
In this episode of Nightly Scroll: In this episode of Nightly Scroll, I’m joined by Kayla Pollock, a Canadian woman who was paralyzed 48 hours after taking the Covid-19 vaccine. Now, she’s on a mission for justice.
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Haley Carania
You know the drill. If you want to watch this show, you got to do it@rumble.com Haley if you want to watch, you got to do it on Rumble. If you want to listen, you could do it on your favorite podcast platform, whatever that is. Apple Podcast, Spotify, just search Nightly, scroll. And of course you can follow me @haleycarania on most social media platforms. But let's get into it right, because the COVID 19 pandemic was a wake up call and a turning point for a lot of people. We the people started questioning the experts, the science, the policies, everything. All of a sudden these three letter agencies and authorities that we used to trust lost us completely. People like myself who used to get whatever shot my doctor recommended never got one ever again. I question which vaccines I would ever get again or ones I'd give to my future children. Are the tried and true ones like chickenpox or MMR or polio? The reasons we have generations of kids being raised with autoimmune disorders, allergies, mental illnesses and other afflictions that generations past never dealt with? Is there a larger conspiracy at play? Does our government want us sick for profit? Was our compliance being tested for future reference, A few years ago these questions would have been considered corrupt crazy. But with more brave vaccine injured people speaking up and sharing their stories, we are starting to put the puzzle pieces together. My next guest started experiencing an adverse reaction when she and her doctors now attribute to her third Moderna COVID 19, booster shot. A once healthy and vibrant mother in her 30s, now a quadriplegic due to transverse myelitis. Canadian doctors and officials are no help. But that's not stopping her from suing Moderna for tens of millions of dollars and making sure the world hears her story. Kayla Pollock joins this episode of Nightly Scroll. Kayla, welcome to Nightly Scroll. I want to first thank you for joining and telling the story because I'm sure you it's very emotional, it brings up a lot of memories. So I want to ask you, why did you get the COVID 19 vaccine? Was it something you felt forced into or did you just get it? Because this is what everyone was doing. This is what your doctor said.
Kayla Pollock
At the time. My adoptive father was actually in long term care and he was passing away at the time. He, he had early onset dementia. In order to go into the home, you had to be vaccinated. So at that time it was sort of like a choice between do you not say goodbye to your father or do you, do you not get vaccinated? And also I was working at a children's school in kindergarten classes where it was, you know, there. And also, like, the news, like, the fear mongering was just crazy. When I look into it, I feel, looking back, there's. There was a lot of, like, coercion. I really feel that a lot of the reason that I also did it was that, I mean, I used to believe the, like the who, the World Health Organization, was like the standard. If there's like a pandemic, it's real. If they're saying, you know, I was kind of thinking like that we were going into, you know, like 1918 or something or, you know, where this could, this was that deadly. And looking back, yeah, I, you know, I feel very stupid. I have a lot of regrets, obviously, but, yeah, that's the short end of why I got it. I think a lot of it, the media did not help that at all. And, and neither did the mandates. Right.
Haley Carania
I. I know that a lot of people probably feel the same way. Like, I fell for this. I mean, I was asked to wear masks on the subway. I was living in New York City at the time, and I did it. I mean, a police officer came up to me and said, wear a mask. Even though I knew that people were still getting Covid and it didn't make a difference. But when authorities are telling you what to do and there is this fear, this is what people do. I mean, it's just human nature, right? You think that you're doing the right thing. So I hope you don't feel stupid. Even though I know a lot of us look back and think, I mean, how did we do this? Or how did we believe this? But you're in Canada, you're in Ontario. And I remember stories of truckers who were protesting the vaccine. You heard stories about their bank accounts being frozen. I mean, were you afraid of what the Canadian government was threatening?
Kayla Pollock
I'm actually very good friends with Tamara Leach and Chris Barber as well. So Tamara and Chris actually were just in court last week and they're looking at. Tamara is looking at seven years in jail for mischief in Canada. We don't, we don't give that many years to, like, murderers or rapists. So that seems quite excessive. And Chris is looking at having his truck, which is, you know, hundreds, thousands of dollars truck that his family, like, grew up inside of this truck. He had his dogs put to sleep in this truck. He's a trucker. Look at there. They want to cease and destroy the truck. Plus I put him in jail for eight years. And like, Tamara is only charged and this is a first time offense, you know, and it's, it's mischief. Like, it's a mischief charge. Mischief is like something that we charge people with for spray painting when you're a teenager or something, you know, or spitting on a sidewalk kind of thing.
Haley Carania
Like, and they're not going to jail for that long.
