Anonymous ID: 81e45b Aug. 10, 2021, 9:05 a.m. No.81087   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>81002

>You can't reach these people using logic and reason

Correct

Programmed to follow authority - remember grade school?

Some never graduated

>insane asylum

true.

even when one is aware of what is going on, this does not insulate u from the psychological effects. not possible to simply think it away, the atmosphere is pervasive. good to stay away from public places but 18 mos is a long time.

 

Lindell is inspiring -

==we cannot live in fear anymore=

Anonymous ID: 81e45b Aug. 10, 2021, 10:09 a.m. No.81119   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>1122 >>1126

https://t.me/praying_medic/3989

 

Jack Posobiec |@JackPosobiec

 

Source tells me AZ Gov Candidate @KariLake just walked out of the RGA Conference. She Is headed to the Mike Lindell symposium in South Dakota instead.

Anonymous ID: 81e45b Aug. 10, 2021, 10:25 a.m. No.81124   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>1126

After legal threat, 2 Kirksville dental students don't have to get mandatory COVID vaccine

 

KIRKSVILLE, Mo. โ€” It took the threat of a lawsuit, but two Kirksville dental school students will now not be required to get a mandatory COVID-19 vaccine.

 

Ashley Swanson and Sharon Murza are Christians who attend A.T. Still University's Missouri School of Dentistry and Oral Health in Kirksville.

 

According to Liberty Counsel, a non-profit litigation organization with a particular focus on religious freedom, Swanson and Murza did not want to get the vaccine for religious reasons.

 

Their attorney said the women believe that getting the shot would be sinful disobedience to God.

 

Liberty Counsel claims that when Swanson and Murza requested a religious exemption, school officials gave them the runaround.

 

The attorney said the two were first told there was no form to fill out for a religious exemption and that they should submit an email explaining why they were requesting the exemption.

 

After doing so, they then received an email from the school saying there was now a form they needed to fill out.

 

After filling out that form, the university told them their request had been "denied due to unsubstantiated evidence."

 

Liberty Counsel says when the students asked the university to clarify what "evidence" the school was seeking, they each received a curt non-response, telling them their exemption request had been denied and that "there is no appeal process based on guidelines by university legal counsel."

 

In a demand letter Liberty Counsel sent to the university, the women's attorney told the school the failure to grant the requested exemption is a violation of both state and federal law, and the organization threatened legal action.

 

After receiving the letter, A.T. Still University then changed its decision and approved the religious exemption requested by Murza and Swanson.

 

When KTVO asked the university for a comment, Sean Oโ€™Connor, senior director of communication and marketing, simply said, "ATSU has always allowed appropriate medical and religious exemptions."

 

When asked to speak to KTVO about the matter, the two students politely declined.

 

"We appreciate the invitation for an interview but think it would be best to decline to maintain peace with the school and anyone else who would see it," Swanson wrote.

 

https://ktvo.com/news/local/after-legal-threat-2-kirksville-dental-students-dont-have-to-get-mandatory-covid-vaccine