I posted the other day about the Canadian-made documentary ‘Why Can’t We Talk About This?’
Which you can watch here, & I recommend that you do! From the site:
Why Can’t We Talk About This? delves into the life of a man grappling with the aftermath of a COVID-19 vaccine injury, weaving his personal struggle into a broader examination of why such experiences are rarely discussed. Through interviews with medical experts, legal commentators, and public figures, the documentary uncovers the emotional, physical, and societal toll of vaccine-related harm, questioning the mechanisms-cultural, political, or otherwise— that enforce silence around this issue. It’s a raw, provocative look at a hidden epidemic, aiming to give voice to the unheard and challenge viewers to confront an uncomfortable reality.
There’s another excellent documentary – U.S. made & also recently released – called ‘Follow the Silenced.’
There are a couple places you can access this one, main one being at the documentary site linked above.
From a description of the film found on the site:
"For the past three years, a film crew has been intimately documenting the lives of everyday Americans who have been seriously injured immediately following their COVID-19 vaccination. In the process of documenting these diverse stories across the United States, the filmmakers uncovered a larger story behind a successful campaign to conceal the true scope of injuries from these vaccines.
What begins as a simple quest for appropriate medical care becomes an eye-opening journey that exposes the frightening reality behind the scenes of our nation’s healthcare system, federal regulatory agencies entrusted with our health and safety, and what has recently been described as “The Censorship Industrial Complex.”
At the heart of this story is a call to action. Abandoned by their doctors, the U.S Government, and pharmaceutical companies, the injured create a community to heal each other and give voice to the voiceless. Through their formation of REACT19, these injured individuals discover the cause of their injuries, the research to prove it, and the treatments to restore their health."
The weekly online show Highwire showed the documentary yesterday. Their show includes a pretty interesting panel discussion that took place following the doc’s premiere in Austin, Texas. Kind of juicy, actually – with some well-articulated disagreement among the panel members (which included two injured people from the group React 19 – a group for the vaccine-injured that is well worth checking out – as well as two MD’s & a well-known evolutionary biologist) as to what needs to be done first, who needs to do it, & so on. Since all of this is a pretty big deal, & no two people can ever agree about everything (or sometimes, anything!?), I found it worth seeing. It’s Highwire’s episode # 431, & you can watch it here. (If that link doesn’t work, which I suspect it may not in a day or two as the site gets updated, just look for episode # 431 to locate it.)
There you have it!
As I said in my previous posting,
"Why Can't We Talk About This?" (Part 1)
I’m putting in a plug here for the new documentary “Why Can’t We Talk About This?”
….
I believe that those of us willing to discuss awkward topics – the ones other people don’t want to talk about – kind of have a duty, really, to be talking about this one – & for that matter, all things Covid-related.
Janet, in Toronto.
p.s. one thing I’ve done myself to spread the word? I’m about to send an email – names & addresses blind-copied – to a long-ish list of people, some of whom I know have been curious & talkative about vaccine injury in recent years – & some who I know have been among the not-exactly-willing-to-talk-about-it crowd. Very gently-worded, as those of you on that email list can attest. May the conversations begin!!
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You're right, Janet, it is a powerful documentary! Thank you for mentioning the discussion panel as I didn't know it took place. Will watch that too. Take care.
Janet - I’ve watched Follow the Silenced a couple of times and listened to that heated panel discussion afterwards. I get it - what’s been done to people is so very heartbreaking and infuriating. The anger is understandable.
Praying you get some good conversations going. Or at the very least, some acknowledgments 🙏🙏🙏