Anonymous ID: 6b4aff May 13, 2021, 8:25 a.m. No.13651559   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1651

>>13651514

>>13651492

 

Collectively, we have had enough. That energy is real. Trust IS Earned. In a world of constant lies, mind games, and disinformation, it's taken it's toll for sure.

(Never noticed that typo. Missing "N".)

 

1358

Q !4pRcUA0lBE 05/13/2018 02:54:08

 

Trust must be earned.

Trust is not blind, nor is truth.

We fight every sigle day on behalf of you, the people who put us here.

We knew this day would come.

We will never forget.

Do not glorify us.

We are merely the vehicle.

You are what matters.

You are hope.

You are love.

You are peace.

Stay united.

Stay together.

Stay strong.

This is bigger than any one person or entity.

You are fighting for truth - collectively.

Will of the people.

Trust in yourself.

The choice will always be yours.

God bless you all.

Where we go one, we go ALL.

Q+

Anonymous ID: 6b4aff May 13, 2021, 9:12 a.m. No.13651967   🗄️.is 🔗kun

BIBLICAL. ENVY. = EVIL

 

‘Vaccine envy is real,’ says a Cleveland Clinic pediatrician. Here’s what she’s telling parents and teens about the COVID-19 vaccine

 

Regulators have given the go-ahead for younger teens to begin getting Pfizer’s COVID-19 shots, raising questions for some parents who want to better understand how a vaccine could affect their teenagers.

 

Pediatricians across the U.S. are fielding these questions, which range from whether the vaccine is even necessary for teens and children — they are in fact “effective transmitters” of the virus — to whether side effects will be that different than what adults experience.

 

“Chances are they’re going to do great with a vaccine, and they’re going to have really good protection,” says Dr. Michelle Medina, a pediatrician and a member of the Cleveland Clinic’s vaccines advisory committee.

 

BioNTech SE BNTX, -3.18% and Pfizer Inc.’s PFE, 1.37% COVID-19 vaccine is the first shot authorized for teens between the ages of 12 and 15 years old. It’s expected that teens in this age group can start getting their shots on Thursday.

 

“The biggest concern that we hear about from parents…is, these are young kids, with a long life ahead of them,” Medina said. “That’s always the thing that makes people hesitate. However, when you do weigh the potential risks versus the benefits, I think that scale still tips very heavily on the benefit side of things.”

 

more

https://www.marketwatch.com/story/vaccine-envy-is-real-says-a-cleveland-clinic-pediatrician-heres-what-shes-telling-parents-and-teens-about-the-covid-19-vaccine-11620918335?