How the anti vaxx CULT leaders make money out of other's...

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    How the anti vaxx CULT leaders make money out of other's misery.

    Follow the money?

    Follow Tenpenny.

    She keeps fooling cult members.......
    f you ever had any doubt that the pro disease mob were nothing more than a money making cult intent on spreading misinformation to the public and undermine health of the community, look no further than this.
    One of the modern founding members of the cult , Sherri Tenpenny ( a favourite of Pandemic Pete.....of course), is behind a new money making scheme of recruitment, a online boot camp intent on targeting vaccine hesitant people to persuade them not only not to vaccinate but to spread the word to others.
    The multi level marketing of pseudoscience.
    The boot camp teaches Tenpenny’s version of vaccines, immunity and COVID, guaranteed not be be evidence based.
    How much for this top level quackery?
    $623 per person. With 400 per class that adds up to almost $250,000 per quackery course.
    Tenpenny does not apologise for making a living, even though it can potentially kill someone, it doesn’t matter to her and her buisness partners.
    A CBC journalist signed up for the boot camp to find out exactly how low the cult will go, and it is pretty low as you will read.
    All ca$h and no responsibility.
    Annette.
    *Online boot camp instructors discuss how to target vaccine hesitant, potential hacking of vaccine passports*
    CBC journalists signed up for the $623 Mastering Vaccine Info Boot Camp to find out exactly what was being sold to her students.
    "You're in our choir," Tenpenny told the class. It's those who are on the fence who need to hear the message, she said.
    "My job is to teach the 400 of you in the class … so each one of you go out and teach 1,000," she said, encouraging students to "practise in front of a mirror."
    "My job and your job and everybody else who does this, their job is to sow seeds," she said in a separate YouTube video promoting the boot camp.
    "We're going to build an entire army to stand up and say not only, 'No,' but 'Hell, no.'"
    ‘Manipulation and persuasion'
    The boot camp's course material is primarily taught by Tenpenny herself, who explains her theories on the immune system, vaccines and COVID-19, often contradicting scientific consensus on the topics.
    The communication tactics are taught primarily by Tenpenny's business partner, Matthew Hunt, who gives advice on how to ensure students connect with people on a personal level as a persuasion tactic.
    "Understanding the subjective human experience and how each individual stores their VERSION of information is key to unlocking their mind and building trust … and successfully affecting change with them," his course material reads.
    His lessons also encourage students to recognize what type of persuasion tactic is most effective for the individual based on the way the person talks. He slots them into four categories and presents different persuasion strategies for each.
    "It is about manipulation and persuasion and convincing people of something to simply get them on their side," said Krishana Sankar, science communications lead with COVID-19 Resources Canada, a digital source for up-to-date scientific information on COVID-19.
    She's part of a team that helps dispel misinformation during nightly Q&A video calls that are open to the public.
    "It's extremely frustrating because we are constantly trying to educate people on what's real."
    “Tenpenny told CBC in a statement that she stands behind the content of her boot camp and that she "won't apologize for earning a living."
    “Organizers of the course attended by CBC journalists said that 400 people had signed up, which at $623 per student, adds up to almost $250,000 in course fees......”
 
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