Kayla Pollock
They don't. You don't go to jail usually for mischief. It's a misdemeanor. Like you get, like, it usually goes away and you get nothing unless you hurt somebody. And, and you know, I mean, the police hurt some people. Like we saw all over the news, as you remember, some of the Mounties that ran over, you know, disabled people with the horses and things like that. But Tamara and Chris didn't physically harm anybody, nor did they threaten to. So I'm more afraid now of what they might do to me only because I've chosen to take a stand after they've already frozen the bank accounts and done all of that. Unfortunately, the truckers came about, it was about a week after I had already become paralyzed. I believe it was around that time. So they were doing it to prevent this from happening to people like me. One of the people that's in jail for the Coots protest actually reached out and from, from the penitentiary and actually did a, a social media phone call and they actually, you know, gave me like a, a shout out saying, you know, it was people like Kayla Pollock is, is why we did this. And, and I thought that's really crazy. I, I have to learn a little bit more about what's going on there. I, I was kind of shocked. I just found that out a few hours ago. So, yeah, it's, it's. I, I'm, I'm worried even now about it, but I don't have a lot more left to lose. You know, like, it didn't just, you know, it took everything from me. And I, and I think a lot of people think that until they sort of kind of hear my story, I guess. Yeah.
Haley Carania
Well, let's get into your story to fill everyone in my audience in on what happened. When did you get your first Moderna shot?
Kayla Pollock
I can't give specific dates and times of my vaccines because I do have a $45 million lawsuit against Moderna. Okay. So I can't get into specific, I can't mention specific dates, times of any incidents. All I can say is that I did that it was a Moderna shot that, that I received that caused this and that it was confirmed by, by my hospital Records and by a neurologist and, you know, things like that.
Haley Carania
But how many did you get?
Kayla Pollock
I. That was at my boot, so that was my booster shot.
Haley Carania
Okay, so you had gotten three.
Kayla Pollock
Yep. Because. Yeah.
Haley Carania
So I won't ask you timing exactly.
Kayla Pollock
But other than that, everything's on the table.
Haley Carania
Okay, so after you took this booster shot, what happened?
Kayla Pollock
Well, shortly after, you know, to make a longer story short, like, one day, my boyfriend and I, we had gone for a hike, long hike, and we had our dog with us and everything there was like. It was a. It was a normal, like, February, end of February day. No falls, no slips, no, like, nothing. I mean, I was very fit and active and nothing out of the ordinary. And I came home and I went to bed early that night because I was feeling fine. But I had to get up early the next day because a lot of my colleagues at work were calling in sick a lot, probably from fear, because a lot of that times when a kindergarten class, like, starts to go missing, you think, oh, my gosh, what have they all got? Right? And then, you know, it could just be that people are keeping them at home because school's just not making sense, or it could. They're also in kindergarten, or they could have just gotten a cold or. You don't know. Right. And of course, if you had any symptoms, you couldn't come to school. So people. It was just. It was. It was lun. Lunatic. I don't. It was awful. But it. I had gone for a hike, and I'd got up early for that phone call to get my earlier, like, a longer shift that day. And I went to get up, and I couldn't move anything from the neck down, so I could feel everything. And I immediately knew because I'd had a C section. So I know when you're a woman and you have a C section, that is a way that they. They paralyze your body so that you're not feeling the pain. And then when you try to get up, because you really want to just get up and go see your baby in the nicu, let's say in my situation, you can't just get up. Like, you. You. You can try all you want, and you're not getting up. Right. And so I immediately knew, like, I've just woken up quadriplegic, and I believed that I had Guillain Barre. I thought, okay, I. I likely have Guillain Barre syndrome. That's. That's. That's a vaccine reaction that is a little more well known. And. And it. It fit with the symptoms. So I had. I also trained service dogs and exotic animals at the time, And I had. Our dog started acting really weird, and I was trying to go get. Tell him to go get my boyfriend. And anyway, the dog started pacing back and forth, and he came up, and he said, what's wrong with the dog? And I said, just call 911. I was really calm. I do well under pressure. I was really calm, and I just said, call 911, and you need to just let them know that I'm quadriplegic. And he had no idea what that meant. Wow. And I just said, I can't move at all. And I think he probably, at the time, thought that I pulled something or like that I was probably being a little bit dramatic. But they took me to the hospital, and I got to the hospital, and the doctor came in. I was brought by, like, you know, like, by ambulance with a backboard and a neck bracelet. The doctor comes in, he takes the neck brace off, he takes the backboard off, and he starts moving my limbs all around, and. And I'm thinking, like, okay. And that made sense to me because I knew I hadn't fallen. I knew I hadn't fallen out of bed. I knew, like, I hadn't broken anything. And I could feel things. Not as well as normal, but I could still feel. And he did some reflex tests and things like that, and he goes, okay, well, I know what's wrong with you. This is psychosomatic. It's in your head. And so he ordered a psych consult, and he left me in the room. And then a couple hours later, I started just screaming in pain. Like, I just. I just had all this pain coming in my neck, and I had no idea what was going on. And that's when I was like, okay, what the hell is going on? Because I knew it wasn't in my head. No. And then they started giving me high doses of morphine, and I'm like, if I'm a psych patient waiting for my psych consult, why would they be giving me morphine?
