BEWARE...SOME DAYS ARE NOT VERY PRETTY. I GET CRABBY LIKE NORMAL PEOPLE DO. AND I DO SPEAK MY MIND.
DO NOT READ IF YOU ARE SENSITIVE TO TRUE, REAL, EVERYDAY FEELINGS LIKE MINE.(But I think you would enjoy it)
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Another
COVID whistleblower has come forward to allege that the statistics
about ICU’s being overrun are wildly inflated, over-reported, and in
many cases an outright LIE by political officials.
Josh Snider worked in facilities management at Missouri Baptist Medical Center or “MBMC”,
“I watched our hospital administrators say in the media that our
intensive care units were overflowing with COVID patients, at 98%
capacity, knowing that it was a complete and utter lie.”
THIS MISSOURI HOSPITAL NEVER HAD 98% ICU OCCUPANCY, ADMINISTRATORS LIED TO UNCRITICAL MEDIA
HOSPITAL SHUT DOWN ICU FLOORS, DRAMATICALLY REDUCING CAPACITY
“And even after shutting down
three-fourths of our ICU capacity, they were still never more than 50%
full with that drastically reduced overall capacity. These medical
systems that are saying they are overrun with COVID patients are likely
LYING TO THE PUBLIC,” Snider said.
Empty hospital ICU wing during COVID: no COVID patients to admit!
Snider
says that three out of floor ICU floors were closed because there were
no COVID patients to put in them. So when hospitals like theirs say they
are at 98% of capacity, they are LYING.
COVID
whistleblower Josh Snider took photos of 3 of 4 of the MBMC ICU wings
SHUT DOWN because there were no COVID patients to admit during the
pandemic.
MBMC has refused to comment for this story after repeated requests for comment.
Snider provided documentary proof of
the COVID case load of the MBMC system, whose COVID patients do not
track national trends, and where the number of COVID patients in ICU
were, at many points, a single, solitary person.
“I would have to adjust the airflow
in some of the rooms of people in the ICU with COVID, they were fine. I
believe in COVID, I know it’s serious, but I also personally saw people
who were fine, they had a terminal case of boredom. I spoke with these
people and they weren’t sick at all, they felt fine but were told they
had to stay there. Many brought their PlayStations with them to waste
away the days with video games instead.”
WHISTLEBLOWER TALKED TO PATIENTS IN INTENSIVE CARE WHO WERE FINE, BORED, PLAYING VIDEO GAMES
The case charts published by the MBMC
hospital chain also demonstrate that COVID hospitalizations were always
very minor. Snider says their ICU COVID capacity was 60 patients.
Snider provided an INSIDER CHART from the hospital that shows VERY
DIFFERENT NUMBERS than were being reported to the public and to the
government.
This
chart was INTERNAL and distributed to employees of MBMC. In it, you can
see that the number of COVID patients in critical care was always under
20. The hospital shut down 3 of 4 ICU wings, and in the remaining one
had the capacity for 60 beds/patients. They never came close to being at
capacity for COVID ICU patients.
These charts, provided by Snider,
show that there was a relatively normal track for COVID infections at
the MBMC Center, an acute care facility in St. Louis. Even during
periods of infection spikes in the national population, those spikes are
not found in the hospital data. As well, the bottom line showing
serious cases of COVID requiring intensive care remain significantly
small and reduced throughout the months of the pandemic.
INTERNAL: on August 18, 2021, MBMC said they had 19 COVID patients in ICU.
EXTERNAL: on August 20, 2021, MBMC told the public they had 35.3 COVID patients in ICU.
THE PUBLIC NUMBERS ARE OFF FROM THE INTERNAL REPORTS OF COVID PATIENTS IN THE ICU BY ALMOST 100%
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Here is the chart generated from information submitted to the US
Department of Health and Human Services, as published by the Gannett
News Service:
The
overstated COVID ICU statistics are visible here. Not only is this
chart misrepresenting reality because it doesn’t account for the three
ICU wings that were shut down, but the actual numbers presented are
almost 100% off what they were reporting to employees internally.
The government reports this data very poorly on this site as well.
Snider has provided his personal statement, documentary evidence, and
clear data discrepancies that all suggest that hospitals are not
telling the public the truth about the COVID pandemic.
