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Discussion One Health Agenda Where it all Began

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SharonM

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This article from Connie Shields is entitled "Where It all began: the hidden origin of One world health and the global system now ensnaring Canada.
" Most Canadians believe "One Health" is a harmless scientific concept, a way to acknowledge that humans, animals and the environment are connected. But the version of One health driving today's laws, culling orders, and digital ID programs did not come from science. It came from global institutions and from the people who have shaped pandemics, food systems, land policy, and financial systems for over a century.
This is the story of how a simple academic idea was weaponized into a global governance framework ... one that reaches into
-food production
-land rights
-agriculture
-digital identity
-emergency powers
-Indigenous governance
-supply chains
-lawmaking in Canada
And yes, it connects directly to Rockefellers, the UN, WHO, World Bank and the political class in Canada quietly implememting it through bills like C-293, C-5, S-206, Alberta's new digital ID framework, and BC's DRIPA. "
" Why Canadians must pay attention - because One Health is not localized. It's totalized. It touches your food, your land, your water, your livestock, your healthcare, your mobility, your rights, your identity, your digital records, your economic survival. And it's being implemented without debate, without consent, and without any transparency."

Where It All Began: The Hidden Origin of One Health and the Global System Now Ensnaring Canada
 
In Waterloo Region, the recent change in naming our hospitals to be under the banner "Waterloo Region Health Network" (WRHN - (Midtown, Queen's Blvd and Chicopee) was to get away from the individual names of Grand River Hospital, St.Mary's and Freeport hospital, respectively. This is absolutely pushing us in our region to fall under the "One World Health" global system.
 
I agree with the concern being raised here. “One Health” might sound harmless on the surface, but when you actually look at how it’s being implemented through policy, it’s clearly moved far beyond just science. The scale of coordination between global institutions and domestic governments should at least raise questions, especially when it starts affecting areas like food systems, land use, and digital identity.

At a minimum, Canadians deserve transparency and open debate on something this far-reaching. Policies that touch so many parts of daily life shouldn’t be introduced quietly or bundled into legislation without clear public understanding and consent.
 
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