Haley Carania
Well, they probably knew. They probably started to know once you started feeling that pain and you were screaming in pain, that there was.
Kayla Pollock
Remember, no tests, Nothing. Yeah, except blood tests to make sure a. I didn't have Covid. I got a Covid swab.
Haley Carania
Of course.
Kayla Pollock
Of course. Because that was. You know, then we could have just blamed on Covid. But I got tested for Covid, and I got tested for drugs and alcohol. So once they figured out, you know, there's no Covid, and there's no drugs and alcohol. They just left me there. But once I started screaming, you know, usually when a psych patient starts screaming, they would ask, you know, can, like, the attending physician to like, give them some Valium or something or maybe some sort of benzodiazepine to calm them down or something. But they were giving me high doses of hydromorphone. And then of course I was like, out of it. But I, I knew, like, I knew that it wasn't in my head and I knew they knew. And so that, even, that, even that really confirmed my suspicion that it was vaccine related. And then of course, they had. I had this doctor come and I'll never forget that he, he almost like whispered in my ear and he said, I have a friend at home who's a radiologist and I am going to call him right now. And he's agreed that. He came back and said, he's agreed that if you go into the MRI right now, he will check his, your scans from home. Because I do not believe this is in your head. I think there's something really wrong with you. And I said, I'll go right, I'll go right now. And it was like, if I remember correctly, it was like a few hours worth of MRI because it was with contrast, without contrast. It was, it was a big mri. And were you still in pain at.
Haley Carania
This point or had the drugs kicked in?
Kayla Pollock
Well, the drugs were. As soon as the drugs would wear off, I, it was, it was excruciating. But I was, I, I was kind of confused because I, I definitely didn't hurt myself. So of course Guillain Barre doesn't cause that. So then I'm like, maybe I had a stroke or maybe I have a tumor or like, do I have, like, I didn't know what was going on at that point. All of a sudden, and then I'm like, maybe this has nothing to do with my COVID vaccine. But no, it had to. Like, I just, I knew I kept going back in my gut. I was like, no, no, this is, this came on too quickly. Like, you have to know. So I knew it was neurological because I'd had previous quick, quick episodes of it. So not like this just sort of like leg, leg falling kind of thing. So I knew that it was neurological. And so they, they did the scan and, you know, there was massive amounts of damage to my spinal cord to the point where it was like millimeters away from my breathing tube. That's why I couldn't breathe properly. I just didn't realize that I couldn't speak or breathe properly because I one of my lungs wasn't getting like when you're paralyzed, your, your chest muscles can't move, your muscles are paralyzed so you can't breathe properly. A lot of people with paralysis, that's why they get these, these breathing tubes and things is because their their muscles are paralyzed.
Haley Carania
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Haley Carania
If you don't mind me asking, why do you think that or did you have any symptoms after the first two shots? Why do you think that this all happened after the third? Was it just too much of the spike protein or what I really believe.
Kayla Pollock
I believe a few things. I believe that the one of the reasons I did get my booster is I was type one. I'm type one diabetic and one of the things that they were telling you is that comorbidities Absolutely. So diabetes was listed as like the all these people apparently were in the hospital dying of type. Like if they had diabetes they were dying from from COVID Like we were being told this all the Time. So they don't specify, of course, type one, type two, if you're 80, if you're, you know, if you just died in a car accident, you happen to have Covid. That's, you know, they didn't tell us any of this. I didn't know any of this. It was censored on social media. So people say, well, why did you research it? It was all there. Well, no, by the time I got this vaccine, it wasn't there anymore. Right. So maybe you could have looked into this while they were getting the vaccines ready. But at that point in time, I wasn't in a position where I needed to worry about it. So it was not. And then, of course, you know, all these people with diabetes are apparently dying and the news is swinging things and it's all over international media. So. And I'm working at a school, and, you know, I have a son and, you know, he's going to school anyway. So I'm like, you might as well go to school. Because he, you know, I was working in the same, you know, classrooms as him. And I'm like, you might as well go to school because nobody's wearing their masks properly. All the kids are throwing them on the floor. And then someone will have a rainbow mask, and the kid will go, I like your mask better, and they'll switch.
Haley Carania
Right.
