I made a post yesterday describing a New Zealand whistleblower who shared anonymized data containing dates of COVID vaccinations and dates of death, where applicable.
A lot of things happened since then. First, I spoke with Steve Kirsch, who assured me that the data was genuine and the whistleblower was sincere.
A big discussion followed my post, as well.
Celia Farber also reported many additional facts today:
This information was offered to other groups before (see VFF’s statement)
The alleged whistleblower, identified as Barry Young, has been arrested
New Zealand’s government obtained an injunction prohibiting the spread of the data. Steve Kirsch’s hosting account was terminated, and he moved the data to a new account.
In addition to offering a new way to download whistleblower data, Steve also provides additional details worth reading:
At this point, I believe that Barry Young was more likely to be sincere than insincere in his intentions and actions.
My previous questions and comments about Liz Gunn’s statements about nursing home deaths and data quality still apply, with one exception: the partial nature of the data is explained by the fact that some shots were not paid through the system that Barry Young was supposedly administering. (I hope more clarity emerges).
This clarification is vital since I questioned the sincerity of the person who possibly risked his life to disclose data.
I greatly hope that, after thorough analysis, the data will yield useful information!
Appreciating your update, I'll reshare my comment to yesterday's piece:
It is a very wise approach for truth-seekers to question everything - including from sources that affirm our beliefs. Especially from sources that affirm our beliefs - we are predisposed to lower our guard for sources we believe are on our side. The truth has no side, it either is or isn't.
This approach withstands changing facts, additional information. Your initial skepticism is warranted. We must challenge even sources we agree with if we seek truth. It has no ego or need to be right. It either is or isn't.
I was in the gallery at Barry Young's bail hearing today. He will be allowed bail from tomorrow at 1pm. He's a hero. The whole gallery gave him a standing ovation.