The extraordinary surge in deaths has led to many towns constructing cold body storage facilities in order to process the corpses of the vaccinated.
On October 11, a Special Council Meeting was held in Port Hedland, Western Australia, where Councillor Adrian McRae outlined the urgency of the gathering.
“My own company, GDTK, here in Hedland, has just finished the construction of a cold body storage facility here in Wedgefield [an industrial area north of Port Hedland]. Since when did Port Hedland need to have extra cold body storage facilities?”
“I spoke with the company owners who we built it for, [a] local funeral director. They told me that in 2020 at the height of covid, they were doing on average one funeral a week – one. Since the injection rollout they’re doing over one funeral a day.
“That’s almost a sevenfold increase. It’s frightening.”
During the Special Meeting a motion was passed urging the immediate suspension of Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines.
The motion, brought forward by Councillors Adrian McRae, Lorraine Butson, and Camilo Blanco, was approved by a vote of 5-2.
The council’s decision was driven by findings presented by Dr. David Speicher, a Canadian molecular virologist and epidemiologist, who raised concerns about the discovery of SV40 (Simian Virus 40) DNA sequences in the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.
According to Dr. Speicher, SV40 is a virus previously linked to cancer risks, which was first identified in contaminated polio vaccines in the 1950s and 1960s.
The presence of SV40 DNA in current COVID-19 vaccines, he argued, necessitates immediate precautionary action.
The council’s motion not only called for the suspension of the vaccines but also requested several follow-up actions:
- A letter to the Prime Minister of Australia, urging for the immediate halt of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.
- Notification to all healthcare practitioners in Port Hedland to inform patients about the alleged vaccine contamination and ensure they are given informed consent regarding vaccination.
- A request to other local governments across Western Australia to take similar actions based on these findings.
The council also tasked its chief executive with sending letters to Western Australia’s Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson and Commonwealth Health Minister Mark Butler, seeking their public response to Dr. Speicher’s claims.
Federal MP Russell Broadbent supported Dr. Speicher’s findings through letters to the council, further adding weight to the concerns raised during the meeting.
However, not all officials shared the council’s sense of urgency. Western Australia Premier Roger Cook criticized the motion, accusing the council of spreading “unverified claims” and described their actions as going “off the rails.”