Kayla Pollock
And my son wasn't much older, so I'm thinking, okay, this is just not effective anyway. In fact, it's probably like, more like you're probably going to get more illness just by the fact that you're. You're literally wearing other people's masks. So. Right. I mean, you know, it just. If there was this deadly, like this deadly disease, then I was going to get it eventually from my son anyway, so I might as well try to save myself and not die on my son, because I was going to die because I was diabetic. Right, right. And that's how it sounded. So to me, that's. That's the absolute definition of portion. We were also in Ontario where you're being told, like, you're, you know, if you don't do this, then you know that you're. You're not allowed here, you're not allowed there. You're not allowed to do this. If you had, like, a public event of any type, Doug Ford told people that. That the cops could arrest you. There were people arrested for going to family Christmases and things like that. And I was not one of those people. That was someone who said to you, you're not Wearing a mask. You're not coming near me. I had a lot of religious friends and they believe like when God wants, it's your time, it's your time. So they didn't believe in wearing masks. So I was. I was living in quite a religious community and like a really tight community. And a lot of them were religious and they didn't believe that. So I wasn't not friends and I still friends with them. So it didn't. It never divided me socially as far as that. Like, I believe in freedom of ch. And so I think that that's where the coercion looking back is something that makes me very angry. So that's.
Haley Carania
Yeah, I don't blame you. I would be very angry. I'm healthy and I'm angry on behalf of you and all these other people who are vaccine injured and people who are, you know, Covid angers me so much because of all the lunacy that went on. But you have been diagnosed with transverse myelitis, is that correct? So what is that and what are the symptoms? How does that play into all of this?
Kayla Pollock
So essentially what happens is you get something like either it could be. Now remember, I had to have all these things ruled out to make sure that it was the vaccine in order to file a lawsuit, for instance. So you get something like it could be an infection, it could be like all sorts of little things that can cause. Like vaccines are. Are one thing that it can. That can cause it. Sometimes they don't know exactly what causes can be something like mono. Okay. Is. Is. Is common for causing. It's in young adults. But normally what happens is you'll notice things which I Hindsight of course, 2020 things like you'll normally you'll have a lot of pain leading up to it. I had no pain, but things like urinary retention. So like feeling like you have to pee, but you can't. So I just thought that I had a bladder infection. That's a common symptom of bladder infection. And women get them and men get them and we're humans and we get them. So, you know, I thought that might be what it was. And it didn't think much of it. And then I had fallen twice where I'd kind of like, you know, lost my legs, I call it, and real. And then I realized the second time, like, no, this is neurological. It's really serious. In Canada, it's like years to see a neurologist. So by the time I realized I had a neurological issue going on, I was told like it's going to be a couple years before you see someone anyway. So I'd already realized something was going on. But people say, why didn't you go to the hospital? And I look at what happened when I went to the hospital, and I think, what would have happened if I came in with nothing? Like, they. I came in completely quadriplegic, and they did nothing. So transverse myelitis essentially means that your body is like for it. In my case, it gets the vaccine, and my body was. Now, people who have autoimmune disorders are more likely to react to a vaccine because what happens is the vaccine is mistaken as isn't. Well, it's not even a mistaken really, but your body is. Instead of attacking the. The vaccine per se, or. Or doing what the vaccine's supposed to supposedly do, it sees it as a foreign invader and it starts to attack your own immune system, just like any autoimmune disease. So what happened is it started attacking my spinal cord, and it caused severe swelling and inflammation to the point where it. It tore off all the myelin sheath, which is the. The part that helps the messages travel to and from your brain to your spinal cord. So your brain says, I'm going to move my leg, but there's all this swelling in there, so the messages can't get through. Wow. So you'll have partial messages going through. So at times, like, my legs will shake uncontrollably, and people be like, see, she's faking. And I'm thinking, well, no, those are called spasms. Or your legs will be extremely stiff. Like my legs. Somebody will try to lift them and they're. They're not able to. Like, you would physically not be able to lift my legs. And I'm not that big of a person because they're so tight. It's like having a snake. And I know this from working with exotic animals. It's like having a boa constrictor wrapping around you. And it's actually something known as banding that a lot of people transverse myelitis get, where it's in their. In their midsection as well, where it's like having a boa constrictor wrap around you so tight. Other things, you lose control, your control. Like you cannot pee. Like, you physically just cannot pee. And then you also. You also, you ha. You cannot go to the washroom. Like, you cannot use your bowel. Does not work. It just doesn't work. Wow. So you lose that. Like, you lose. You lose more than just your legs. And then because you can't roll over in bed or you can't do those things. Especially being type one diabetic, you get. Bet you get bed sores, which are sores from laying on one spot too long. And unfortunately, I can feel everything. So I don't know about you, but most people, when they go to sleep, I'm sure you. Everybody can relate to the fact that, you know, you go to bed and you're laying in your bed and you're like, I'm not really comfortable. And you move, and then you move again and you move again and you move again and you're like, I'm just not comfortable. And you can't sleep, so you keep rolling over, or you wake up in the middle of the night unconsciously, sort of, or subconsciously was what you would call it, and you're just. You're. You're rolling over. Well, that's your body's way of saying, like, you've been on this side too long and your body's starting to sort of feel a little bit of discomfort before the pain, right?
