- Aug 6, 2012
- 27,994
- 24,799
- 2,405
Like the old East German system. The covert kakistocracy and their families are in all government in particular policing and healthcare. Free ride for you if you are one of the chosen ones. Thoroughly disgusting.
Remember, some of us warned you what you will face in the future if you follow our path. I guarantee far too few understand. A creepy system of government ensures a creepy system of regular citizens.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/covid-mental-health-death-warriner-1.5667765
The family of a Toronto woman admitted to hospital on suspicion of COVID-19 is demanding answers after an altercation with security that they say left her unconscious and in intensive care — with no word to her relatives until just days before she was dead.
For 11 days, as Danielle Stephanie Warriner lay alone in a hospital bed, her family had no idea where she was, no idea she'd been restrained by guards and no idea she'd never regain consciousness.
Five days after they were finally contacted, she died at age 43.
"I had no opportunity to communicate with her, I had no opportunity to support her," her sister Denise Warriner told CBC News.
"Whether it was going to help her or not, she didn't have anybody there ... It absolutely tears me apart."
Stephanie, as her family knew her, was the younger of two sisters. She was especially sensitive and wore her heart on her sleeve, Warriner remembers.
A turn for the worse
"She felt everything," Warriner said of her sister, recalling how as a child she was fascinated with butterflies. One day, when the two girls came upon a dead butterfly in their backyard, Stephanie "just cried and cried and cried."
"It affected her so deeply ... And that's the kind of person that she grew to be as an adult," Warriner told CBC News.
Remember, some of us warned you what you will face in the future if you follow our path. I guarantee far too few understand. A creepy system of government ensures a creepy system of regular citizens.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/covid-mental-health-death-warriner-1.5667765
The family of a Toronto woman admitted to hospital on suspicion of COVID-19 is demanding answers after an altercation with security that they say left her unconscious and in intensive care — with no word to her relatives until just days before she was dead.
For 11 days, as Danielle Stephanie Warriner lay alone in a hospital bed, her family had no idea where she was, no idea she'd been restrained by guards and no idea she'd never regain consciousness.
Five days after they were finally contacted, she died at age 43.
"I had no opportunity to communicate with her, I had no opportunity to support her," her sister Denise Warriner told CBC News.
"Whether it was going to help her or not, she didn't have anybody there ... It absolutely tears me apart."
Stephanie, as her family knew her, was the younger of two sisters. She was especially sensitive and wore her heart on her sleeve, Warriner remembers.
A turn for the worse
"She felt everything," Warriner said of her sister, recalling how as a child she was fascinated with butterflies. One day, when the two girls came upon a dead butterfly in their backyard, Stephanie "just cried and cried and cried."
"It affected her so deeply ... And that's the kind of person that she grew to be as an adult," Warriner told CBC News.