Below is what I wrote on the day of my first forced jab, I wrote it as soon as I got home.
Sad to say that under duress I got the jab in order to keep my job that I love and couldn’t imagine working elsewhere. I need this job to support my whānau, pay mortgage, insurance food etc.
I had an interesting jab experience. I made a cardboard sign saying…….I am being forced under duress to get an experimental drug/vaccine by Jacinda. I am an ece teacher and i need this job to support my whānau.
As soon as we got to the jab centre, we got a frosty reception. I brought a support person with me who is pro choice for the jab.
When i was at the computer/man getting questioned, my support person asked questions they didnt like. She was filming.
I asked if i had to sign anything, and they said verbal consent needed only. When he asked me if I was giving verbal consent, I said under duress I give consent.
I demanded the written consent form. When I signed it, I signed Under duress before my name.
By this time they had assigned a Māori warden/security guard to follow us. When we moved to the area to be jabbed we were rudely told to stop filming. So we did.
I then politely asked my jabber, what her qualifications were, and would she aspirate the needle. Meanwhile the Māori warden was getting more agitated and rude. No they do not aspirate. I ask why she give reply.
I was asked again if i give consent, I said under duress yes.
Then we went to the observation bay for 15 minutes, one nurse observing 25 people.
We went outside after observation was over, and began filming about the experience, filmed for about, a minute, before being rudely asked to move on, we filmed for about one more minute before the Māori warden came along and told us rudely and aggressively to stop filming, and that she would call the police.
We stopped filming, and slowly walked to my support persons car in the disabled carpark right outside jab centre. (My support person had a disability card parking pass. We hug goodbye, as the Māori warden is yelling at us, and dialing the police on her phone.
My support person knows her rights and their was no sign saying No Filming, so she said “nah I’m not leaving.”. She told me to leave.
The police came, and my support person was treated nicely, she knew her rights, the Māori warden got a warning from the police.
So now I am home, had some vitamin C, D, garlic, n.a.c. zinc, and homeopathic snake venom stuff, and help from mother nature’s green herb.
If i knew how to upload my video or photo of my sign i would.
Anyway for anyone else out there in the same forced situation as me, please stay strong and Hold the Line.
Arohatinonui.
4.41pm noticing little jumps in my heart every now and again, slight headache so will take some panadol now.