Coercion, threat or use of punitive measures against states, groups, or individuals in order to force them to undertake or desist from specified actions. In addition to the threat of or limited use of force (or both), coercion may entail economic sanctions, psychological pressures, and social ostracism.
The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential.
Telling people they'll remain prisoners in their own homes, be refused employment, refused travel, refused access to business and services if they don't get vaccinated easily amounts coercion, not "voluntary consent".
The way they'll get around this though is by saying it's not an experiment, it's just a rollout of inadequately tested vaccines, which as far as I know isn't covered by the Nuremberg code.
Word on the street Amnesty International has put out that Canada did a piss poor job on human rights in 2020, while a lot of thier claims on their report were dog shit (build the fucking pipeline...), they off-handedly mentioned the government response to the pandemic was 'discriminatory' and a 'violation of human rights'
Coercion, coercion is everywhere.
Coercion | human behaviour | Britannica
Coercion, threat or use of punitive measures against states, groups, or individuals in order to force them to undertake or desist from specified actions. In addition to the threat of or limited use of force (or both), coercion may entail economic sanctions, psychological pressures, and social ostracism.
Telling people they'll remain prisoners in their own homes, be refused employment, refused travel, refused access to business and services if they don't get vaccinated easily amounts coercion, not "voluntary consent".
The way they'll get around this though is by saying it's not an experiment, it's just a rollout of inadequately tested vaccines, which as far as I know isn't covered by the Nuremberg code.
Word on the street Amnesty International has put out that Canada did a piss poor job on human rights in 2020, while a lot of thier claims on their report were dog shit (build the fucking pipeline...), they off-handedly mentioned the government response to the pandemic was 'discriminatory' and a 'violation of human rights'
Other than the enforcing these rules against Nazis I can't think of any other time war crimes were prosecuted.
When it comes to war the winners are hero's and the losers war criminals. Just that simple.