Kayla Pollock: Injured by the Jab - Then Offered Assisted Death by the Government! Viva Frei Live
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We're live, not doing a typical video intro today, because I want to give the special or specific intro to this live stream in particular.
If you haven't heard this story, the story of Kayla Pollack, you're going to hear it today.
Rage-inducing is not an adequate description.
It's almost beyond comprehension, and we'll get into the details in a bit.
I'm going to try to find the video of one of the recordings which we're going to play during this stream when Kayla tells her story.
The preface that I want to give for this stream is if you're inclined to typically rumble rants and super chats and tips and locals, instead of doing that, please don't.
And the link to Kayla's Give, Send, Go is in the pinned comment on YouTube.
And I just posted it there again.
Because it's beyond atrocious what the government did, has done, and continues to do.
And there's several elements of this story in terms of raising awareness of people's experiences in general.
Documenting and memorializing for an eternity so that these stories don't remain stories and people understand what people have gone through.
Kayla is now living a life that requires, it's not even a question of compensation for injury, in the punitive or compensatory sense.
She's got a life of expenses that did not exist prior to this event.
And the government, beyond leaving her high and dry, we're going to get into it.
I'll also preface this by saying YouTube overloads.
We're doing this live on YouTube, Rumble, and vivabarneslaw.locals.com.
And the reason is so that this story is shared far and wide, memorialized, and so that Kayla has the maximum exposure for the Give, Send, Go campaign, for her current and future needs, and be damned with any bullshit censorship on YouTube.
The rules are, I know the rules.
I took the re-education camp.
I re-watched my video.
The rules are that people are allowed sharing their own personal experiences and personal stories.
There will be no medical advice in any of this.
There will be no recommendations or suggesting medical interventions full stop.
This is Kayla telling the world what she's gone through, what she continues to go through, and what the, I'm about to swear again, Canadian government.
Is making her go through.
So that's the intro.
That's the...
Those are the caveats.
So the link to the Give, Send, Go is there.
Share it far and wide, please.
Now, Kayla is going to...
I'm going to come bring Kayla in and we're going to do this.
I didn't tweet this out before we went live.
I think it was tweeted out and let everyone know that we're live, but this is happening now.
All right, Kayla, I'm bringing you in.
In three, two, one.
Kayla, nice to meet you.
Well, we met briefly for two minutes before.
Thank you for coming on.
Thank you for doing this.
No, thanks for having me.
I say we start from the beginning.
We're not going to really start from the beginning of all time, but for those who don't know who you are, haven't heard of you, let's do a 30,000-foot overview, and then we're going to get into the details of what happened to you.
Yeah, basically, I was someone who got very lucky growing up and got to work with exotic animals.
So I worked with lions and monkeys and big cats, especially, and parrots.
And, you know, I got very lucky in what I was able to do.
And when I had my son, somebody said to me, well, my family said, You know, a son who needs you.
And I love my job, but I thought, no, it's not.
So I traded in lions and went for kindergarten children instead.
And I gotta tell you, I don't know which ones bite more.
I mean, I've never been bit by a lion, but lots of parrot bites, but I'm not sure which ones were more difficult to deal with.
But I loved, I worked for the school board.
In my area for four years and absolutely loved my job.
I lived in a really small community, so my son went to school at the school that I worked at, so I knew all his friends and he knew where my classroom, where my work was, so he'd always stop in my classroom and I'd go into his sometimes with tortoises or something that was, you know, okay to have at home.
And his stepmom worked at the sister school, so he's going to be lucky in high school when he doesn't have a mother following him around, I think.
I was going to make a joke that you traded one group of wild animals for another.
I did.
It's not a joke.
I really did.
So you are from Ontario, right?
I am from Ontario, yeah, from Ontario.
I don't know if you've mentioned the town.
Do you mention the town?
Right now I'm from Bradford, but I used to be from Mount Albert, Ontario, which is a small town.
I swear to you, I think I've been through Mount Albert.
Really?
Is it Northern Ontario?
Yeah.
Would that be anywhere near the road through or to Timmins?
No.
I don't think so.
It sounds very fair.
I'm going to look up a map in a second.
I don't think so.
Sorry, that's my Apple Watch.
I highly doubt it.
I turned off all my devices, but you know what?
I don't know how to turn off my Apple Watch.
Well, currently in Florida, we're going through an AT&T outage.
Oh, dear.
Oh, it's back.
It's back.
Look at that.
Okay, just like that.
It was gone all morning, and everyone was prepping for the next global shutdown.
