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)
DON'T FORGET...FREEDOM OF SPEECH !
Project Veritas on Monday released video of a senior campaign advisor
admitting New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy will impose a state-wide
Covid vaccine mandate AFTER re-election.
Phil Murphy is hiding information from the public in order to win independents, moderates and undecided voters.
Wendy Martinez, a senior advisor for Phil Murphy told a Project
Veritas journalist the governor is waiting to impose the mandates until
after the election because the “independents and undecided” will not
vote for him if he did mandates.
“He [Murphy] is going to do it [COVID vaccine mandate], but he
couldn’t do it before the elections,” Martinez said. “Because they’re
[undecided and independents] all into the my rights, my sh*t,” Martinez
said.
“This appears to be a top down understanding,” James O’Keefe said.
Matthew Urquijo, manager of NJ Forward said, “Once, you know, we have
a win, he’s like, ‘Alright, guns blazing,” like, who cares? I’m in it,
let’s do the mandates, let’s do this, XY and Z.”
On Sunday night, Arizona Patriots held a rally to free
political prisoners in Scottsdale, Arizona, and MAGA rappers turned it
up.
Kelvin J, Bryson Gray, and
Tyson James performed conservative rap hits in support of the Jan 6
political prisoners and Jake Angelli, The “Q Shaman”.
Bryson Gray is the most banned rapper alive after Youtube removed his
viral “Let’s Go Brandon” song for violating Youtube’s medical
disinformation policy.
“Let’s Go Brandon, The Pandemic ain’t real they just planned it”, raps Bryson Gray.
Unlike globalist endorsed rappers Gray uses clean language and makes godly rap music.
Rappers that use horrible and degrading language towards women,
racial slurs against Asians, and promote illegal and immoral activity,
are not deplatformed or demonetized.
“Let’s Go Brandon” immediately went viral and reached #1 on Apple music.
For the first time, Bryson Gray and Tyson James performed the song live on stage.
A mother was left stunned and outraged this week when she was made aware of her son receiving a Covid-19 vaccine at his high school without her consent.
Somehow, she says, her son was able to sign the parental consent form himself without anyone notifying her before he received his jab.
Allowing the minor to receive the Covid vaccine without parental consent directly violates the state guidelines, which require a parent or guardian to sign off on the experimental jab before it can be administered to ANYONE who is under the age of 18. The policy is clearly stated as such on the Louisiana Department of Health’s website.
G. Shelly Maturin, the attorney representing Ravain, called out both the school as well as the vaccine clinic for their ‘lawless behavior’ that has created a “nightmare” situation. Maturin also claims that multiple other underage students were also permitted to receive the experimental vaccine without parental consent.
He wrote in a statement:
“The egregious and reckless actions of Ochsner and East Jefferson High school went well beyond any legal and moral bounds and at a minimum, constitute a battery upon the minor child. Their actions should shock the conscience of all citizens of Louisiana.”
Maturin says he’s examining every avenue to hold the vaccine clinic and the district accountable for their egregious actions.
The health care provider who administered the shots at the school, Ochsner Health System, apologized for their employees who ignored the protocols they had in place when vaccinating students at East Jefferson High School. They also confirmed that the incident took place at one of their mobile vaccine clinics that was part of a school vaccination event on October 21, 2021.
According to 4WWL, A spokesperson from Ochsner said the following:
“While we firmly believe in vaccinating adolescents to keep them safe from COVID-19, this should be done only with parental consent. Our team has been notified that a student was vaccinated without proper parental consent at a school vaccination event on October 20, 2021.We have procedures in place to ensure that all policies are followed; however, in this instance, this did not occur. We have taken immediate action to review our on-site vaccination policies and to ensure that these policies will be strictly enforced moving forward.
As a leading healthcare provider in this community, we value the trust that parents put in us to care for their children, and we are revising our school vaccination program to ensure that this does not happen again.
We are in communication with the parent who brought this to our attention. We offer our sincere regret and apology for any distress this has caused.”
Jefferson Parish Public Schools also confirmed that the incident took place in a statement that was released by the board on Friday night. The letter made clear that the school board had partnered “with multiple healthcare providers” to provide vaccinations to students and staff members on school grounds. They also acknowledge that “obtaining written consent” from a parent before a student receives a jab would be considered standard operating procedure but the practice was not followed by the vaccine clinic.
Jefferson Parish Public Schools released a state late Friday night:
“Today, we were made aware of an incident that occurred this week during a vaccine event held by Ochsner Health, whereby a student received a vaccine without parental consent. Ochsner Health officials have informed us that they are conducting a thorough investigation of the vaccine event to ensure this was an isolated incident and does not occur again.