Haley Carania
And you can't do that, so you're just sitting through the pain.
Kayla Pollock
And also, when I wake up, it's excruciating. Like, it literally feels like I got hit by a vehicle. I used to play Premier League Soccer, which is high, high. Like, before Team Canada, I was a goalie. And I mean, I've had some massive injuries, and it's like having broken bones and. And being, like, run over by, like, having. Having a vehicle on top of you, basically.
Haley Carania
How often do you feel like this?
Kayla Pollock
Every night, because I can't move. So as soon as I wake up, several times a night, it's just a panic, like, you wake up. I've actually had many dreams or nightmares that I'm actually in a car accident and I can't move and that there's a vehicle on top of me because that's what it feels like. And then I'm stuck and my legs are all mangled and I'm stuck. Or I'm under a horse and I'm stuck. And then I wake up and I realize, oh, you're not stuck, but you're stuck because you're not rolling or you're not moving. So, yeah. And in Canada, people think we have free health care here. I'm going to let you know it. We don't have free health care. Right. We don't have people that come to our house and, you know, help us move at night or. Or, you know, you know, stretch our limbs or Give us physiotherapy. I've been left by personal support workers. They have just not shown up. And I've been left in bed all day where I've like bawled my eyes out all day and, you know, just not been able to move. I ended up having to obviously lose my job because I couldn't go to work. I never even had a discussion with my job about quitting or anything because I was in the hospital for six months and I couldn't feed myself. I couldn't do anything. I couldn't even move my neck like this.
Haley Carania
You mentioned Canadian health care and how people think that it's free, but you mentioned that it's not free. And this Canadian health care style is something that Liberals in America want to strive for. The Democrat Party wants to strive for this. And it sounds good because people don't want to pay for it, but they don't understand the trade off. The government decides when you get care, what care you get, when you get it, and how good the care is. And so what would you say to these people, knowing what you know now and how the system has failed you, about what free health care is really like?
Kayla Pollock
Well, what free health care does is it encourages many, many people from all over the world to want to come into your country. And I would too, if I found a place where I could get free health care that was as great as it sounds. They come into the country and then they are also disappointed. So you're not only failing your own country and failing your own citizens, but you're also of no fault of their own, of no fault of the, of the people actually immigrating here. You're failing them too, because you've enticed them and told them that you offer these things. You've allowed mass immigration in the, in the case of Canada so that people will vote for them. In our case with, with the Liberals, that's, that's part of, I believe, their strategy there. And they've allowed that. And I have lots of immigrant friends who have come to Canada and they're like, this is. I was better off just staying in my own country. I did all this moving. I moved my whole family, my whole life, my job in my home country. One of my really good friends was a midwife. She comes here now. She's personal support worker. She makes a fraction of the money and there's no free health care. We literally sit in emergency rooms and die. Yep. I have a friend, I have a.
Haley Carania
Friend of mine, she's Canadian and she's dual citizen. So her dad was, he grew up in New York, her mom was Canadian, she's from Montreal and her dad had cancer. So they thought, well, thank God that he's a dual citizen. We're going to get care in the United States of America. We're not going to go in Canada because he'll die waiting for care. And what my friend explained to me and I was shocked. This is like the first time that I'd ever really seen a, a firsthand story about what the healthcare system in Canada is like. She explained to me that she used to babysit for doctor's children. And when she would go over these doctors houses, these children had like eight iPads, four phones, they had all these gadgets, expensive things. And my friend asked the kids, you know, how do you have four iPads? Or how do you have two self, like what do you need all this stuff for? And the kids explained to my friend, well, my dad's a doctor and they can only make a certain amount of money. So people bribe my dad with fancy things so that they can get health care faster or better or whatever it is. And that was shocking to me.
Kayla Pollock
Yeah. And a lot of our doctors are leaving because you're so highly taxed. Like my neurologist for example, that, that said in the audio recording on my website that said, you know, my, my gut impression here is that it's not going to be cancer or a tumor, that this is caused by the vaccine. When I have an audio recording of that because I started recording everything because Lord. And that's what he's referring to when he says, my gut impression is it's in my files that that's was the vaccine. But at the time he hadn't ruled out that it was a tumor yet. But they ended up being able to do that easily. But they ruled everything else out. And he's like. And then I asked have you seen that before? And he's like, I've seen many, many cases like it. He went to Dubai, he went back to Dubai because he like he didn't believe in all this stuff. And you can't make like they tax them so badly that doctors want to leave. You have like people that have immigrated into Canada that become doctors that end up going back to their own country because it's so bad here for the doctors, for the patients. And also usually doctors don't necessarily get into the business of being a doctor because they want to see all their patients dying. Right. You'd like to at least think that. And honestly that's my experience has been that the doctors are just as upset as the patients now. A lot of them just don't care anymore because they've just seen it and they just, you just become immune to it, I think. But there are the ones that just want to cry with you. And in my case, you know, I went back to the hospital after I wasn't receiving care and said, like, I don't know what to do, nobody's coming to my house, I don't know what to do, I'm being left in my bed. And they said, well, in Canada we offer something called medical assistance in dying. And three times, instead of offering me health care, they offered to medically euthanize me three times. And of course I have proof of that as well.