Yeah, that's right.
So, am I allowed to ask how old you are?
Yeah, I'm 37 now.
Okay.
And so you sent me a bunch of pictures yesterday, and it's amazing that you had lions and working with animals, and I can see them in the backdrop.
Oh, yeah, there is.
How long were you teaching for?
I wasn't teaching, but I did work at a school with youngsters, so I helped with their behavioral issues more so and supervised them, depending on what I was doing that day.
But I did that for four years.
Okay.
So, and I loved it.
I was 500 meters away from work, so the commute was good.
And, you know, there was parks everywhere.
You know, everything was wheelchair accessible there too, which is so ironic.
Because where I live now, nothing's accessible.
I can't even get out of my door by myself or onto my porch by myself or...
Do almost anything by myself now, but we can get into that.
All right, so I guess now, all of this happened about two years ago now.
Two years ago today.
It's two years ago.
I did not know that.
This is two years to the day.
When this happens, your kid is eight years old, give or take?
When this happened, my son was seven, yeah.
Seven.
Let's go all the way back, I guess, starting the pandemic.
Pandemic hits, everything gets shut down.
What were you doing for work at the time?
And then what were you doing during the pandemic?
Part of the time, I was actually able to work, depending on what Ontario was doing with their school system at the time.
So we wore, like, atrocious masks with visors over them.
I mean, we looked like we worked at the ER as staff.
And then I was constantly squirting kids in the eyes with sanitizer by accident, feeling like a terrible person.
They come to help kids and I'm squirting them with alcohol in the eyes and everything smells like tequila and we're washing down the toys with Javex and no one's pencils can touch each other.
It's chaos and it's scary.
But I loved my job.
I didn't want to sit at home.
And then when I wasn't at work, Ontario at least had ruled as far as court systems and if you'd had any child custody issues in the past, or even if you didn't have custody issues, you were just in a separation agreement or something, or you just had a verbal agreement where your child went back and forth to one parent to another's house.
Ontario, at least I know, had ruled that you were considered one cohort.
So legally, your child could go back and forth between the two houses.
So at this time, I'm type 1 diabetic.
I have been since I'm 11. And so I have an autoimmune disease already.
And of course, the news is going off.
And at this point in time...
I mean, I had a child, but I didn't know anything about media censorship.
I didn't know that when you watch a certain news channel, it might be paid for by a certain political party.
I wasn't aware of that.
It's never something that's come up in a discussion in my life.
So, as much as I was very much aware of You know, the WHO going on TV and what our politicians were saying and what our, you know, what our Ministry of Health was saying and what our rules were.
I mean, I found it a little silly that, you know, we might get arrested if we went to, you know, our neighbor's house or our family's house for Christmas.
But, you know, most people...
We're either really keeping their distance or they were, like, really opposite.
I would say, like, 99% of the people around here wore masks, no problem.
I mean, you couldn't go anywhere without one.
So in the meantime, I was still having my son.
His dad and I didn't have any issues.
His dad and I get along really well.
So we weren't having any issues with him going back and forth.
But I've got to be honest, it scared me a little bit.
Because I think his dad might have been...
His dad has a bigger family of people that he just does.
So how big his cohort was versus how big mine was, it just came down to that.
It was not anyone breaking rules or not breaking them or following them or not.
It just came down to that.
So I started to get a little worried that, you know, I mean...
Kids are germ infested anyway.
My own kid.
But I wasn't going to be staying away from my son.
That was never an option.
It was never something I thought about.
I didn't even want to stay away from work.
So, you know, yeah, I guess things stayed pretty normal.
I mean, I guess some of it was kind of entertaining.
We had online schooling.
So my son would get his computer out and he'd be like.
Falling asleep at the computer, bored out of his mind.
And then all the kids would go crazy in the classroom.
But since I worked at the school, I was able to just sort of pop on there and everyone would just go silent as if I had authority.
And I thought it was really funny that my son was at the time in like grade two and in grade three, I believe, or maybe he was in grade one and grade two or whatever.
I didn't have any authority in his classroom.
Like, I didn't work in his classroom.
But I guess because I worked at the school, they would all, like, be silent because they thought, like, what was I going to do through the computer screen?
So I just thought it was funny when my son and I would joke about it.
He's like, Mom, do it again.
So, you know, it would be kind of funny.
But, yeah, everything stayed kind of normal in that way.
Mental health was a real issue around everybody.
I mean...
I mean, you were literally locked in your house.
And for me, I was alone all the time.
So I'm locked in my house when I don't have my son.
