HAKE NEWS 08/05/21 Thu. Surgeon General Pushes Vaxx for Kids
VIDEO ARCHIVE: Periscope/Twitter | YouTube | Podcast via jlptalk.com
Hake News for The Jesse Lee Peterson Show, Thursday, August 5, 2021
End of Hour 1: Vaccines for Kids Likely to Get Green Light in Upcoming School Year: Surgeon General — but the inventor of the mRNA vaxx technology says risks don’t outweigh rewards! //
End of Hour 2: Mexico tries to sue US gun manufacturers. // Report: NCAA "undervalues" women's basketball. // Grammys will have a diversity and inclusion fine-print in contracts. // This week was Black Women's Equal Pay Day. //
After JLP, catch The Hake Report.
08/05/21 Thu. Hour 1
Vaccines for Kids Likely to Get Green Light in Upcoming School Year: Surgeon General — but the inventor of the mRNA vaxx technology says risks don’t outweigh rewards! //
SCAREMONGERING
(TheSkimm) Delta has a lot of people worried... chances of infection when “vaccinated” are maybe 50-60% less likely (so they’re thinking maybe you cut your chances in half — of getting it… but it’s supposed to greatly diminish harsh symptoms) — estimated 35,000 symptomatic cases in the US each week.
Phony Fauci reportedly warns: it's still possible to get it. Supposedly about 0.004% of “vaccinated” people got a breakthrough case that required hospitalization. One study found about 19% of breakthrough cases experienced long-haul symptoms. Some ended in death.
For those who already got it: in one study, less than 1% of those who've had a severe case got it again. So far, it looks like those who do test positive again may have milder symptoms.
These women are pushing masks, and testing. No mention of the obvious: Be healthy and clean, wash your hands, keep personal space from others. One obvious thing they do mention: Get outside! — the majority of known cases have been traced to indoor transmission. But they ignore that sunshine is good for you.
Vaccines for Kids Likely to Get Green Light in Upcoming School Year: Surgeon General
That’s that creepy pro-abortion foreigner Vivek Murthy, evil Obama holdover — theSkimm wicked females talked to him, BTW. (The Epoch Times) In fact, he said it on the “Skimm This” podcast! BARF!
“What are the odds that a vaccine for kids under 12 will be approved during the next school year?” Murthy was asked as part of the podcast’s “lightening round.”
Murthy responded by saying that he thinks that “the odds are high” — for “emergency use” — for a disease that’s extremely low-risk to most young children.
A (greedy?) Pfizer spokesman said in June they expect testing data from their ongoing experiments on 5 to 11-year-olds by September and would likely ask regulators for emergency use authorization later that month. Data for children 2 to 5 years old could arrive soon after that, the spokesman said.
WARNING
U.S. and European bureaucrats have admitted concerns about supposedly rare cases of heart inflammation in children, especially boys (and younger men especially under 30) — particularly for the messenger-RNA so-called vaccines that I hear change your DNA.
The inventor of mRNA vaccine technology, Dr. Robert Malone, has said that the risk-benefit ratio of the vaccine for children doesn’t “look so good.”
“Typically, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices [ACIP] of the CDC would be evaluating risk-benefit ratio for a new vaccine in a vigorous way, using quality-adjust life years,” Malone told EpochTV’s “American Thought Leaders” program.
He said although older adults risk adverse events with vaccines, the risk of serious China Virus is pretty high, so they can claim the benefits outweigh the risks… BUT:
“Adolescents, in contrast, have a very, very low probability of disease or death from COVID … that calculation doesn’t come out looking so good.”
Malone urged people to take the time to do their research before making a decision.
“It’s up to you. It’s your body. It’s your choice. I strongly suggest that you take the time to get informed, do the best you can, and then make the decision that you think is right for you,” Malone said.
08/05/21 Thu. Hour 2
Mexico tries to sue US gun manufacturers. //
Report: NCAA "undervalues" women's basketball. //
Grammys will have a diversity and inclusion fine-print in contracts. //
This week was Black Women's Equal Pay Day. //
After JLP, catch The Hake Report.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Men's Forum first Thursday, 7 PM TONIGHT, Aug 5…
MEXICO ATTACKS THE SECOND AMENDMENT
(TheSkimm) Yesterday, the country of Mexico sued a group of US gun manufacturers, accusing them of negligent marketing, sale, and distribution of guns to Mexican drug cartels — SUING US FOR THEIR CORRUPTION!
Mexico said the "deadly flood of military-style" weapons over the border – reportedly over 2.5 million over the past decade – has victimized Mexican citizens and the gov. Supposedly least 70% of guns trafficked come from the U.S.
Now, amid a high homicide rate, Mexico wants these companies to take responsibility for THEIR failure! It's believed to be the first time a foreign gov’t has sued U.S. gun manufacturers. The companies have not responded.
The lawsuit could face challenges. In 2005, the U.S. gave gun manufacturers wide immunity from civil liability lawsuits. RIGHTLY SO.