Haley Carania
You're a mom, you have a son to take care of and the government that forced you to take this shot is saying, sorry, the only thing we can do is kill you three times.
Kayla Pollock
I kept the paperwork, I kept all the emails. And the worst part of it is I had come into the hospital saying I just felt like dying because things were so bad. So that's the one thing that you're not allowed to offer like medical assistance in dying to somebody who technically could be, at that point in time, you could say that I was almost suicidal. Like, you could argue that. So I wasn't necessarily, I wasn't in there saying like, you know, I'm going to do something. But you could argue like, that is not a case and you're not supposed to be offered medical assistance in dying. You're supposed to ask for it.
Haley Carania
That's still, it's so messed up.
Kayla Pollock
It's so bad. Like it's, it's, it's a, it's a horror story from hell. And this is where I was like, okay, I sat my 7 year old son down and I said, listen, if mommy goes public about her story, I really do believe that this is going to go all over the world and that people are going to know about it because when mommy puts her mind to something, nobody gets in my way. However, that being said, some people are going to say really nice and encouraging things to Mommy and some people are going to be very mean and very nasty to me. And he goes, why would people do that? I said, because that's the Internet, that's social media and that's people. There's going to always be people that like you and always be people that don't like you. And I said, what do I do? I said, I feel like the right thing to do is to stand up and to teach you that if you believe in something, you need to do it. And he goes, well, mom, what if there's somebody out there that's exactly like you and if you don't tell your story, you don't help them? And then he asked me one day if they had needles when he was watching a TV show about animals being put to sleep. Do they have needles that put people to sleep? And I said, well, they do in some countries. And I thought he would drop it. And he goes, well, did they have that in our country? And I said, well, they do. And he goes, why would someone do that? And I said, well, imagine there's a mom, and you know, she's got cancer and she's dying and she's in a lot of pain. And, you know, I made this, like, really compelling case for an instance where I thought maybe medical assistance and dying would be appropriate. And he says, mom, don't you think it's God's decision when you die?
Haley Carania
Yeah.
Kayla Pollock
And then I was like, okay, you know what this is? He has no idea what's going on at this point in time. And he's now basically saying, go tell your story and don't forget the maid part. That's all I could hear.
Haley Carania
Well, I now, I'm so, I'm so proud that you are telling your story because like your son said, there are going to be other people like you. You are not an anomaly and I'm sure you do feel alone at times, because I'm sure this is, you know, it's heart wrenching, but there are unfortunately people who have gone through this. So have you connected with other people who are vaccine injured? Have you talked to them? Have they joined your lawsuit against Moderna? I mean, are you.
Kayla Pollock
Oh, I don't have a class action lawsuit. My, my, my, my lawsuit is the first in North America. Now, in the States, you cannot sue the vaccine company.
Haley Carania
Right.
Kayla Pollock
Our wonderful Canadian country, in case you're wondering how I got around that, they made a deal with the government without telling the citizens of Canada. So the deal is that I sue Moderna. I win, let's say $45 million. Moderna pays me, and then the government pays Moderna back and our tax dollars pay the government. So essentially, you know, Moderna, Moderna's name might get tarnished in the meantime, but, you know, our lovely tax dollars, everyone else's tax dollars that didn't want this to happen to me are going to pay for Moderna's mistake. And the government's mistake. But they didn't tell you that at the time. They just said the vaccine companies had immunity. So in Canada there's a loophole and people say, well that's not true. That's not true. I've had a lawsuit against them for, for over a year. Right. The first thing that you do in a lawsuit is you try to get it dropped. Whether when you're the defendant, the first thing they would have said is, we have immunity. You're not able to file a lawsuit against us. Goodbye. And it would have been thrown out of court.
Haley Carania
So where does this all stand now?
