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Waikanae Watch

~ issues relevant to Waikanae people and others

Waikanae Watch

Monthly Archives: December 2022

mRNA found in Breast Milk, studies show shedding is real – Dr Peter McCullough

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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from the Daily Telegraph NZ

U.S. Cardiologist and epidemiologist Dr Peter McCullough is one of the World’s most published medical researchers.

In recent interviews McCullough summarises studies where the mRNA and spike protein have been shown to be present in various human biological systems well after the date of ‘vaccination’, and has been confirmed to be present in the breast milk of nursing mothers, raising the spectre of human to human transferrence of the Messenger RNA, a process called ‘shedding’.

Pfizer and government-funded scientists both in New Zealand and abroad reassured citizens at the beginning of the roll-outs that the spike protein would remain localised at the site of vaccination (the upper arm deltoid muscle), and would exit the body within hours of it. Multiple studies now show this to be disinformation.

Authors of the studies conclude that if present in breast milk, it is likely to be present in other bodily fluids, such as blood and genital secretions.

A written summary of the studies can also be found on McCullough’s ‘Courageous Discourse’ Substack.

‘Shedding’ has been theorised about since the beginning of the mRNA roll-outs, but was dismissed as ‘conspiracy theory’ by Pfizer and government-funded scientists.

Read the rest

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Nurses for Freedom NZ year-end message

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Thank you for supporting Nurses for Freedom NZ during 2022; we appreciate each and everyone of you!  Thank you especially to all those who have supported us financially, with kind words and prayers.

I thought I would take this opportunity to give you a brief update on the current stage of play before we take a break over the holidays.

As you are aware, a year ago, over 1500 staff from public health services were terminated for refusing to take the Covid 19 “vaccine”. According to official information requests (OIR) 621 of these were nurses.  Sadly, this number does not include those nurses who left before they were pushed, Lead Maternity Carers, Carer’s/Support workers and staff working in non–DHB settings (Non-DHB settings are not subject to OIR). It is therefore impossible to calculate the actual number of nurses/carers/LMC affected, but considering the current state of our public health system and the existing 4000-5000 deficit in the nursing workforce, even the loss of 50 experienced Kiwi nurses is enough to make a difference. 

Interestingly,  more recent OIR’s to Te Whatu Ora indicate the number of nurses ‘terminated’ to be less than those in the initial OIR. We are aware that booster requirements and vaccine injuries have forced more nurses out of work so are left with no option but to question the reliability of data we receive. 

We currently have over 200 nurses registered with our NFFNZ Nurses Collective and many more who are part of our wider organisation of over 1200.  Many of these have chosen to leave nursing or pursue other modalities which indeed is a sad loss to our health system which is currently in crisis. 

We are also proud to represent other clinicians who benefit from the support we offer whether 1:1 or as part of our Regional Co-ordinator network. If you are a clinician and looking to connect, please get in touch.

As most of you are aware, this year has been hard. There have been highs and lows. Sometimes it feels we are close to breaking through, other times it feels like we are in the midst of a never-ending nightmare.  I would however like to end the year on some of the positive highlights that have presented themselves:

1. Nurses for Freedom NZ teams have established themselves in 14 towns around NZ; feedback indicates this contact and our Telegram support have been lifesavers for many nurses.  Our objective to ensure registered nurses are allowed to work in all settings remains clear and we have not deviated from this.

2. NFFNZ has lobbied Members of Parliament, Te Whatu Ora, Nursing Unions and The Government and has been reported on by several media outlets and other professional nursing organisations; positive or negative, we are now known!

3. Our Nurses Hui in November was a great success; thanks to the WTF team (Wellington) plus guest speakers Dr Rene de Monchy, Linda Wharton and Dr Matt Shelton we are looking forward to repeating this event. 

4. NFFNZ has plans for 2023 which we cannot reveal as yet however, these plans will ensure our longevity and increase our capacity to be included in making decisions relating to healthcare design in New Zealand. We are also looking into how our teams can support deteriorating mental health within our wider community as a means of giving back. 

