Kyle Kemper 💫

20.1K posts

Kyle Kemper 💫 banner
Kyle Kemper 💫

Kyle Kemper 💫

@kylekemper

The golden age is dawning 👉 @wtfdial | StableFi

Florida, USA Katılım Mayıs 2008
5.4K Takip Edilen46.2K Takipçiler
Patriot Token
Patriot Token@Patriot_Erc20·
The PATRIOT Statue of @realDonaldTrump was successfully installed last night at Trump National Doral in preparation for the PGA’s Cadillac Championship. We’ve heard the PGA players will arrive soon to start practicing!!! We couldn’t contain this beast it’s already been published all over TikTok. Congratulations PATRIOTS! More news coming soon!!! We hope you love it as much as our community does @realDonaldTrump!!!
English
35
65
141
8.9K
Digital EU 🇪🇺
Digital EU 🇪🇺@DigitalEU·
💊 Emojis used as coded language to promote illegal activities online? Some platforms are now detecting emojis used as code for drug sales. This is one of the key findings of the first EU-wide report on systemic online risks. Dive in → link.europa.eu/CQhKGc #DSAForReal
Digital EU 🇪🇺 tweet media
English
1.6K
105
521
3.4M
The Bitcoin Historian
The Bitcoin Historian@pete_rizzo_·
JUST IN: MICHAEL SAYLOR'S STRATEGY IS NOW OFFICIALLY ON PACE TO BUY OVER 450,000 #BITCOIN THIS YEAR HE'S BOUGHT 140,000 BTC IN JUST 4 MONTHS HE WILL OWN 1,000,000 BTC COMING THIS YEAR 🚀
English
52
193
1.4K
54.1K
Nancee Droo
Nancee Droo@NanceeDroo·
@DNSWilson @kylekemper I wonder how many NHL players actually received the poison, er, shot to be able to play hockey…. I mean, a nurse in Alberta was released from her AHS-funded job because she got caught saving lives, er, inputting false info into patient records. Her case is on the internet.
English
1
0
2
63
Kyle Kemper 💫 retweetledi
Don Wilson, LLB 🇨🇦
It truly looked to me that the covid vaccine killed Sean Hartman. Sean died 33 days after his first covid shot with an enlarged heart and no prior medical history. Subsequent medical investigation revealed a build-up of spike protein in his adrenal glands. The doctor conducting the study concluded this caused a fatal drop in Sean's blood pressure. Noone else has offered a plausible account. Despite this, there is no recourse against the government that required Sean to take the shot to keep playing hockey. Funny how the government can negligently build a road but isn't negligent when they require a child to take a fatal injection just to live his normal life. I don't see a strong legal path available for Hartman here, but wish to plead with anyone who will listen to please act with restraint when imposing medical interventions on people you don't know the first thing about. Rest in Peace Sean. God lend your strength to his family.
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.

English
49
273
831
21.6K
Kyle Kemper 💫
Kyle Kemper 💫@kylekemper·
@rupasubramanya CPC is actually a more fiscally conservative version of the LPC; both of which serve the party and not the people
English
4
0
47
764
Kyle Kemper 💫
Kyle Kemper 💫@kylekemper·
Why does this look so demonic?
English
630
300
1.9K
35.1K
tobi lutke
tobi lutke@tobi·
@philngo_ less carrots as well, ideally. Make the whole government efficient.
English
10
0
107
5.7K
Phil Ngo
Phil Ngo@philngo_·
More carrots, less sticks. Government just needs to create the conditions for farmers to grow more carrots. Not punish them for deterrence of the ideal behaviour. Although if you were subsidized by the taxpayer for your education, you should at least make the taxpayer whole. How to value that is the hard part. Perhaps the idea from @EricDLombardi that OSAP can be forgiven for contributing post-grad time in Ontario is a worthwhile venture. Not an exit tax.
tobi lutke@tobi

Make Canada so compelling that the best and brightest want to net-immigrate, not flee. Let's stick to good ideas, of which Pichette has plenty. Making Canada a cage is not one of them.

English
4
0
36
10K
Mark Carney
Mark Carney@MarkJCarney·
Solidarity, inclusivity, and equality. That’s what our Liberal Party stands for.
English
3.3K
416
2.2K
228K
Kyle Kemper 💫
Kyle Kemper 💫@kylekemper·
@CanadaFP @CanSwitzerland Deceptive content is more accessible these days but hopefully your efforts will help awaken more critical thinking in the world and the general population will look closer into historical theater 🎭
GIF
English
0
0
1
165
Foreign Policy CAN
Foreign Policy CAN@CanadaFP·
Over the last few weeks, we’ve shown how AI-generated visuals can mislead. Meet the cast: a unicorn, a nurse, a reporter and a girl. All AI-generated. All created in seconds. Before reacting, pause, check the source and #ThinkBeforeYouShare
English
40
124
124
18.3K
Andrew Lawton
Andrew Lawton@AndrewLawton·
We need to make Canada the strongest, freest, and most prosperous country on earth. A Conservative government led by @pierrepoilievre will do that.
English
256
231
1.4K
16.9K
Kyle Kemper 💫
Kyle Kemper 💫@kylekemper·
Canada could benefit from an effective referendum/direct democracy process to increase accountability amongst the representatives. Our democracy currently is isolated to election day voting for a person and after that is political party rule. Westminster style representative governance was created to solve problems of a different age when planes, electricity and internet didn’t exist and you needed geographical representatives to meet in Ottawa. If Canadians were informed about the Swiss process I think an overwhelming majority would embrace a more effective democracy solution.
English
0
0
0
14
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦
🇨🇦Wayne🇨🇦@Reil76·
If floor crossing truly went against democracy, we would not be voting for individual MPs at all, we would be voting only for parties. In Canada, we elect a local representative in each riding, not a fixed seat for a political party. That means the person elected is the MP, and they are accountable to their constituents, not permanently bound to a party label. When an MP chooses to cross the floor, the election result is not cancelled, and no votes are erased. The same elected representative continues to serve the same riding. What changes is the party they sit with in Parliament, not the fact that they were chosen by voters. If democracy meant locking MPs to a party forever, then voters would have no real choice beyond selecting a party list. That is not how Canada’s system works. Floor crossing can be controversial, but it exists because MPs are elected as individuals within a parliamentary democracy where accountability happens at the ballot box, not through party handcuffs mid term.
English
1.5K
287
1.2K
89.5K