Kayla Pollock
Well, we're there. They have a few days now in order to tell us whether or not they're going to disclose in discovery. Moderna is the only vaccine company in the entire world that has not disclosed any of the. There's the, like, there's a bunch of blacked out. Moderna's papers are just purely blacked out. So Pfizer's had to show theirs Johnson and Johnson's had to show theirs AstraZeneca, whatever, wherever Moderna has not had to. Now I would be the first case where Moderna would then be giving these documents. And when it my, my case, it would be a trial by jury in my hometown. So what would happen then is it becomes public. And so every single person, I bet you the news from all over the world will be at that trial waiting to see those documents because they become public, public disclosure. And so what they wrote in there, I guess we're gonna have to see because, you know, one of the, one of their, their defenses was that. And it was far down the list. But it was something along the lines of paraphrasing here, Moderna doesn't cause transverse mellitus. And then in the next line it says something along the lines of if Moderna did cause transverse myelitis, you should have known about it. I'm thinking, well, you know about it now. Yeah.
Haley Carania
And you know, the great thing is.
Kayla Pollock
That in all this time it's taken lots of studies from the who, from various reports from, from peer reviewed studies have come out showing a link between not only MRNA vaccines and transverse myelitis, but moderna and transverse myelitis. So thank you. Time. I'm glad, I'm glad I've had a bit of time because now there's lots more evidence for the fact that this.
Haley Carania
Is not a Burn it to the ground, expose it all. God is on your side. I feel like God is moving through you for this because this your Story is so important. And to your son's point earlier, your story could lead to someone else telling their story and someone else telling your story. Moderna and these other companies, they cannot hide in the darkness any longer. So, I mean, you're suing one of the biggest big pharma companies in the world. Is this expensive? What kind of assistance do you need?
Kayla Pollock
What's expensive is just living day to day. $350 a week to get physiotherapy. And that's a something that's like not at all. I either get to be hopped up on pain meds or I get physical therapy. And I'm not going to take a bunch of morphine because I'm not going to support, support the pharma pharmaceutical companies any more than I already have. And also, I don't want to be falling asleep on my son. Right. I actually, you know, like I said, my son had to go live with his father. I lost my house, I lost my dog, I lost my career, I lost my legs, I lost my bowel, I lost my bladder, I lost. I mean, I wake up with post traumatic stress disorder every day because in my dreams I'm either in a, in a car accident or I'm walking and then wake up and realize this is a nightmare again. Like, I wake up every day and relive the fact that I'm paralyzed and can't move. So there's no amount of money. And I get people saying that I'm a grifter and you know, I don't even know where that term came from all the time that I'm faking and all this stuff, you know, Global News just did a piece, we had something called a vaccine injury compensation program in Canada. And we have a big mainstream media company called Global News. And Mainstream Media doesn't touch stories like mine. Well, they did a big international study and they decided or not study investigation, and they found that this vaccine injury compensation board, that was the liberal setup in our wonderful free health care system, the money that was filtered into there, two thirds of the money it was spent on, and I quote you here, okay, Drinking Fridays, ping pong tables, Netflix and slushy machines. Now the only thing I can say to that, because it's just so sad, scary and sick, is that while all these high school students were doing all these things and people like me were not being compensated because our government said that God forbid you got a vaccine injury, you know, you'd be promptly compensated and there's not going to be very many, you know, they expected 40 claims and there's thousands of claims. And that's just the claims that have got in line. Yeah, they don't even have enough. Like there's, there's no way, there's no counting here. So that's just recently come out within the last. That was around July 4th. So my story finally made it to, to you know, international media, like mainstream media. So now people are like, oh, maybe it's real. And I'm thinking it honestly took global news telling you this for you to believe it's real. And I still get people telling me I'm faking but. So what I need is unfortunately to live in Canada. There's no such thing as free health care. So I'm literally. I have a 10 year old son and I'm getting worse every day because I don't have health care. So I need money to live. I mean money for, to hire personal support workers that show up, that come and get me out of bed. I can't dress myself, I can't shower myself. I can't get in or out of bed myself. I can't roll over myself. I can't get in or out of my wheelchair by myself. I can't pee myself. I can't go to the other washer myself. So I need, I need basically to hire people that can help me do these things.
Haley Carania
Where can people go to find out more about your story and help if they can?
Kayla Pollock
Yeah, I do have a website. You can find it a lot of information on my story and there's a. You can donate from all over the world in any currency, by credit card, by E transfer, by Wire, by PayPal. And it's www.op k a y l a.ca and if you hit slash donate there that could. That brings you right to the donation page. But there's a video that goes at the very beginning that tells my story in about 13 minutes. Shows the hospital, tells all the information, shows my medical records. You can listen to the audio recording. I just dropped the front page of my lawsuit on my social media on X. I'm at, at Casey Pollock. So at K C P O L L O C K on X. I.
Haley Carania
Will certainly be following your story because it is that it is a great one. You are extremely brave, well spoken. I believe you other people. I'm sure everyone watching this show right now believes you and we believe in you and I will stay on this lawsuit. I, I pray that you get the outcome that you want and thank you so much for, for telling your story.
Kayla Pollock
Kayla thanks for having me. I appreciate that a lot.
Haley Carania
God bless. Kayla's website was up on the screen throughout the interview, and I do encourage you to go check it out because she has those audio recordings of her doctors admitting the truth about the Moderna vaccine and what it did to her. I thank her for coming on and telling her story. I know that must have been difficult. And I thank all of you for watching this episode of Nightly Scroll. I will see you right back here on Monday.
Podcast Summary: Nightly Scroll with Hayley Caronia
Episode: Paralyzed Woman Blames COVID-19 Jab, Sues Moderna! - Hayley Caronia (Ep.103)
Release Date: August 1, 2025
In Episode 103 of Nightly Scroll with Hayley Caronia, host Hayley delves into a compelling and emotional story that has significant implications in the ongoing discourse around COVID-19 vaccinations. This episode features Kayla Pollock, a Canadian mother who alleges that her severe adverse reaction to a Moderna COVID-19 booster shot has left her quadriplegic. Kayla is now pursuing a lawsuit against Moderna for millions in damages, bringing to light concerns about vaccine safety and governmental accountability.
Kayla Pollock opens up about the circumstances that led her to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. She explains that the decision was heavily influenced by external pressures and personal circumstances.
She highlights the coercive environment, including mandates at her workplace and societal pressures, which left her feeling compelled to get vaccinated despite misgivings.
Shortly after receiving her third Moderna booster, Kayla experienced a sudden and severe adverse reaction, leading to quadriplegia caused by transverse myelitis. She recounts her harrowing experience in the hospital, where her symptoms were initially dismissed as psychosomatic by medical professionals.
The lack of immediate and proper medical response exacerbated her condition, delaying critical diagnosis and treatment.
Kayla criticizes the Canadian healthcare system, arguing that what is often touted as "free" healthcare is fraught with systemic inefficiencies and neglect. She shares personal anecdotes about the inadequate support and mismanagement she faced post-injury.
She also touches upon the bureaucratic hurdles in suing vaccine manufacturers in Canada, highlighting the challenges faced in seeking justice and compensation.
Transverse myelitis is a severe neurological condition where the spinal cord becomes inflamed, disrupting communication between the brain and the body. Kayla details how this condition has drastically altered her life:
She describes the relentless pain, loss of mobility, and the psychological toll it has taken, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Kayla is spearheading a lawsuit against Moderna, seeking $45 million in damages. She alleges that Moderna was aware of the potential for such adverse reactions but failed to disclose the risks adequately.
She emphasizes the lack of transparency from Moderna compared to other vaccine manufacturers and the potential implications of her lawsuit on public health policies and pharmaceutical accountability.
Hayley Caronia provides her perspective throughout the episode, expressing empathy for Kayla's plight and sharing her own experiences with vaccine mandates and fear-induced compliance.
She also critiques the Canadian healthcare system, aligning with Kayla's sentiments about its shortcomings and the hidden costs associated with "free" healthcare.
The episode concludes with Hayley urging listeners to support Kayla's fight for justice and to raise awareness about the potential risks associated with COVID-19 vaccinations. She emphasizes the importance of personal stories in shaping public opinion and policy.
Kayla provides information for listeners to connect with her and support her cause, highlighting the ongoing struggle for adequate compensation and healthcare support for vaccine-injured individuals.
Vaccine Hesitancy Post-Pandemic: The episode underscores a growing distrust in health authorities and pharmaceutical companies following the COVID-19 pandemic.
Personal Impact of Adverse Reactions: Kayla's story exemplifies the severe personal and familial ramifications of adverse vaccine reactions, including long-term disability and psychological trauma.
Critique of Healthcare Systems: Both Kayla and Hayley offer a critical view of the Canadian healthcare system, questioning its efficacy and transparency.
Legal and Financial Struggles: The challenges Kayla faces in seeking legal redress highlight broader issues related to pharmaceutical accountability and the accessibility of justice for vaccine-injured individuals.
Kayla Pollock [09:32]: "I immediately knew because I'd had a C-section. So I know when you're a woman and you have a C-section, that is a way to paralyze your body so that you're not feeling the pain."
Kayla Pollock [23:48]: "Transverse myelitis essentially means that your body is like... your body was attacking your spinal cord."
Kayla Pollock [40:06]: "Moderna pays me, and then the government pays Moderna back and our tax dollars pay the government."
Hayley Caronia [04:13]: "It's just human nature, right? You think that you're doing the right thing."
Listeners moved by Kayla's story are encouraged to visit her website www.opkayla.ca/donate to contribute to her lawsuit and support her ongoing medical needs. Kayla shares detailed accounts of her experiences, including audio recordings and medical records, to substantiate her claims and rally support.
Note: This summary is based solely on the provided transcript of the podcast episode and aims to accurately reflect the discussions and viewpoints presented therein.