KISSING UP TO WOMEN
(TheSkimm) The NCAA. A new report says it "undervalues" women's basketball teams and doesn't treat them equally to the men's teams. Surprising...absolutely no one. The org sparked outrage after a video from this year's March Madness tournament showed a bare-bones weight room for the women and a better weight room for the men. In response, the NCAA commissioned a gender-equity review of its basketball tournaments. The results: the org hasn't followed through on its commitment to "diversity, inclusion, and gender equity" in women's basketball. And that it puts more funding and value in the men's program. The NCAA's Board of Governors says it's "wholly committed" to being equitable and working to make changes.
The Grammys. Yesterday, the Recording Academy announced that the 2022 awards show will be produced with an inclusion rider – aka the fine print in a contract that helps ensure diversity. In recent years, the Grammys, Oscars, and Golden Globes have gotten flack for lacking diversity. Now the Recording Academy is saying 'we hear you.' It'll require Grammy producers to audition, interview, and hire people who've been "historically and systematically excluded from the industry." The academy's president and CEO called it a "monumental step" for the music community.
Black Women's Equal Pay Day was Tuesday, August 3rd omg. Black women earn, on average, 63 cents for every dollar paid to non-Hispanic white males. Today marks how long it takes Black women to make as much money as white men in 2020. Yes, it's an additional eight months.
MASK MADNESS
Florida County School Board Changes Course Again on Defying Governor’s Ban on School Mask Mandates
(The Epoch Times) Broward County schools on Aug. 3 again changed course on whether to comply with or defy an executive order by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis which prohibited schools from imposing mask mandates on students.
In a written statement to The Epoch Times, the school board has not changed its policy but “paused it.”
“In light of the governor’s executive order, the district is awaiting further guidance before rendering a decision on the mask mandate for the upcoming school year. At this time, the district’s face covering policy, which requires the use of masks in district schools and facilities, remains in place.”
The School Board plans to discuss next steps at a special meeting on August 10.
Dr. Vickie Cartwright, interim superintendent of Broward County schools is looking into the executive order further.
On July 30, the governor signed an executive order that protects parents’ right to make decisions regarding the masking of their children. A month earlier, he signed a bill that protected the parents’ “fundamental right” to make decisions for the upbringing, education, health care, or mental health of their minor children.
“Many Florida schoolchildren have suffered under forced masking policies,” DeSantis said.
Board of Education Sues California Governor Over School Mask Mandates
(The Epoch Times) The Orange County Board of Education (OCBE) voted during an Aug. 3 special session to sue Beta Gov. Gavin Newsom for extending the state of emergency and mandating masks for students during the next curricular year.
The board’s decision came after Newsom announced an extension to the state of emergency, requiring a mask mandate for students in grades K–12. Trustee Rebecca Gomez was absent during the vote.
“I want to do what’s in the best interest of the kids in our community,” OCBE President Mari Barke told The Epoch Times.
OCBE Vice President Ken Williams told The Epoch Times that the board fears “this could be a repeat of last year, and the attempt is to remove—by the state Supreme Court—the abuse of the emergency power, that Newsom is usurping.”
“There is no emergency that exists that he should be able to use the emergency powers to mandate such a statewide decree,” Williams said.
Around this time last year, the board filed a lawsuit against Newsom and the California Department of Public Health officer for mandating schools to instruct virtually.
“We had concerns last year, we still have those concerns now, and now this time is different,” Williams said.
“There is no run on hospital care. There are lots of emergency rooms and hospital rooms available for care. We’ve reached herd immunity. We have, I think close to two-thirds of America already vaccinated … Now, the time period is very different than last year.”
Williams said it’s the “children and the families” that are being negatively impacted by the governor’s orders.
Robert Tyler of Murrieta-based legal team Tyler & Bursch said Newsom is “no longer entitled to cling desperately to the state of emergency,” and could “not force children to wear face masks in school.”
Mask Mandate in St. Louis County Temporarily Blocked by Judge
(The Epoch Times) Residents of St. Louis County in Missouri won’t be mandated to wear masks for at least two weeks after a local judge granted a temporary restraining order against the requirement that was issued in July.
Circuit Judge Ellen “Nellie” Ribaudo on Aug. 3 ruled in favor of state Attorney General Eric Schmitt, who had filed a lawsuit to halt the mask mandate that was first announced by County Executive Sam Page and St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones.
The judge has scheduled a hearing on a preliminary injunction for Aug. 17.
Last week, the county council voted 5–2 to repeal the mandate that would have required masks to be worn in indoor public settings regardless of vaccination status, but the county executive insisted the mandate remained in effect.
“The court notes that although some will take this court’s ruling as a victory there is no victory while the COVID-19 virus remains a significant threat to public health and there is no question it remains a significant threat to public health,” Ribaudo wrote in her ruling. “There can be no victory until the residents of St. Louis County and the State of Missouri are no longer risking their health, well-being, and lives at the hands of COVID-19 virus.”
Schmitt said that Ribaudo’s ruling was a “huge win” for county residents.
“This is an important, hard-fought victory, but our fight against unreasonable and unconstitutional government overreach continues,” Schmitt said in a statement.
Page said on Twitter that he’s “disappointed” in the judge’s decision as “more and more mask requirements are put in place across the country to help slow this deadly virus.”
“The CDC recommends wearing masks in public places and we ask everyone to follow that guidance as we continue our vaccine efforts,” he wrote.
08/05/21 Thu. Hour 3
After JLP, catch The Hake Report.
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