We believe that broad participation in vaccinations reduces the risk of COVID-19 transmission and is essential to keeping our schools and community safe and healthy. Jefferson Parish Schools has partnered with multiple healthcare partners to provide vaccination opportunities to eligible employees and students since vaccines first became available. Our standard operating procedures include obtaining written consent from a parent or legal guardian prior to a student receiving the vaccine during an event conducted at one of our schools.
We will continue to work with Ochsner Health and our other healthcare partners to ensure vaccination events conducted on our campuses follow this process.”
Either way, whether it was the school’s negligence or the healthcare provider’s, these adults need to be held accountable. A parental consent form for children under 18 years old is not a new concept by any stretch of the imagination. Not knowing how their own procedures weren’t followed isn’t a good enough excuse for this type of incident to occur – especially if they are planning on continuing to administer the experimental vaccine at the school.
An illegal alien was arrested on Wednesday after killing two BYU students in a crash in Orem, Utah.
Ceasar Castellon-Flores killed killed Hailee York, 21, of
Lehi, and Ashlyn Hanzon, 21, of Pearland, Texas when he flew through an
intersection on Friday. Cstellon-Flores does not have a license and was
in the country illegally.
An unlicensed driver who was allegedly trying to “beat the light”
when he crashed into another vehicle, killing two BYU students, was
booked into the Utah County Jail on Wednesday.
Ceasar Castellon-Flores, 20, of Orem, was arrested for investigation
of two counts of manslaughter, negligent collision, reckless driving,
speeding and two counts of not obtaining a license.
Friday night, a crash at the intersection of 400 S. State in Orem
killed Hailee York, 21, of Lehi, and Ashlyn Hanzon, 21, of Pearland,
Texas. The women were in a Chevy Malibu making a left turn onto State
Street when a Jeep Cherokee allegedly tried to speed through the
intersection after it turned yellow, according to a police booking
affidavit…
…Police noted that the driver of the Jeep, Castellon-Flores, actually
passed other cars in front of him that were in the process of slowing
and stopping for the traffic signal. Investigators determined that
Castellon-Flores was traveling 68 mph in a 40 mph zone, and then
increased his speed to 73 mph once the light turned yellow, according to
the affidavit. When he realized he was about to hit another car, the
Jeep was only able to reduce its speed to 67 mph before the collision,
the affidavit states.
Castellon-Flores is an undocumented citizen, according to the
affidavit, and appeared to officers to be “making an attempt to flee or
elude police” when they came to his house after the investigation to
look for him.
Its
Republican governor weathered months of scorn for loosening pandemic
restrictions ahead of other state leaders. Its case counts, when on the
rise, are often cited by critics as evidence that the entire Republican
approach to managing the virus has failed.
But drops in Florida’s case counts invite a fraction of the attention.
New infections per 100,000 residents dropped to 12 over the past week, according to the New York Times coronavirus tracker. Over the past 14 days, cases dropped by 48%.
Other states with far more expansive pandemic restrictions are seeing COVID-19 continue to spread at faster rates than Florida.
In New York, for example, the rate of new cases is more than double that of Florida’s at 25 per 100,000 residents over the past week.
In Washington state, the rate of new infections per 100,000 residents was at 31 during the past week.
Critics
have vilified Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for a pandemic response that
deviated early from what other states did to limit transmission. He
allowed businesses to resume operations with some limits in early May
2020, just two months after the virus shuttered virtually the entire
country, and by September of last year had lifted all restrictions and began efforts to limit new ones that local governments could impose.
J.
Edwin Benton, a political science professor at the University of South
Florida who cast doubt on the veracity of Florida’s current numbers,
suggested DeSantis’ political ambitions have likely driven both his
pandemic-related decisions and the intense attention paid to them.
“It’s
a right-wing approach, and it’s just a page out of Trump’s playbook,”
Benton told the Washington Examiner. “He’s doing it to mimic what Trump
would still be doing and did do prior to being voted out of office.”
Other
Republican governors who ditched restrictions early or have so far
resisted pressure to require vaccination have faced much less heat for
pursuing the same kind of policies as DeSantis; Benton said that’s
because “they aren’t running for president” like Florida’s chief
executive.
Few of the more dramatic predictions about the result of DeSantis’ approach have come to pass.
In the spring, low case counts and low unemployment earned DeSantis some positive media coverage and a limited amount of praise.
But
the seeming success of his refusal to mandate masks, social-distancing
measures, and, ultimately, vaccines did not silence many of his more
vocal critics, who continued to sound the alarm over the summer of
DeSantis’ push to reopen schools fully without any masking requirements
in the classroom.
That changed in August and September when the
highly contagious delta variant drove a deadly wave of new infections
that hit Florida, with its high population of elderly residents,
especially hard.