“The real flu season in the hospital
was always more serious than COVID has been,” Snider said. “Flu season
in a hospital is very challenging, and even the tamest flu season in
years past was still worse than COVID has been so far. The people who
have been suffering and sadly dying are clearly people who are hundreds
of pounds overweight, and people with multiple other comorbidities like
stage 4 cancer. I’m not a Doctor, but the response and panic to this
virus is clearly wildly disproportionate to reality.”
Woman's obituary blames unvaccinated for her COVID-19 death: 'The cost was her life'
A. Pawlowski
·4 min read
It’s a startling beginning of an obituary announcing the passing of Candace Cay Ayers from complications of severe COVID-19.
“She
was preceded in death by more than 4,531,799 others infected with
covid-19. She was vaccinated but was infected by others who chose not to
be. The cost was her life,” it reads.
Candace
Cay Ayers died on Sept. 3, after life support was removed. “She took
about four or five breaths after that and she passed away right there
within a matter of minutes,” her son said. (Courtesy Marc Ayers)
The Springfield, Illinois, mother was 66 and received her second shot of the Moderna vaccine in March, said Marc Ayers, her son.
But the family believes she caught the breakthrough infection
in July after visiting an unvaccinated friend in Mississippi. Her
condition deteriorated quickly and she died on Sept. 3, three weeks
after being placed on a ventilator.
“Mom was a fighter… and mom
was so angry at people for not getting vaccinated and not wearing a
mask,” Marc Ayers, 36, told TODAY.
“Mom was very vocal about
people who just refused to take those precautions and so we thought it
was a good idea to put that in the obituary and make a statement out of
it.”
His sister, Amanda, wrote the obituary, with the family
hoping it would inspire people to get vaccinated and continue to take
precautions as COVID-19 cases spike.
'We did everything that we were advised to do'
Candace Ayers was relieved to become fully vaccinated this spring because she had a pre-existing condition, rheumatoid arthritis, and was already immunocompromised, her son said.
The
whole family, including her 68-year-old husband, Terry, and both of
their adult children received the jabs at the same time. They continued
to avoid eating inside restaurants and kept wearing masks while grocery
shopping, Marc Ayers recalled.
This
was the last photo the family took together before Candace and Terry
Ayers drove to Mississippi in July. From left to right: Marc Ayers, his
parents Candace and Terry Ayers, and his sister Amanda. (Courtesy Marc
Ayers)
“We did everything that we were advised to do,” he said.
“We're
a family that believes in science, believes in the medical advice of
the community, medical recommendations from doctors. We followed
everything very strictly. So all that combined is kind of what we're
still in shock about how it didn't seem to matter, at least for my mom.”
In
mid-July, Candace and Terry Ayers drove to Mississippi to visit an
unvaccinated friend whose husband had earlier had COVID-19 and passed
away. Everyone thought the couple would be safe since they were both
vaccinated and breakthrough cases around that time were rare, their son
said.
“I wish there was better science out at the time that said
maybe they should stay home, maybe these precautions are good for
regular people, but (not) for the immunocompromised. I wish doctors had
not cleared my mom to travel to Mississippi.”
As the couple drove
back home five days later, Candace Ayers already felt very fatigued and
later developed joint pain, nausea and a cough, Marc Ayers recalled. She
tested positive for COVID-19 on July 28, while her husband tested
positive three days later. His case was mild, but she continued to
deteriorate.
After two visits to the emergency room, Candace Ayers
was admitted to the hospital with pneumonia. As her oxygen levels
continued to drop, she was put on a ventilator. Just when she seemed to
improve, she developed sepsis.
“After
that, any progress that my mom had made in terms of her lungs getting a
little bit better was erased and the pneumonia took over with a
vengeance,” her son said.
“The last week or so of her being alive,
her lungs were completely white in the X-ray — they had completely
filled up with fluid and infections.”
Candace Ayers shares a happy moment with her son, Marc. (Courtesy Marc Ayers)
She
was fully sedated and couldn’t squeeze the hands of her loved ones.
They don’t know if she was aware they were there. Doctors told the
family to consider comfort care,
which entails giving pain medications to the patient, removing life
support and letting her go peacefully. That’s what happened on Sept. 3.
“She took about four or five breaths after that and she passed away right there within a matter of minutes,” her son said.
“I
would just wish (unvaccinated people) would read the story of my mom,
what we as a family went through and see if that's something they want
to put their loved ones through, because I can probably assure you that
it's not.”
Marc Ayers urged everyone to get the vaccine and wear a
mask to protect themselves and others. Already, acquaintances and
strangers have reached out to tell him they received the shot after
reading his mom’s story, he said: “It is working already, and so the
more that we can keep talking about it, the better it will be.”
