Best Practice Update

FOI: Vaccination Justifications

You may have received an email or letter requesting information on the research and justification of the administration of vaccines, such as:

Dear Sir/Madam,
RE: SCHOOL VACCINE POLICY.


In relation to UK Government COVID-19 'Vaccine' Policy and Childhood Immunization ‘Vaccine’ Policy which includes INFLUENZA, HPV, MEASLES AND POLIO, under the protection of the People's Union of Britain, you are hereby served notice of conditional acceptance that you are lawfully entitled to 'vaccinate' children, whilst in the care of the headteacher at the school, whether on school premises or elsewhere, provided you deliver to me the following:

  1. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that the COVID 'vaccines' or the [Childhood Immunization Policy list] INFLUENZA, HPV, MEASLES, POLIO 'vaccines' are incapable of harming children.
  2. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that the COVID 'vaccines' have undergone rigorous double-blind placebo safety studies.
  3. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that children will not die, suffer or develop any adverse reactions including,but not limited to, neurological problems, blood clots, blindness, nerve damage, deafness, autoimmune disease, anaphylaxis, anaphylactoid reactions, allergies, fertility complications, Guillain-Barré Syndrome, etc and/or suffer any other form of harm, complication, or die as a result of or because of being injected with any COVID-19 vaccine or any Childhood Immunization 'vaccines'.
  4. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that the COVID 'vaccines' approved for emergency use by the MHRA provide immunity from either SARS-COV-2 or COVID-19; the HPV, POLIO and INFLUENZA 'vaccines' provide immunity from HPV, POLIO and INFLUENZA.
  5. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that you sought legal advice on whether it is lawful to administer emergency use 'vaccines' to children on the school premises and that you have performed an appropriate risk assessment.
  6. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that you have employed the Precautionary Principle when deciding whether or not to 'vaccinate' children at the school.
  7. Material evidence, not hearsay or opinion, which proves beyond reasonable doubt that you have informed your public indemnity insurers if there is any possibility that serious or fatal 'vaccine' adverse events might ensue upon 'vaccination' of children, in which case you would be liable for gross negligence and perhaps even manslaughter.

Please deliver to me these reasonably requested items within seven days of your receipt of this notice, given the seriousness of matters raised and the imminence of schools adhering to the UK Government policy of rolling out the COVID 'vaccines' and INFLUENZA and other Childhood Immunization 'vaccines' for children.

I look forward to hearing from you without delay in signed writing.

Insincerity and honour, without ill will, frivolity or vexation,

Signed xxxxx

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Leaving aside any pseudo-legal wrapping and references that may exist, we need to look at whether this is a valid request. To be valid under the Freedom of Information Act a request must;

  • be in writing
  • include the requester's real name
  • Include an address for correspondence
  • describe the information requested
The examples we have seen (with a real name included) fulfil the requirements, so we need to respond.
You do not have to respond within seven days of receipt. The timeframe is that of a Freedom of Information request - 20 working (school) days.
 
However, we also need to have the information in a recorded format to respond, and it is almost certainly the case that an individual school or trust does not. Additionally, vaccination is a government requirement, not a school project.
 
Therefore, our recommended response (in line with Section 16 of the Freedom of Information Act - to provide advice and assistance) is as follows:
 
"The UK Government decides on the vaccination strategy for children in England and Wales, and commissions School-Aged Immunisation Services (via NHS England) to administer required vaccinations, based on research carried out at national, not school level. Therefore, the school doesn't hold this data and the request should be directed to NHS England.
 
If you are dissatisfied with the handling of your request, you have the right to ask for an internal review. Internal review requests should be submitted within two months of the date of receipt of the response to your original letter and should be sent to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. This does not affect your statutory rights."
 
The DPE Team
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

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