The spike in cases, hospitalizations, and deaths attracted widespread nationalcoverage
and a fresh round of criticism aimed at DeSantis, who was at that point
not just declining to implement pandemic-related mandates statewide but
actively attempting to stop any Florida entity from adopting them on
their own.
Florida’s apparent emergence from that wave and return to a transmission rate lowerthanitsneighbors and much of the country has warranted little reevaluation of the narrative surrounding DeSantis’ stewardship of the state.
While
Florida’s summer surge in cases was viewed in media coverage and
political commentary through the lens of DeSantis’ leadership, the
state’s current COVID-19 decline has been framed as a product of trendsaffecting all states — when it’s warranted coverage at all.
In
Washington state, with nearly three times the number of new COVID-19
infections this past week than Florida, state employees faced a deadline
Monday to take the vaccine or lose their jobs.
Some sectors of
New York, including healthcare workers and New York City school
personnel, have also faced vaccine mandates that so far have not brought
COVID-19 infections down to the level currently seen in Florida.
Chicago museum fires all of it's mostly White female, financially well-off docents for lack of diversity
Emma Colton
·4 min read
The Art Institute of Chicago fired all of its trained volunteers and guides last month, who were mostly older White women, to diversify its team.
"We
were surprised, we were disappointed," Gigi Vaffis, president of the
docent council, said in an interview with radio station WBEZ of the
firings. "There is an army of very highly skilled docents that are
willing and ready and able to continue with arts education."
The
Art Institute used to have more than 100 docents, 82 of whom were
active, until an executive director of learning and engagement, Veronica
Stein, sent an email on Sept. 3 firing them all, the Wall Street Journal reported. Docents are trained volunteers who lead tours of museums, and at the Art Institute, they averaged 15 years of unpaid service.
back up to restore default view.
The
firings were apparently sparked by the fact that most of the docent
staff was composed of older White, financially well-off women, the
outlet reported. Stein said that the museum needed to take a new path
"in a way that allows community members of all income levels to
participate, responds to issues of class and income equity, and does not
require financial flexibility."
The fired docents were offered a two-year free pass to the museum as gratitude for their previous service.
The
institute is one of America’s oldest and largest museums, with its
docent program launching in 1961 as part of an initiative of the Woman’s
Board and the Junior League of Chicago.
The docents sent a
letter on Sept. 13 detailing the staff "engaged in eighteen months of
twice-a-week training to qualify as a docent, five years of continual
research and writing to meet the criteria of 13 museum content areas,
and monthly and bi-weekly trainings to further educate ourselves with
the materials, processes and cultural context" of the museum’s pieces.
"It
was nearly a full-time job," Dietrich Klevorn, a docent since 2012,
told the Wall Street Journal. "We had to spend a lot of time physically
in the museum studying works of art, researching, putting tours
together."
"We had to be very comprehensive about everything as
we talked with them, moving through the space," she said. Klevorn was
the only docent to speak on the record to WSJ, after the museum
reportedly requested they not speak to the media. The institute told Fox
News later Sunday that "the museum did not ask the docents not to speak
to media," but that the docent council decided to decline further
comment to the press.
The Chicago Tribune’s Editorial Board even hit back at the museum’s decision, calling Stein’s termination letter to the docents as "weaselly."
"Why
not invest some time in recruiting new, diverse docents? Why not grow
the corps in such a way that it’s refreshed? Why not help docents who
need help with expenses or child care? Why not have a hybrid model, at
least until the current docents exit?" the board wrote in its Sept. 27
opinion piece.
"Instead
of trashing volunteerism as inherently elitist, why not avow and attest
to its ongoing value as a vital part of necessary diversification and
cultural change?"
Robert Levy, chairman of the Art Institute,
defended the decision to fire the docents days later in his own op-ed,
and said that the plan to do so had been in the works for 12 years.
"Critical
self-reflection and participatory, recuperative action is required if
we are to remain relevant to the changing audiences seeking connection
to art," he wrote.
Klevorn,
who is Black, conceded to WSJ that the docent staff was "not a
demographically representative population." Vaffis, however, noted that
the staff was a diverse group socioeconomically, and included a fireman
and condo manager among the group.
"Still, the Art Institute
hasn’t explained why they had to be jettisoned en masse and not
diversified over time. The museum appears to be in the grips of a
self-defeating overcorrection. It has adopted the language of diversity,
inclusion and equity so completely that it was willing to fire the same
upper-middle class volunteers it relies on for charitable donations,"
WSJ noted.
The Art Institute told Fox News in comment on Sunday that they "have not fired anyone."
"We
thought we were being very clear when outlining our plan, but somehow
this has been twisted into unfounded accusations of reverse racism
resulting in lewd threats against our staff. We’re simply pausing a
volunteer educator program and would never want to diminish the
contributions they have made. This should not be the roots of a culture
war," a spokesperson for the institute said.
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