After being compelled to get his second dose of the Covid-19
vaccination, a Division I athlete from Tennessee State University was
hospitalized with myocarditis.
The news surfaced after the athlete uploaded a video of himself lying
in a hospital bed, warning others about the potentially deadly side
effects of the Covid-19 vaccination on Tik Tok.
The University of Tennessee’s John Stokes, a golfer who also happens
to be an Academic Medal of Honor student, spoke in a TikTok video about
how he was informed that he would be unable to participate in sports
during his final year after being diagnosed with myocarditis.
Stokes ended the video by urging the NCAA not to compel
student-athletes to get the vaccination, and he said that he had spoken
with a large number of other players who had had cardiac problems after
receiving the vaccine.
This news will almost certainly be ignored by the mainstream media,
but Todd Starnes did his best to bring it to our attention. Here’s what
he had to say about it:.
John Stokes is a Division One golfer at Tennessee State University,
but now his athletic career and his life are in jeopardy all because of
the China Virus vaccine.
A few days ago, John received a second dose of the vaccine — and four
days later he was in the hospital — with a severe heart issue.
Myocarditis.
A 21-year-old collegiate athlete – perfectly healthy — until he got the vaccine.
Doctors told John that his college athletic career may be over.
Like many other college athletes, John was required by the NCAA to get vaccinated.
But students were apparently not told about the severe side effects of the vaccine — especially for young people.
Vice President Kamala Harris raised eyebrows on Sunday with her tweet urging Americans to help protect already vaccinated people in order to end the COVID-19 pandemic.
"By
vaccinating the unvaccinated, increasing our testing and masking, and
protecting the vaccinated, we can end this pandemic. That’s exactly what
we are committed to doing," Harris tweeted.
There has been widespread confusion over vaccine rhetoric from the Biden administration,
as a push to protect the vaccinated has become a common talking point,
despite the vaccines already providing strong protection for those
who've gotten them.
Harris’ tweet was no exception and was met with criticism and confusion.
"’Protecting
the vaccinated’ is an odd argument since the vaccinated are already,
you know, vaccinated. And the vaccine works in keeping one out of the
hospital 99.99 percent of the time per the data," Fox News contributor
Joe Concha responded.
Former Trump administration staffer Kyle Hooten asked, "Why do you need to protect the vaccinated? Doesn’t the vax do that?"
Fox News contributor Kate Pavlich called Harris’ message "bizarre" and noted the Biden administration appears to be "taking credit for something…the vaccine is supposed to do."
Many others took to Twitter with thoughts on Harris’ message:
Meanwhile, unvaccinated people face a far greater chance of death from the COVID-19 delta variant, according to a new study from the Centers for Disease Control.
The
study monitored incident of COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths
in 13 U.S. jurisdictions during two periods between April 4 and July 17
in 2021. Findings showed that numbers for all categories were
"substantially" higher in persons not fully vaccinated compared with
those in fully vaccinated people.
After
the second period, which occurred between June 20 and July 17, the
study noted that not fully vaccinated individuals are 4.5 times more
likely to get infected (89.1 per 100,000 vs .19.4), 10 times more likely
to be hospitalized (7.0 per 100,000 vs .7) and 11 times more likely to
die (1.1 per 100,000 vs .1) from the delta variant.
The period of time the study examined coincided with the delta variant becoming the dominant strain in the United States.
Fox News’ Peter Aitken contributed to this report.
Jenn M. Jackson is a professor at Syracuse
University. She is an assistant professor of political science and uses
they/them pronouns to describe herself.
On the 20th Anniversary of the 9-11 attacks on America, Jenn
tweeted out that it was an attack on the ‘heteropatriarchal capitalistic
systems – a system many white Americans fight to protect.’
It was like she was auditioning to be a member of Joe Biden’s cabinet.
This is the kind of garbage being taught in our universities and colleges today.
A professor at Syracuse University has drawn strong reactions for a
tweet calling the attacks on September 11, 2001 a strike against
‘heteropatriarchal capitalistic systems’.
Jenn M. Jackson, an assistant professor of political science, made
the remarks in a series of tweets on Friday, a day before the 20th
anniversary of the attacks that killed 2,977 people.
‘We have to be more honest about what 9/11 was and what it wasn’t. It
was an attack on the heteropatriarchal capitalistic systems that
America relies upon to wrangle other countries into passivity,’ wrote
Jackson, who uses they/them pronouns.
