Anonymous ID: a0e804 Sept. 24, 2021, 5:49 a.m. No.14650130   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Newsom signs bills allowing children to hide sex operations and abortions from parents

 

California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two bills on Wednesday relating to abortion rights, with both helping children hide medical information from parents.

 

The first bill, AB 1356, will create new offenses arising from recording or photographing patients or providers within 100 feet of the entrance to a reproductive health services facility. The other, AB 1184, will keep patient information confidential for patients who are not the primary policyholder for their health insurance. Healthcare services that patients can keep confidential include "reproductive health care and gender-affirming care," according to the governor's statement.

 

“California has been a leader in protecting access to sexual and reproductive rights, but as we’ve seen recently with unprecedented attacks on these rights, we can and must do more,” Newsom said in his statement. “I applaud the establishment of the California Future of Abortion Council and look forward to its important work to advance our state’s leadership on this vital issue. I’m proud today to sign these two bills that demonstrate our dedication to strengthening and further protecting access to reproductive health care services in California.”

 

Newsom's statement noted his signing of the bills came after Texas enacted a ban on abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, promising California would "remain a haven for all Californians, and for those coming from out-of-state seeking reproductive health services here."

 

All nine Republican members of the California Senate opposed the signing of AB 1184 and sent a letter to Newsom urging him to veto the bill.

 

“We should be encouraging parents and family to be involved in their children’s lives, not removing them further from it,” read the letter.

 

Newsom's signing of the twin bills comes just over a week after he handily defeated a recall effort on Sept. 14. The election is set to cost taxpayers roughly $276 million.

 

The governor's office did not immediately respond to the Washington Examiner's request for comment.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/newsom-signs-bills-allowing-children-171900404.html

Anonymous ID: a0e804 Sept. 24, 2021, 6:21 a.m. No.14650330   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0337

DS hijacking the Narrative on the "Red Pill."

 

A daily pill to treat Covid could be just months away, scientists say

 

Within a day of testing positive for Covid-19 in June, Miranda Kelly was sick enough to be scared. At 44, with diabetes and high blood pressure, Kelly, a certified nursing assistant, was having trouble breathing, symptoms serious enough to send her to the emergency room.

 

When her husband, Joe, 46, fell ill with the virus, too, she really got worried, especially about their five teenagers at home: “I thought: ‘I hope to God we don’t wind up on ventilators. We have children. Who’s going to raise these kids?’”

 

But the Kellys, who live in Seattle, had agreed just after their diagnoses to join a clinical trial at the nearby Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center that’s part of an international effort to test an antiviral treatment that could halt Covid early in its course.

 

By the next day, the couple were taking four pills, twice a day. Although they weren’t told whether they had received an active medication or a placebo, within a week, they said, their symptoms were better. Within two weeks, they had recovered.

 

“I don’t know if we got the treatment, but I kind of feel like we did,” Miranda Kelly said. “To have all these underlying conditions, I felt like the recovery was very quick.”

 

The Kellys have a role in developing what could be the world’s next chance to thwart Covid: a short-term regimen of daily pills that can fight the virus early after diagnosis and conceivably prevent symptoms from developing after exposure.

 

“Oral antivirals have the potential to not only curtail the duration of one’s Covid-19 syndrome, but also have the potential to limit transmission to people in your household if you are sick,” said Timothy Sheahan, a virologist at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill who has helped pioneer the therapies.

 

Antivirals are already essential treatments for other viral infections, including hepatitis C and HIV. One of the best known is Tamiflu, the widely prescribed pill that can shorten the duration of influenza and reduce the risk of hospitalization if it is given quickly.

 

The medications, developed to treat and prevent viral infections in people and animals, work differently depending on the type. But they can be engineered to boost the immune system to fight infection, block receptors so viruses can’t enter healthy cells or lower the amount of active virus in the body.

 

At least three promising antivirals for Covid are being tested in clinical trials, with results expected as soon as late fall or winter, said Carl Dieffenbach, director of the Division of AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, who is overseeing antiviral development.

 

“I think that we will have answers as to what these pills are capable of within the next several months,” Dieffenbach said.

 

The top contender is a medication from Merck & Co. and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics called molnupiravir, Dieffenbach said. That is the product being tested in the Kellys’ Seattle trial. Two others are a candidate from Pfizer, known as PF-07321332, and AT-527, an antiviral produced by Roche and Atea Pharmaceuticals.

 

They work by interfering with the virus’s ability to replicate in human cells. In the case of molnupiravir, the enzyme that copies the viral genetic material is forced to make so many mistakes that the virus can’t reproduce. That, in turn, reduces a patient’s viral load, shortening infection time and preventing the kind of dangerous immune response that can cause serious illness or death.

 

So far, only one antiviral drug, remdesivir, has been approved to treat Covid. But it is given intravenously to patients ill enough to be hospitalized, and it isn’t intended for early, widespread use. By contrast, the top contenders under study can be packaged as pills.

 

Sheahan, who also performed preclinical work on remdesivir, led an early study in mice that showed that molnupiravir could prevent early disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid. The formula was discovered at Emory University and later acquired by Ridgeback and Merck.

 

Clinical trials have followed, including an early trial of 202 participants last spring that showed that molnupiravir rapidly reduced the levels of infectious virus. Merck Chief Executive Robert Davis said this month that the company expects data from its larger phase 3 trials in the coming weeks, with the potential to seek emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration “before year-end.”

 

Pfizer launched a combined phase 2 and 3 trial of its product Sept. 1, and Atea officials said they expect results from phase 2 and phase 3 trials later this year.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/daily-pill-treat-covid-could-083032667.html

Anonymous ID: a0e804 Sept. 24, 2021, 6:38 a.m. No.14650457   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14650440

(kek)

 

4484

Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 06/20/2020 13:00:58

https://twitter.com/TheJusticeDept/status/1274148764769452033

SDNY

Importance of SDNY control?

Jurisdiction:

Weiner evidence collection

Clinton Foundation

Epstein evidence collection

Ukraine

(focus on above [for now])

[Watch NYC]

https://twitter.com/SDNYnews/status/1274178732476059650

THE GUARD REFUSING TO STEP DOWN?

POTUS refusal to formally nominate?

APPOINTED TO POST BY SDNY JUDGES [unusual][removal of 'acting']?

The stakes are high.

They will fight.

Super bowl puppy show

Q

Anonymous ID: a0e804 Sept. 24, 2021, 6:54 a.m. No.14650580   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14650531

Part of what always bugged me about Thomas.

His part as Monsanto attorney. Clearly had no issues with the toxic shit they were doing to our food and water.