>>19442614 (pb)
>>19442955 (pb)
>Yes. However, most will break when starving or when they are arrested for child abuse, based on non-compliance with WHO directives, or malnourished children, or isolated children, etc.
>Faith over fear.
>Be prepared to lose everything and everyone for what you know is the narrow path. Home, family, physical possessions, 'freedom', and life.
https://twitter.com/realstewpeters/status/1694949572278153419
Stew Peters
@realstewpeters
It’s now legal in Quebec for the government to STEAL your children if you refuse to mask or “vaccinate” them by deeming you an unfit parent.
Quebec Passes Bill 15 which gives the State Full Control of Your Children and Extends Mask Mandate
https://lorphicweb.com/quebec-passes-bill-15-which-gives-the-state-full-control-of-your-children-and-extends-mask-mandate/
Quebec calls into question parental primacy
https://www.michaeljournal.org/articles/societal-debates/item/quebec-calls-into-question-parental-primacy
Youth protection: Bill 15 to prioritize interests of children over parents
https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/youth-protection-bill-15-to-prioritize-interests-of-children-over-parents-1.5862699
Quebec passes law changing child protection regulations, setting aside natural family ties.
The law no longer seeks to maintain children in their family homes or with extended family.
https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/quebec-passes-law-changing-child-protection-regulations-setting-aside-natural-family-ties/
According to Canada’s CTV news, the new law aims at “prioritizing the interests of children over all other considerations, including the interests of the parents,” and brings a number of changes to youth protection regulations in Quebec with a view to facilitating the placing of children in foster homes in alleged cases of neglect or abuse.
Quebec’s Youth Protection Act (1977) had hitherto recognised that the state should “tend to maintain” a child at risk “in his or her family environment.” This was the principle of parental primacy, that is, that parents have the primary responsibility of their children.
If it were impossible, or not in their best interests, for children to stay in their family homes, then the child protection authorities sought to place the children with members of their own extended families. Only after that avenue had failed would children be placed in foster homes.
Mainstream Canadian news outlets have described the new law as an “acknowledgment that keeping a neglected or abused child within their biological family at all costs” should no longer be “an absolute priority,” and that “ensuring the child is provided with a stable environment as quickly as possible” should be “the government’s priority.”
Judges and social workers will therefore be able to disregard the principal of parental primacy when making their decisions about the fate of a child.
Another change brought about by the new law is an easing of confidentiality rules regarding children’s personal information; this will now be more easily passed along and shared among authorities and caregivers.
Although the law was met with virtually no opposition at the National Assembly, some parents in Quebec have been waving red flags since its introduction as a bill.
Some argue that the overriding of parental primacy could set a dangerous precedent and give the state too much power over children.