High-profile doctors, scientists, and public speakers, including GB news presenter Neil Oliver, will be heading to the island to discuss vaccine injuries at the Healing Beyond Covid event in early February.
The two-day conference at the St Pierre Park Hotel on 7 and 8 February will mark the official launch of the Guernsey Covid Vaccine Injury Community.
‘We’re very honoured to have all these people come over,’ said Jo Robinson, one of the organisers.
‘These people are at the forefront of protocols for vaccine injury. This is a global scenario where the government created a massive fear narrative where there was only one way to go – natural immunity no longer existed and there was a lot of coercion to take the novel experimental gene therapy injection.
‘In my view, the evidence is mounting that these particular injections are not fit for purpose. This event is an opportunity for people to hear it from the horse’s mouth. It is controversial, and I get that a lot of people want to forget and not talk about Covid any more – but it’s important that people do come along and challenge these speakers and look at health in a slightly different way.
‘The overall idea is from a place of love and positivity – it’s for re-empowering people’s own health sovereignty. We all need hospitals in times of crisis, of course, but there’s so much that people can do for themselves as well.’
The event follows various open meetings that have been locally held throughout the year by the group, when it was scoping out interest in the topic and the potential for a support group.
‘Those smaller meetings were helpful,’ said Mrs Robinson, ‘but they weren’t really having the public impact that I’m hoping this event will. If it has the effect of bringing this topic out into the open and ultimately helping those who are suffering to get recognition and further support, then I’ll be delighted.’
Mrs Robinson said some 10 public speakers had confirmed their attendance so far – each well-known advocates for treatment innovation and ‘uncovering the truth’ on various health matters.
It will open with the film premiere of ‘Inconvenient Study’ at 6.30pm on Saturday 7 February. The new documentary from Highwire presenter Del Bigtree is considered ‘essential viewing’ for anyone curious about how public health decisions are made.
From 8.30am the next day, Mr Oliver will host a full-day conference. He will be joined by several guest speakers, including Dr Angus Dalgleish, a cancer specialist discussing the rise in ‘turbo cancer’ post-vaccine, Dr Peter McCullough and Dr Chris Flowers discussing vaccine injury, and Dr Tess Lawrie, co-founder of the World Council for Health, which is supporting the event, along with Channel Island Integrative Health Alliance and GCVIC.
‘If you feel something isn’t right in the current health landscape, you’re not getting the answers you need, or you simply want to take informed control of your physical and mental wellbeing, this weekend will open new doors,’ Mrs Robinson said.
‘It seems to have snowballed, which is great. I’m a quiet person, I hate the limelight – but I’m doing this as a grandmother. I look at the future for my grandchildren and my younger family and I feel this is really important for all people to consider.’
The group has invited all deputies to attend.
‘We can talk about this and we need to talk about this,’ she said.
‘We can’t just cover it up and pretend it never happened. If you don’t learn the lessons from the last time then it will happen all over again.’
Tickets cost £15 for the film premiere on 7 February, £35 for the full day conference the following day, and £45 for a combined ticket. They can be secured by searching for ‘healing beyond covid’ on eventbrite.
Fifty free tickets have been reserved for vaccine-injured individuals, and they can be accessed by contacting the group on gcvic@protonmail.com.
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