Medical lies, superstitions, hypocrisy and cold-blooded professional murder-for-hire
First locally acquired human rabies infection reported in Ontario since 1967? Kid who swatted a bat off his face? No. That's ridiculous. Dr. Kevorkian and associates are too hard at work in Canada.
Same as everybody else? And I wasn't served anything special or different at the school cafeteria?
11-Year-Old Boy Dies From Rabies After Bat Lands on His Face While He Slept

Certain wicked men outside the family must have heard something about the child's encounter with the bat, and thought it the perfect opportunity to take advantage of childish fears and superstitions to arrange a murder or child sacrifice with a medical cover-up or plausible explanation for the death, to excuse themselves of guilt by proof beyond a reasonable doubt of causing the child's illness and death intentionally.
A society that permits abortions inevitably permits child sacrifices, assisted suicides and human euthanasia, and that is the usual faithlessness and evil witchcraft we experience from provincial districts of Canada swearing an outdated allegiance to a long-dead queen.
And just get mental health doctors and cops involved
The opportunities for murder and cover-up are magnified tenfold.

… compliant and didn't threaten any of the security staff at St. Christopher's. ¶While the man was at St. Christopher's, Bethel said police received a call from a relative who said he was suicidal and a threat to himself. The family member said that he might have access to weapons and a permit to carry. ¶Bethel said the call was dispatched to officers as the "male was a threat to himself and had threatened staff" around 10:30 a.m.…
Essentially the same thing. Except this was a set-up with a false report and a murder. He wasn't suicidal. The cops were homicidal and not quite successful in concealing their murderous rage against an apparently unarmed individual who had owned guns and had been subsequently falsely reported as mentally ill in order to confiscate his guns.