I'm sitting here thinking, how much more of the news do I want to watch?
So it was...
Honestly, it was very depressing.
It was psychological torment.
I was just talking with someone earlier this morning.
In order to not manipulate, but in order to get people to...
Line up for this procedure, which was the only way out.
It took three years.
I was making a joke.
It took three years of an increasing death count in the chyrons of news outlets.
Someone in the chat says children are not.
Oh, no, it said children are not German-fested.
That's propaganda.
I got kids, man.
I'll tell you one thing.
They're dirty.
When one kid goes down in a classroom, the whole classroom is missing the next day.
I didn't mean German-fested.
I'm joking.
I'm joking.
It's all a joke, but kids always have sniffles.
They need to get cold.
Yeah, but I think my immune system was actually better when I worked at the school, to be really honest.
You get exposure.
You get exposure to a lot of different things.
No doctor, no medical advice.
But so, bottom line, your experience going through this, it's the same as everyone else's.
It was the same.
I think it was a little more scary in some ways because I was being told that if you have an autoimmune disorder or something, you should especially...
Be getting vaccinated because you could die if you got COVID if you had an autoimmune disorder.
And just to be clear, the autoimmune disorder is type 1 diabetes?
Type 1 diabetes, yeah.
I'm mildly ignorant.
I know it has to do with insulin levels.
What type 1 versus type 2 diabetes?
Type 2, it might as well just be a whole different disease.
Type 1 is something where you have...
It used to be that you used to get it only in childhood.
Something has changed that.
When I was a kid, like I'm 37 years old, when I was a kid, there was no such thing as someone being diagnosed over 20. Now it happens all the time and they say it's type 1. I don't know what's going on with that.
But basically, it's an autoimmune disorder.
It can be genetically passed on through generations.
I was adopted, so...
I wasn't sure that mine was.
I later found out that it was genetic.
When did you get diagnosed with that?
I was 11 at the time.
But I mean, it didn't stop me from leading a healthy life.
I have devices on me.
So you hear little beeps on me.
That's just my insulin pump.
Or I have things that are attached to my body.
Like I have needle that is in my skin all the time.
And a device that delivers insulin.
And it talks to another little robot on my skin that tells it what my blood sugar is, which is also a needle.
So with that device, which...
Ontario was not paying for those for a long time, so there was no way that I could afford them.
I mean, these things cost like $600 a month just to operate one, and then I believe it's another $700 roughly a month to operate the other.
So that wasn't in my budget.
So these are not things that you can just...
Bye.
But then Ontario, you know, changed some of its guidelines, and I was able to get these devices.
And, you know, as far as living a daily healthy life, I mean, I did it.
I hiked.
I did all the things with the children.
I still, I trained service dogs and guide dogs.
I did a lot of different things.
And I was a mom, so I was always...
Go, go, go, go, go, because that's what happens when you're a mom.
You know, even if it was dad's time, you know, I was always, I loved to be outside.
I spent the majority of my life in the country, and that's where my love of being outside is about dad, and so, yeah.
Yeah, so I say it's relevant in that, yeah, but we were told, you know, underlying comorbidities would contribute to risk factors.
Yes.
So you go and you get the first two shots without incident, and they were the Pfizer's.
Yeah, and I only got those because, first of all, I had a father in long-term care who was dying.
You know, people say, well, you know, you were adopted.
He wasn't your real dad.
If someone raises you for your whole life since you're 10 months old, That's her father.
And my father was in long-term care, and he was passing away quite quickly.
And we knew he only had, you know, not so much time.
And that was part of it.
I also, I'm not 100% sure, but I think it was mandatory, if I'm not mistaken, looking back, that if you worked at the school board, I believed, because I believe that's...
Because of the government, if you worked for a government or anything, I think, I believe the school board was also, it was either mandatory or it was becoming mandatory.
So you had to have your vaccines for that.
And you also...
To stop you on your debt, first of all, I don't know who would say that an adopted parent is not, you know...
Oh, a lot of people do.
The internet's filled with trolls and we have to, in as much as not pay attention to them, not give them any attention, but...
It's all new to me.
What I'm flabbergasted is the sheer cruelty of some of the trolling that I've now seen through everybody.
Cruelty.
There's no other way.
It's not trolling.
It's inhumane psychological cruelty.
And I can't imagine what a person sitting on the other end of their computer derives from pleasure of that.
It's been hard to watch, but at the other end of it, I've also had to realize that, you know, And I've been called, I don't know, I think it's called grifter.