Tutor Reveals What It's Like Talking to University Colleagues About Covid-19 Vaccines

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9 months ago
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Gareth Gee: "I think we see this in public quite a lot now, that lots of people did make a mistake, or a series of mistakes, and that was definitely the case, or the impression I got before I left, from some very good colleagues, is that they realised this was what was going on. These injuries were real. And of course, all of them, pretty much all my colleagues reported that they had Covid and they needed time off work after being vaccinated against it two or three times, or maybe even more."

"What you want to say is, 'You've got an illness now that you've been supposedly inoculated against two or three times, and yet you need time off work it's so bad. So, you know, what's going on? I'd be angry if I'd been inoculated against an illness, and then the illness I got, is so bad it knocked me out and I couldn't work.' But I couldn't really have those conversations in a group, because, as I think many of us have discovered, you talk in a group about these things, that can be very dangerous for you."

"But talking to certain colleagues, yeah, they kind of agreed. Before I left, I got one of my colleagues, the one who's suffering from a heart problem, I asked him to watch the documentary 'Safe and Effective: A Second Opinion' from Oracle Films. I said, 'just watch this, please, with an open mind and then tell me what you think.' The next day, after watching it, he met in the office and he gave me a great big hug. He said, 'Right, I get it. I get it.' He was really apologising, because a year before his point of view had been that anyone who wouldn't take these vaccines was a danger."

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