My own country of Canada just kicked me out because my Covid immunity was acquired naturally and not from a vaccine
By: Rachel Marsden
I went home to visit my mother. Canada tried to force me into a Covid detention facility threatening fines and police action as they don’t recognize my natural immunity. I had no choice but to immediately fly back to Europe.
At the time of writing, I’m at an altitude of exactly 11,277m, 5,230km away from
Vancouver, Canada, and 3,159km from my stopover in Munich, Germany, en route
back to Paris, France. Where I really should be is relaxing on the backyard
patio or in the jacuzzi at my home near Vancouver with a cold drink on a hot
summer day. Instead, I’m on a Lufthansa flight heading back to Paris – just a
few hours after arriving across the ocean on a 10-hour flight – because my own
country’s officials kicked me out. All because I committed the apparent
violation of trying to re-enter my own country with proof of naturally acquired
Covid-19 antibodies made by my own immune system post-recovery rather than those
generated by the manmade Covid-19 vaccine about which much is still to be
learned.
Daily life for a Covid-19 survivor with natural immunity from the disease is not
for the faint of heart. As someone with a high level of laboratory tested
antibodies whose levels have yet to drop even after several months post-illness,
my doctor has advised against vaccination. Much is obviously still to be learned
about the Covid jabs, still in stage 3 of clinical trials and considered
experimental by health authorities – particularly with reports abounding of
breakthrough cases of vaccinated people catching and spreading Covid.
To protect and preserve my acquired immunity by opting out of vaccination
that risks interfering with it or causing a risk to my health, France now
requires me to succumb to nasal swab antigen tests every 48 hours if I wish to
continue accessing everyday venues like public transit, gyms, restaurants, some
shopping malls, and bars. But it’s a price that I’m willing to pay for my
health.
And now I’m paying another price for choosing to protect my own health. I’ve
found myself threatened with internment by the Canadian government – something
that not even terror suspects or illegal immigrants are subjected to without at
least a hearing.
When I attempted to return home from Paris to Vancouver to visit my elderly
mother for the first time in a year, I was treated worse than a criminal. I
arrived at the airport with a negative PCR test, two positive Covid antibody
tests from March and July proving that I still had significant Covid antibodies
post-recovery, and a ‘covid immunity certificate’ written and signed by my
French doctor to confirm this fact.
The Canadian border officer refused to accept the antibody laboratory test
results as proof that I had recovered and was immune from Covid. He wanted a PCR
test less than three months ago, after which everyone is expected to take the
vaccine. (I didn’t even know that I had Covid until I took a serology antibody
test weeks later.) Nor did the officer show any consideration for the negative
PCR test taken hours at departure, or for the various other antigen tests – all
negative – taken every 48 hours for the prior 10 days. Instead, he ordered me to
sign up for a 3-day stay at a government internment facility (to then be
followed by a mandatory and monitored 14-day home isolation).
I was then referred to a federal health officer who asked if I had signed up and
paid (up to $2,000) for the 3-day government internment. I said no. She said
that I had no choice except with respect to which government-contracted facility
I’d like to be detained in at my own expense. I asked, “What if I just walk
out?” She gestured to the RCMP officer behind her and said that leaving would
result in a fine of nearly $6,000. I asked, “Then what if I just stay here in
the airport and book a flight back to Paris and cancel my entire visit back home
to Canada?” She replied that it would be fine. So, I booked a flight back on my
phone at a cost of just over $1,500 – still cheaper than the government
internment. She took down my return flight number, wrote me up a federal ‘health
order’ that I had to sign, acknowledging that I was to leave Canada on that
flight or face criminal penalties up to and including imprisonment. She
helpfully added that I could still be fined for my ignorance, but they’d
graciously let me off with a warning this time. What a benevolent budding
authoritarian regime.
Let’s be clear: The Canadian government, by behaving in this manner, is
routinely criminalizing those with Covid antibodies that are not derived from a
manufactured experimental vaccine.
Just a few hours later, I am now on that flight back to Paris. My mother
broke down in tears waiting for me on the other side of the arrivals hall as her
daughter was expelled from her own country – something that Canada doesn’t even
do with terror suspects without some kind of due process.
The next step for myself and others subjected to this discrimination should be a
court challenge to the federal government’s actions. Government-ordered
internment facilities for immune Covid survivors under threat of incarceration
have no place in any democracy.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN