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Biker Rico 💎

@BikerRick3

Libertarian. Relax...X is just mental backyard dirty mattress wrestling. I post it long before CBC does, for free. Clubhouse Rules. Too old for this shh...

Katılım Ağustos 2022
7.5K Takip Edilen5.9K Takipçiler
Regina Watteel
Regina Watteel@ReginaWatteel·
If no duty of care then F-off and leave us alone. Don't tell us what to do or force drugs on us. Government should provide clear data, voluntary options, and get out of the way—especially when they claim no duty for harms from their guidance and policies.
The Canadian Independent@canindependent

BREAKING: Ontario Court of Appeal Dismisses Lawsuit Over Teen Sean Hartman’s Death Following COVID-19 Vaccination. In a significant decision released today, the Hartman v. Canada (Attorney General) ruling was upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal, dismissing a lawsuit brought against the federal government over the death of a teenage boy following a COVID-19 vaccination. The court found that the claim had no reasonable prospect of success and agreed with a lower court decision to strike it in its entirety. The case was brought by Daniel Hartman, whose 17-year-old son, Sean Hartman, died in September 2021. Sean, who had been described as previously healthy, was found dead beside his bed 33 days after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. Following the vaccination, he had been taken to hospital due to symptoms his father believes were related to the vaccine. Sean’s father, Dan Hartman, says his son chose to get vaccinated so he could continue playing hockey, as vaccination was required for participation in many sports and activities at the time. Hartman’s lawsuit alleged that federal officials, including the Minister of Health, were negligent in approving, promoting, and monitoring the vaccine, and that they acted with reckless indifference or wilful blindness to potential risks. The Court of Appeal acknowledged the devastating nature of Sean Hartman’s death, describing it as a tragic loss for his family and community. However, the judges concluded that the legal claims could not succeed. Central to the ruling was the finding that the federal government does not owe a private duty of care to individual members of the public when making broad public health decisions during a pandemic. Instead, such decisions are made in the interest of the population as a whole, often requiring difficult trade-offs that may carry risks for some individuals. The court also determined that the claim failed to establish the necessary elements for misfeasance in public office. Specifically, there were no material facts showing that government officials acted in bad faith or knowingly engaged in unlawful conduct that would likely cause harm to Sean Hartman. The judges noted that the clinical trial data referenced in the lawsuit supported the conclusion that the vaccine was highly effective, undermining the argument that officials knowingly promoted a harmful or ineffective product. In addition, the court found that the public statements cited in the claim were directed broadly at Canadians and did not create a specific relationship or obligation toward Sean Hartman as an individual. As a result, there was no legal basis to establish the proximity or duty of care required for a negligence claim. Shockingly, the court also claimed that allowing Hartman’s case to proceed could have broader consequences, including discouraging governments from making urgent public health decisions during emergencies due to fear of legal liability. The Court of Appeal further upheld the lower court’s decision to deny leave to amend the claim, finding that the proposed changes would not have addressed the fundamental legal deficiencies. The judges emphasized that lawsuits must be based on clearly pleaded facts, not on the possibility that supporting evidence might emerge later. Ultimately, the court concluded that while the circumstances surrounding Sean Hartman’s death are deeply tragic, the law does not support holding the federal government liable under the claims presented. The appeal was dismissed, bringing the case to a close, with no costs awarded to either side. The Canadian Independent spoke with Dan Hartman by phone this evening. He said he is “seriously considering” taking the case to the Supreme Court and that he and his legal team will evaluate their next steps over the coming week. Hartman noted that the cost of taking the case to the Supreme Court could exceed $20,000. He added that he does not want to ask those who have already donated to his cause to contribute further but said, “What other option do I have?” Dan believes the courts are not willing to find the government liable or hold it accountable, as doing so would amount to an admission of wrongdoing. He also argues that such a finding would make his larger lawsuit against Pfizer significantly easier to pursue. If you want to donate to Dan’s legal fund, you can do so at the link in the comments section.

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Jim McMurtry
Jim McMurtry@JimMcMurtry01·
I told the truth about Kamloops and can no longer even enter a school without the police being called—while the superintendent who put out 215 chairs to traumatize students makes $527,363.
Jim McMurtry@JimMcMurtry01

"The 215 lost children have become phantom faces at the window and phantom shadows on the floor in schools across Canada. The fact they never existed seems lost in the eulogies." newwesttimes.com/opinion/jim-mc… via @NewWestTimes

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Biker Rico 💎
Biker Rico 💎@BikerRick3·
Our "leader" was publically asking liberal hordes, lynch mob style, if unvaxx'd people were to be "tolerated" Next level up. The propaganda from the federal and provincial gubberments were overreach and exaggeration.
The Canadian Independent@canindependent

BREAKING: Ontario Court of Appeal Dismisses Lawsuit Over Teen Sean Hartman’s Death Following COVID-19 Vaccination. In a significant decision released today, the Hartman v. Canada (Attorney General) ruling was upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal, dismissing a lawsuit brought against the federal government over the death of a teenage boy following a COVID-19 vaccination. The court found that the claim had no reasonable prospect of success and agreed with a lower court decision to strike it in its entirety. The case was brought by Daniel Hartman, whose 17-year-old son, Sean Hartman, died in September 2021. Sean, who had been described as previously healthy, was found dead beside his bed 33 days after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. Following the vaccination, he had been taken to hospital due to symptoms his father believes were related to the vaccine. Sean’s father, Dan Hartman, says his son chose to get vaccinated so he could continue playing hockey, as vaccination was required for participation in many sports and activities at the time. Hartman’s lawsuit alleged that federal officials, including the Minister of Health, were negligent in approving, promoting, and monitoring the vaccine, and that they acted with reckless indifference or wilful blindness to potential risks. The Court of Appeal acknowledged the devastating nature of Sean Hartman’s death, describing it as a tragic loss for his family and community. However, the judges concluded that the legal claims could not succeed. Central to the ruling was the finding that the federal government does not owe a private duty of care to individual members of the public when making broad public health decisions during a pandemic. Instead, such decisions are made in the interest of the population as a whole, often requiring difficult trade-offs that may carry risks for some individuals. The court also determined that the claim failed to establish the necessary elements for misfeasance in public office. Specifically, there were no material facts showing that government officials acted in bad faith or knowingly engaged in unlawful conduct that would likely cause harm to Sean Hartman. The judges noted that the clinical trial data referenced in the lawsuit supported the conclusion that the vaccine was highly effective, undermining the argument that officials knowingly promoted a harmful or ineffective product. In addition, the court found that the public statements cited in the claim were directed broadly at Canadians and did not create a specific relationship or obligation toward Sean Hartman as an individual. As a result, there was no legal basis to establish the proximity or duty of care required for a negligence claim. Shockingly, the court also claimed that allowing Hartman’s case to proceed could have broader consequences, including discouraging governments from making urgent public health decisions during emergencies due to fear of legal liability. The Court of Appeal further upheld the lower court’s decision to deny leave to amend the claim, finding that the proposed changes would not have addressed the fundamental legal deficiencies. The judges emphasized that lawsuits must be based on clearly pleaded facts, not on the possibility that supporting evidence might emerge later. Ultimately, the court concluded that while the circumstances surrounding Sean Hartman’s death are deeply tragic, the law does not support holding the federal government liable under the claims presented. The appeal was dismissed, bringing the case to a close, with no costs awarded to either side. The Canadian Independent spoke with Dan Hartman by phone this evening. He said he is “seriously considering” taking the case to the Supreme Court and that he and his legal team will evaluate their next steps over the coming week. Hartman noted that the cost of taking the case to the Supreme Court could exceed $20,000. He added that he does not want to ask those who have already donated to his cause to contribute further but said, “What other option do I have?” Dan believes the courts are not willing to find the government liable or hold it accountable, as doing so would amount to an admission of wrongdoing. He also argues that such a finding would make his larger lawsuit against Pfizer significantly easier to pursue. If you want to donate to Dan’s legal fund, you can do so at the link in the comments section.

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George Sawision ME
George Sawision ME@GSawision·
@randyhillier @FredFredderson1 This is a big ruling and everybody should help Dan Hartman appeal to the supreme Court. This is the last stand for freedom and justice! This is not a parody,this is real
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Lion Advocacy
Lion Advocacy@LionAdvocacy·
@SeanFraserMP Put your money where your mouth is. Criminalize Charter violations where harm ensues. No immunity for government officials. Aggravating factors in sentencing where gov was prior advised by their lawyers that Act or conduct would violate the Charter. Do it.
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Sean Fraser
Sean Fraser@SeanFraserMP·
The Canadian Charter of Rights & Freedoms turns 44 today! 🇨🇦 It protects the essential rights that make our society free & democratic. At a time when these values are under threat worldwide, Canada will stand up to protect the Charter & the rights it guarantees for everyone. ⚖️
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Rational Posts™
Rational Posts™@rationalposts·
@SeanFraserMP Only 8 million Canadians who didn't take the Covid shots know. But we remember, Sean. We remember. Only your heavily jabbed based doesn't.
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The Buck You Will
The Buck You Will@TheBuckYouWill·
@SeanFraserMP Serious question... ...have you or anyone in your government actually ever read it? Because I don't think you have.
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Insane Reality Leaks
Insane Reality Leaks@InsaneReality·
The scale of the 2011 Japan tsunami is hard to comprehend
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Jon Fraser
Jon Fraser@JonFraserTF·
I lost my godfather today. He was 84 and had been suffering terribly from a number of serious health issues. He was an important part of my life from my earliest memory and I'm truly heartbroken. But then I thought of how Giovanni would have swore at me in Italian and told me not to mope. So I choose to think about the positive. Giovanni came to Canada from Italy 63 years ago with one suitcase and $50. He knew nobody, but he knew there was a thriving Italian community in Windsor, so he headed there. He was working within 2 days and never stopped for the rest of his life. He sent for his brother and sponsored him, back when sponsorship meant commitment and responsibility. They both learned English quickly and then went back to Italy on vacation. They met two sisters and soon after they married them, and sponsored them back to Canada. Then they sponsored additional siblings of both husbands and wives - 8 people in total. All of them worked hard, built businesses and contributed to the community. They were all the epitomy of Canada's once great immigration system and Giovanni was their pioneer. Rest in peace Papa Giovanni.
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Milk Road AI
Milk Road AI@MilkRoadAI·
Andrej Karpathy just made one of the most interesting arguments about AI model design that most people are completely missing. His take is that frontier AI models are not too big because the technology is complex and too big because the training data is garbage. When you or I think of the internet, we picture Wall Street Journal articles, Wikipedia entries, serious writing. That is not what a pretraining dataset looks like. When researchers at frontier labs look at random documents from the actual training corpus, it is stock ticker symbols, broken HTML, spam, gibberish. One estimate puts Llama 3's information compression at just 0.07 bits per token meaning the model has only a hazy recollection of most of what it trained on. So we build trillion parameter models not because we need a trillion parameter brain but because we need a trillion-parameter compression engine to squeeze some intelligence out of a firehose of noise. Most of those parameters are doing memory work, not cognitive work. Karpathy's prediction is separate the two entirely. Build a cognitive core, a model that contains only the algorithms for reasoning and problem-solving, stripped of encyclopedic memorization and pair it with external memory that it can query when it needs facts. He thinks a cognitive core trained on high-quality data could hit genuine intelligence at around one billion parameters. For reference, today's flagship models run between 200 billion and 1.8 trillion parameters with most of that weight dedicated to remembering the internet's slop. The trend is already moving his direction. GPT-4o operates at roughly 200 billion parameters and outperforms the original 1.8 trillion-parameter GPT-4. Inference costs for GPT-3.5-level performance dropped 280-fold between 2022 and 2024 driven almost entirely by smaller, cleaner, better-architected models. The real bottleneck in AI right now is not compute but rather data quality.
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