5. Many of our nurses have returned to work in the aged care sector. Once thought to be the most vulnerable cohort by those who pursue the covid 19 narrative, our nurses are a welcome addition to this understaffed speciality. 

6. Despite the ongoing rhetoric and negativity around us, we are still here. We are still standing firm and on the right side of truth. As more and more high-quality, peer-reviewed research is made available we wait for that moment of clarity by the NZ government that brings an acknowledgment for the mistakes they have made over the past two years.  We hope to see the new Te Whatu Ora Covid 19 policy reflect this and allow unvaccinated healthcare workers back to work in all settings.

This holiday season we send love and blessings to you and your whanau and hope and pray for reconciliation in 2023.

Kind regards

Deborah

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the Jupiter loo in Marae Lane at dusk

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

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a new euphemism

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

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Posted by Waikanae watchers | Filed under Uncategorized

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for some light relief: some of Joe’s many fabrications

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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— Drunk driver killed his wife & daughter
— Pinned medal on a Navy captain who was just a kid
— No knowledge of Hunter's foreign business dealings
— Turned down offer from the Naval Academy
— His uncle won a Purple Heart
— His helicopter in Afghanistan “forced down”

— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) December 22, 2022
https://twitter.com/tomselliott/status/1606321504165285888?s=20&t=y0x5O4nHaFmtzJ5YUBtf4g

BIDEN: "I've been in and out, not as obviously a combatant, but in and out of Afghanistan, Iraq, and those areas 38, 39 times."

That's a flat-out lie. The correct number is 21. pic.twitter.com/mVDbfeMbAL

— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) December 16, 2022
https://twitter.com/RNCResearch/status/1603959244578951168?s=20&t=KouZWXF7ROs33S6fnYy6pg

Giacoppa is apparently the Italianized version of Jill Biden's maiden name lol

— Greg Price (@greg_price11) December 16, 2022

He’s been a truck driver, a lumber yard worker, a university professor, a gang busting lifeguard, a rider of Amtrak trains, a civil rights protester, and he even got arrested trying to bust Nelson Mandela out of prison once. None of these things are real.

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satire: Researching a legendary beast

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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By Bruce Moon

Thoughtful readers will be delighted, I am sure, to know that after many months of arduous preparation, I am about to submit to the Marsden Fund my application for $720,000 for a study entitled “The Social, Environmental and Sexual Impact of the Unicorn in the Southern Hemisphere.”  This will be, I am sure, ground-breaking research in a wholly new field and I am confident that its impact will be dramatic.  Moreover, I am excited to announce that I have the full backing of Father Christmas who is considering unicorns as successors to his ageing team of reindeer.

Appropriate research?

There will inevitably be those dismal characters, as in any field of human endeavour, who suggest that that is a considerable sum and who ask why I consider it appropriate.  My answer is of course, that grants from the Marsden are subject to the highest scrutiny and applications subjected to intense competition from those so-called scientists who, reactionary though it may be, continue to follow the decadent, racist, colonialist practices of so-called “Western” science.

If therefore I, being pale, male and stale, receive a grant of just one half of that for which I have nominally applied – and which I am confident will be awarded to me – then that, just $360,000 I reflect, is exactly the same amount as was awarded recently to a bright young part-Maori lady for a similar study of taniwhas.

Tapping into a wide range of sources

I shall of course, be observing the well-established practices of matauranga maori in this exciting study, though stark realism compels me to admit that I shall be utilising some, inevitably offensive, European cultural practices such as reading and writing, and photography. Reluctant though I am to admit it, I will be using a computer to record, retrieve and analyse what I am sure will, in due course, amount to a massive amount of exciting information to Father Christmas, scientists and members of the lay community alike.

No data? I will find it!

Equally again, there will be dismal and negative characters who point out that no such data exist at this time.  The answer, almost too trivial to mention, is that hitherto, nobody, simply nobody of whom I am aware, has thought to observe and record any.  That is of course a glaring vacuum in scientific knowledge which is a major goal of my project to remedy. 

And then I note that such people overlook the significant amount of folklore passed down by word of mouth for many generations and scrupulously recorded by the celebrated Waitangi Tribunal.  This will surely be a rich source of supplementary information of the highest quality.

Unicorns of many sexes

I am particularly interested in the role of the unicorn’s horn in sexual foreplay and indeed in subsequent activities. Is this role any different when these procedures are being undertaken between a pair of unicorns of the same sex or between a pair of two different sexes or when more than two participate?  I mention that one of the objectives of this research is to establish beyond reasonable doubt just how many sexes exist among unicorns and whether this varies between sub-species.  Compatibility will, of course, be of prime importance to Father Christmas should he proceed to select a team.

Great interest from part-Maori guaranteed

All in all, I am sure that there will be widespread interest in progress reports on this ground-breaking project, particularly amongst the great, rich panjandrums of our part-maori tribes who will in all fairness be able to recognize on national news media in ‘te reo’ (today’s dialect of their own language) which is of course particularly well-suited to scientific discourse, just what an important contribution prehistoric maori practices have to play in our dear little country of “aotearoa” (small ‘a’ for a small country) today!

Bruce Moon  (Irish, Scots, Cornish, English, Jèrriais, Guernesias, and since 1868, New Zealander), Nelson

Postscript:  I can well imagine the acute interest this prestigious project will arouse amongst the Vice-Chancellors of all New Zealand universities and almost inevitably, how there will be intense competition among them to offer facilities, accommodation and auxiliary services to assist in its accomplishment.  There will be little else in any of them today in any way comparable. B

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‘The EU is one of the most corrupt institutions’

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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The majority of Brits who voted in the 2016 referendum to leave it thought so, too. For other reasons given at the time, see this post

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A tribute to Dr Malcolm Dyer

28 Wednesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Malcolm was one of those people who always gave of his best and went the extra mile. Fellow multi-sporter 

The passing of a legend

By Roger Childs

One of the measures which indicates the esteem in which someone is held, is the number of people who attend their funeral. More than 450 mourners were at the funeral of Malcolm Wilson Dyer – father of four, highly respected local doctor, talented multi-sport athlete and distinguished Kapiti citizen. 

Malcolm was born in Hartlepool in the English county of Durham. His father was Scottish and his mother Irish. He always appreciated his varied British Isles heritage; admired Irish culture and proudly wore the Wilson tartan. 

He was a product of the world-renowned Scottish medical education system and it was in Scotland that he married Sarah, who was also a doctor – a PhD from Cambridge. All the Dyer children had biblical names, which reflected the family’s strong commitment to Christianity. 

Malcolm was involved in a range of sports from an early age including sailing, and one of the highlights of the funeral was the video from a Scottish woman who knew Malcolm in earlier times. She spoke of Malcom being keen to take her sailing on the Tay Esturary. She remarked in a broad Scottish accent that she “probably spent more time in the Tay Estuary than in Malcolm’s boat!” 

Making an impact in Kapiti 

The family migrated to New Zealand and eventually settled in Raumati. Malcolm was a key figure at the Coastal Medical Rooms where he was highly respected by his patients. As well as being a general practitioner, Malcolm was also a mentor and appraiser of other doctors in the Kapiti area. His medical knowledge was extensive and he worked hard to keep up with the latest research. He was always happy to answer the questions of fellow athletes and at training season had a medical kit handy if assistance was required.

He was an active member of the Kapiti Running and Tri Club. He won a number of club trophies and served on the committee for many years. As a runner and multi-sporter, he was a fierce competitor and took part in many events around the North Island including at Waikanae, Waitarere and Taupo. Late in 2022, before he succumbed to cancer in early December, he took part in the Horowhenua / Kapiti Big Bang Race with his friend Bruce Candy. 

Malcolm also belonged to the men’s discussion group at the Paraparaumu Impact Church, and enjoyed a good debate.

The Kapiti community has lost one of its great citizens – family man, dedicated Christian, respected medical practitioner and talented athlete. Above all Malcolm Dyer was humble, friendly, supportive and concerned for his fellow man and women. He packed a huge amount into his 52 years and has unquestionably left the world a better place.

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experiencing the ‘Ewy’ Extention to Otaki

27 Tuesday Dec 2022

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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This was opened to the public last Friday 23rd after the VIP ceremony on Wednesday 21st, but your intrepid editors left it until today to give it a try-out.

By Roger Childs

We were due to drive north to New Plymouth for Christmas last Thursday and we thought we would be among the early riders on the new Peka Peka — Otaki expressway. There was an opening ceremony on the Wednesday – somewhat less expensive than for the inauguration of Transmission Gully. There was also a less distinguished cast. Mayor Janet Holborow was there, Deputy Minister of Transport Kevin McAnulty and a few others including the MP for Mana. Where was the MP for Otaki? It was obviously not important enough for the PM or the Minister of Transport. Perhaps that was because the highway was one of the last National government’s “Roads of National Significance”.

Just our luck

The transit authority had been advertising in the papers about the “on’s and off’s” of the new expressway including a one full page sales pitch. The Kapiti Observer front page blared “Expressway Open for Xmas.” However, NZ Transport Agency had talked about the Transmission Gully motorway being open by Christmas 2021 but, as it we all know, it didn’t happen. 

As it turned out last Thursday was a last-minute tidy-up time and the Friday was the actual opening day. 

Coming home on Boxing Day we did get to drive on it. It’s dark grey, smooth and a very pleasant ride. On the banks alongside the expressway, close to Otaki, the trees, shrubs and flaxes had been planted early during the construction, and are now maturing fast. 

Enjoyment and time saving

If you haven’t had your first ride on the new expressway you have a treat in store. In the future, people travelling to the Hawke’s Bay, Manawatu, Wanganui, Taranaki, Taupo and places further north will save at least 10 minutes.

by Geoffrey and Eva Churchman

Unlike the new highways from Tawa to PekaPeka, first the ‘Mwy’ and then the ‘Ewy’ at McKay’s Crossing, the new extension isn’t a whole new route and the old SH1 (and the railway) is always in sight, except when passing Otaki township. You get to see the Otaki station building and yard on the west side, which you didn’t on the old SH1 and the landscape at the station and just north of it has completely changed from what it used to be.

Except at the north and south ends, the new road is pretty straight and also pretty flat. For visitors from the south to Otaki township as well as, of course, the beach and the Otaki Forks, the off-ramp to use is the Otaki Gorge Road, which now has a new bridge over the ‘Ewy’. There is also a southbound on-ramp here for motorists from these places.

Motorists from the north wanting to visit these places have an off-ramp provided for them just north of the Otaki town. Those wanting to visit Te Horo from the north should take this off-ramp too, and then drive along the old main road. Coming from the south the Otaki Gorge Road off-ramp is the only choice, unless they want to take the Waikanae off-ramp at Te Moana Road and then drive east along it to the old main road, where they turn north again.

Because of the predominate straightness and flatness, it’s a pleasant albeit unspectacular experience. However at holdiday times like the present the merger of two lanes into one north of the Otaki town is a bottleneck: we got as far as the Otaki Gorge Road bridge before slowing to a crawl.

There is evidence of new planting including a lot of flax in some parts and what looks like a recently created pond between the Ewy and the railway near the PekaPeka end.

There are a couple of small decorative structures on the east side and also some decoration on the overbridges visible to both north and southbound drivers; although these only extend across two lanes, and not the whole width of the bridges, which looks a little cheap — if they were added at all, why not extend them the whole way?

With the opening of the extension, those who want to by-pass every Kapiti Coast township at 100 km/h can now do so. The new ‘Ewy’ ends at the northern boundary of the KCDC territory.

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cute cottage on Tutere Street

27 Tuesday Dec 2022

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