospital receives $39,000. A nurse friend of mine said that one of the reasons that the hospitals have closed up their COVID wards is that they need to make money. The money isn't in COVID for most of these; it's in elective surgeries.
Jensen said, "Hospital administrators might well want to see COVID-19 attached to a discharge summary or a death certificate. Why? Because if it's a straightforward, garden-variety pneumonia that a person is admitted to the hospital for – if they're Medicare – typically, the diagnosis-related group lump sum payment would be $5,000. But if it's COVID-19 pneumonia, then it's $13,000, and if that COVID-19 pneumonia patient ends up on a ventilator, it goes up to $39,000."
This interview by Laura Ingraham of Alex Berenson and Phil Kerpen goes into even greater detail, where I explained that