‘It was an attack on the systems many white Americans fight to protect,’ they added.
The number of deaths linked to the CDC promoted vaccines this year has absolutely skyrocketed. According to the CDC’s own data.
The VAERS database contains information on unverified reports
of adverse events (illnesses, health problems and/or symptoms) following
immunization with US-licensed vaccines. The CDC government website
links to VAERS platform.
In June VAERS reported 6,985 deaths due to the COVID vaccines.
This comes out to 70 average deaths per day due to the coronavirus vaccine in the last 47 days. This needs to stop!
“The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) database
contains information on unverified reports of adverse events
(illnesses, health problems and/or symptoms) following immunization with
US-licensed vaccines. Reports are accepted from anyone and can be
submitted electronically at www.vaers.hhs.gov.”
Members of Congress and their aides are exempt from Joe Biden’s vaccine mandate for federal workers.
Since Joe Biden’s executive order applies to federal workers in the
executive branch, members of congress and staffers in the legislative
branch are exempt.
President Joe Biden’s new vaccine mandates for federal employees
don’t apply to members of Congress or those who work for Congress or the
federal court system.
Biden issued two executive orders on Thursday requiring vaccination
against COVID for federal workers and contractors who work for the
federal government. He also asked the Department of Labor to issue an
emergency order requiring businesses with more than 100 employees to
ensure their workers are vaccinated or tested on a weekly basis.
However, Biden’s order on federal workers applies to employees of the
executive branch. The House of Representatives and the Senate belong to
the separate legislative branch, and the courts to the judicial branch
of the federal government.
USPS workers are also getting special treatment.
USPS workers are part of the federal vaccine mandate under OSHA jurisdiction, though technically not under the executive order.
JUST IN: White House official now says USPS
workers ARE part of the federal vaccine mandate under OSHA jurisdiction,
though technically not under the executive order.
Deleting a previous thread that was based on earlier reporting. Will also momentarily update our write-up. pic.twitter.com/8ydESDhMeE
Stillbirths have doubled during covid in Mississippi. Officials are sounding the alarm.
Side view close-up of pregnant woman touching her belly. Pregnancy health & wellbeing concept.
Brittany Shammas
Mississippi
has recorded 72 fetal deaths in unvaccinated pregnant women infected
with the coronavirus, state health officials announced Wednesday,
sounding the alarm on the virus's danger in pregnancy.
Speaking
during a news conference, Mississippi State Health Officer Thomas Dobbs
said those deaths had occurred since the start of the pandemic. The
number, which includes only deaths that occurred past 20 weeks of
gestation, "is twice the background rate of what would be expected," he
said.
"That's
quite a number of tragedies that, sadly, would be preventable right
now," Dobbs said, referring to the availability of vaccines.
He
said the state is also investigating the deaths of eight pregnant women
who were infected with the virus. Those deaths occurred over
approximately the past four weeks, during the delta variant-fueled
surge, he said. Many underwent emergency Caesarean sections in an
attempt to save their babies.
Citing those cases, Dobbs and other
state health leaders urged those who are pregnant to get the shot that
can protect them from the virus.
"We encourage you to please get
vaccinated," said State Epidemiologist Paul Byers, noting that his
daughter had recently delivered a healthy baby after rolling up her
sleeve. "That's going to be the best way to ensure that you and your
babies stay healthy."
Scroll back up to restore default view.
Research
has found that pregnant and recently pregnant women face a higher risk
of becoming severely ill from covid-19, with an increased likelihood of
requiring hospitalization, intensive care and use of a ventilator. Those
who contract the virus in pregnancy are also at greater risk of preterm
birth.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month
began urging coronavirus vaccination in pregnant women, after studies
found no increased risk of miscarriage among those who got the shots.
Immunization rates are low in the expectant population, with just 24%
having received at least one shot, according to the CDC.
"The
vaccines are safe and effective, and it has never been more urgent to
increase vaccinations as we face the highly transmissible Delta variant
and see severe outcomes from covid-19 among unvaccinated pregnant
people," CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in a statement last month.
In
Mississippi, the overall vaccination rate has remained stubbornly low.
With just under 40% fully vaccinated and 48% partially vaccinated, its
vaccination rate is second-to-last in the nation.
