Why doesn’t Amnesty International care that I’m a victim of oppressive pandemic policies if I’m not in Russia or China?
By: Rachel Marsden
Finally, the cavalry has arrived… or has it? Amnesty has spoken in support of 
liberty amid sanitary authoritarianism – but it’s Moscow and Beijing in the 
firing line, and there’s no recognition of what’s going on in the West.
Imagine my joy and relief when learning that Amnesty International, a global 
reference for the defense of human rights, had finally published a report about 
the trampling of pandemic liberties after 19 months of oppression, including 
lockdowns, curfews, identity tracking, and everyday violations of the right of 
movement, work, and assembly – all under the questionable guise of sanitary 
protectionism.
Finally, I thought, this powerful NGO was riding to the rescue of the unjabbed 
Western underclass: some of whom were on the frontline of this fiasco early on, 
while the Zoom class hung out at home. Whose work was then considered 
“essential” in order to inform, to heal, to feed, or to transport. Who caught 
Covid at the time, and have now recovered with natural immunity that governments 
refuse to recognize beyond a ludicrous six months – flying in the face of 
everything the medical establishment has known about the persistence of natural 
immunity. Or who maybe didn’t catch it at all. But who are now considered 
societal pariahs for having made a personal choice, in consultation with their 
doctors, to forego the jab – and are excluded from access to much of civil 
society via a new system of government-mandated QR codes tied to our identities 
that can only be validated or renewed via vaccination or (in the case of some 
countries) repeated nose-swab tests. 
Or at the very least, I thought there’d be an impassioned railing against the 
very notion of segregating society through deployment of government-imposed 
identity tools, or making everyone – the jabbed, the unjabbed, and the currently 
jabbed future unjabbed – carry this previously private and potentially 
exploitable information with them just to access banal daily activities.
Except that Amnesty’s new report, “Silenced and Misinformed: Freedom of 
Expression in Danger During Covid-19”, doesn’t address any of this existential 
repression that citizens of Western so-called democracies are experiencing on a 
daily basis. Instead, it “reveals how governments’ and authorities’ reliance on 
censorship and punishment throughout the crisis has reduced the quality of 
information reaching people”, according to Amnesty’s own synopsis. 
Ummm, so maybe my expectations were too high? If Amnesty was going to call out 
the non-stop manipulation and suppression of data and information by our 
“democratic” governments – everything from underplaying the real worth of 
naturally acquired immunity from Covid to the true value of using identity- and 
movement-control mechanisms in order to coerce people to get jabbed with a 
treatment that’s now proven to wear off, under the guise of protecting people 
from a virus that kills relatively few people across the demographic spectrum, 
by controlling select everyday locations that aren’t known for particularly high 
risk of contamination – then that would at least be a contribution (however 
meager) to our fight for freedom of expression, right? 
Or at least if Amnesty tackled the censorship by social media companies like 
Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn – which won’t even permit free debate on their 
platforms about Covid – that would at least be… something. My last column for RT, 
for example, wouldn’t even unroll when I tried to post it on LinkedIn, 
presumably because the keywords “Covid” and “Gestapo” appeared in the URL of a 
piece about how I quit my swim-team over jab-status harassment. LOL-dot-com. 
But seriously, Amnesty apparently doesn’t seem to care much about infringement 
of my freedom of expression by Western-based Big Tech, either. Instead, in this 
time of unprecedented stomping of basic freedoms and intrusion into the intimate 
medical aspects of people’s private lives, Amnesty would like the world to know: 
“The government of China has a long history of controlling freedom of 
expression.” The NGO proceeds to explain how those who speak out against the 
conventional Chinese government narrative are punished and accused of 
“fabricating and deliberately disseminating false and harmful information.”
Oh gee, why does that sound sooo familiar? And yet I’ve never been to China. 
 Amnesty also sounds a warning about “numerous other countries” that 
“have put in place oppressive laws, restricting the right to freedom of 
expression and silencing critics under the guise or in the context of the 
pandemic, including Tanzania, Russia and Nicaragua.”
Uh, guys, I think you spelled “France”, “Canada”, and “America” wrong. 
“In April 2020, Russia expanded its existing anti-’fake news’ legislation and 
introduced criminal penalties for ‘public dissemination of knowingly false 
information’ in the context of emergencies,” Amnesty explains. Oh man, can we 
get some of that anti-fake news legislation to use against our own Western 
government propaganda machines, please? 
“Governments must urgently lift such restrictions and guarantee the free flow of 
information to protect the public’s right to health,” demands Amnesty’s senior 
director for research advocacy and policy, Rajat Khosla. That sounds like a good 
idea. And an even better idea would have been for the organization that prides 
itself on fighting for the liberation of political prisoners of conscience 
around the world to take a break from its predictable ragging on Russia and 
China and have the courage to dig its big, swinging principles out from the 
purse of whomever or whatever permits its livelihood to defend those of us who 
experience oppression every day here in the Western world amid this never-ending 
sanitary psychosis. *
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN