Alberta Premier swore ‘to God’ weeks ago the province was open ‘for good’ but now has announced new restrictions
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Jason Kenney made the sign of the cross while he made the promise.
ALBERTA (LifeSiteNews) – Only weeks before introducing new COVID-19 restrictions, a secretly recorded video shows Alberta Premier Jason Kenney swearing “to God” that his province would be open “for good.”
“It’s open for good, open for good,” said Kenney in the video, which was posted on September 10 by the group Calgary Freedom Central.
“I swear, I swear to God,” added Kenney after being pressed by the person recording the video if he would make good on his “Open for Summer” promises made in late June. He made the sign of the cross while he spoke.
Kenney made the remarks at a July 10 outdoor Calgary Stampede breakfast event for Alberta’s Health Minister Tyler Shandro, according to Calgary Freedom Central.
The person recording the video told Kenney he was concerned that the province would again lock down, noting it had been hard on him.
Kenney told the man that Alberta would not have to lock down again because of the vaccines, saying they are “effective enough to keep people out of hospital.”
Kenney then brought up the U.K., which he said saw a “huge increase in cases” but low hospital numbers. “That’s the sweet spot,” he claimed.
On July 1, Alberta removed nearly all COVID-19 restrictions after being in a lockdown for over six months.
However, despite his promises to be “open for good,” Kenney recently reimposed a province-wide-mask mandate and a stop to alcohol sales in eateries after 10:00 p.m.
In addition, Alberta is for now “recommending” that unvaccinated Albertans “limit indoor social gatherings to close contacts of only 2 cohort families up to a maximum of 10 people.”
Additional video from the event shows protestors who were onsite to note their displeasure to Kenney and Shandro for requiring that the July 1 opening would only happen if 70 percent of the population received the COVID-19 jabs.
In the video, Kenney called out the “vaccine” protestors saying the remaining unvaccinated people in the province are “younger.”
“Most of them are under 12, and the flu is a greater threat to them than COVID,” said Kenney. “In Alberta, we’ve only had two deaths under the age of 30, zero under the age of 20…so COVID is not a threat to people under 30 effectively.”
Kenney then said, “the fact that 20 percent of them are unvaccinated, don’t worry about it.”
On Tuesday, Kenney appears to have backtracked on an earlier promise that there would be no vaccine passports in the province.
A government news release states that starting on September 16, “Albertans will be able to print a copy of their card-sized COVID-19 proof of vaccination or show it on their phone or tablet.”
This comes after Kenney recently took aim at those who have chosen to not get the COVID-19 jab as well, saying the “choices” of the unvaccinated are now “jeopardizing the healthcare system.”
This elicited a rebuke from Alberta Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA0 Peter Guthrie, who said that although he is “vaccinated and believes vaccines” to help protect from the virus, he supports “the rights of individuals to choose for themselves, have control over their bodies, and have the right to maintain privacy in personal health matters.”
Kenney also recently announced a COVID-19 vaccine incentive program. Every Albertan age 18 and over who gets a COVID-19 jab between September 3 and October 13 is eligible for a $100 prepaid debit card.
The province’s health authority, Alberta Health Services (AHS), announced that all staff and contractors must be fully vaccinated by October 16.
The city of Calgary has mandated jabs for all city employees. The city of Edmonton is considering mandating COVID jabs, but has not done so at this time. Employees were asked to disclose jab status by September 10.
As a result, frontline workers in Calgary recently stood in unison in silent protest of the city mandate requiring all employees to get the COVID-19 jabs or lose their jobs.
Also, this past Saturday a large silent protest, estimated at more than 2,000 people, took place in Calgary in support of AHS nurses and doctors and first responders opposed to jab mandates.
On Monday, protests against vaccine mandates were held outside hospitals in Calgary and Edmonton.
Kenney called the protestors an “outrageous small minority” and threatened to bring the full extent of the law on them should they block roadways. Continue…