The delta
variant has hit hard in the state, where recent weeks have been the
worst of the pandemic, according to data compiled by The Washington
Post. The average number of infections was hovering at about 2,800, down
from the 3,586 recorded Aug. 20, but still far above the numbers seen
before this summer.
Almost 1,300 people were hospitalized, and the
state recorded its highest number to die in a single day Monday, with
124. Per capita, it is now second in the nation in total coronavirus
deaths, at 285. (New Jersey, the leader in deaths per capita, stands at
303.)
Dobbs lamented the state's standing during a live-streamed
discussion Friday with Mississippi State Medical Association President
Mark Horne, saying that "it doesn't have to be this way."
"In
Mississippi, we're complacent about being last," Dobbs said. "Aren't we?
And if you see some folks out there talking, they're saying, 'This is
inevitable; people are going to die; it's not worth trying.' That is a
loser mentality, right? Other people don't do this badly."
He noted that the state recorded almost 900 deaths in August, including 61 in people who were between 18 and 31 years old.
"Not
a single one of them was vaccinated," Dobbs said. "I feel confident, if
they had been vaccinated, every single one of those people would be
with us today. It's a stark and painful truth, but it's just what
reality shows."
EXCLUSIVE:Daunte Wright, the 20-year-old Minnesota
man who was killed in a police-involved shooting in April, recorded a
selfie video of himself playing with a handgun in a woman’s bathroom
shortly before he allegedly shoved it in her face and robbed her.
The
13-second clip, obtained by Fox News, shows Wright aiming the gun at
the camera and at his own head, with the sound of running water in the
background. Police found it on his phone during their investigation,
according to court documents.
Wright and an 18-year-old friend
were charged with aggravated robbery in December 2019 after he allegedly
pointed the gun at the woman, reached into her clothing, choked her,
and demanded she hand over $820 in cash he knew she had tucked into her
bra because her rent was due.
Wright
was later accused of violating the terms of his release in the robbery
case, and that’s why he had a warrant out for his arrest when police
pulled him over on April 11.
Bodycam
video shows that he broke out of an officer’s grip, jumped back into
his car, and started to drive away before former Brooklyn Center police
officer Kim Potter shot him. His death prompted weeks of protests and led to first- and second-degree manslaughter charges against Potter.
A
supplemental police report in the robbery case, also obtained by Fox
News, identified Wright as a "documented LOUD PACK gang member."
The
alleged accomplice, Emajay Driver, had gone to high school with the
victim and was invited over to the apartment she shared with a roommate
the night before at around 10 p.m., according to the police report. He
brought Wright, whom the victim had not met previously.
The group
drank and smoked marijuana, listening to music and "hanging out" until
around 2:30 a.m., when the young women asked Wright and Driver to leave,
according to court documents.
The next morning, her roommate handed over her half of the rent, which the visitors saw her tuck into her bra.
Wright
allegedly told Driver he didn’t have to work that day and that they
should "hit some stains," slang for robbing people, according to the
police report.
The roommate left for work, and once the victim was
alone in the apartment, Wright allegedly tried to rob her but left
empty-handed. Wright and Driver were arrested five days later.
Wright later was said to have violated the terms of his release by allegedly waving a handgun in public in Minneapolis.
When police pulled him over in April, they found a warrant for that incident and tried to arrest him.
Video
from Potter’s bodycam shows Wright surrounded by police officers. He
broke free from their grip, jumped into the driver’s seat of his car and
shifted it into gear.
"Taser! Taser!" Potter yells in the video,
even as she pulls out her handgun and fires a single shot, which struck
Wright. She has maintained that she meant to use her Taser.
The car crashed up the road. Wright died and a passenger was injured.
Police
had initially pulled him over for expired license tags and an air
freshener improperly placed in his rearview mirror, but officers found
the warrant when they ran his license.
Potter
originally faced a second-degree manslaughter charge, but Minnesota
Attorney General Keith Ellison announced the additional first-degree
charge last Thursday. The more serious charge would carry a maximum
penalty of 15 years in prison.
Wright's estate also faces a pair of posthumous civil lawsuits alleging that he shot two other people.
One
of them, Caleb Livingston, has been in a "vegetative state" since
Wright allegedly shot him in the head in 2019, according to one lawsuit.
The other alleged victim, a former classmate named Joshua Hodges, has
alleged that Wright and an accomplice shot him in the leg and stole his
car just weeks before the Potter incident.
Driver was convicted in connection with the robbery in December 2020, according to court documents, and the charges against Wright were dismissed after his death.