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Stunning Statements From a Yale Epidemiologist on Vaccines and Early Treatment
Dr. Harvey Risch appeared on Life, Liberty, and Levin Sunday night and provided information that the health bureaucracy doesnāt want Americans to hear. Risch is a Yale epidemiologist who has published more than 300 original research papers cited over 40,000 times on Google Scholar. He has also served on the leadership staff of several prominent journals.
During his appearance, he discussed early treatment and vaccinating children. Since early in the pandemic, Risch has been frustrated that the health bureaucracy wonāt embrace any treatments. He wrote a paper advocating for the use of hydroxychloroquine after performing a meta-analysis of the available studies. Risch seemed genuinely surprised by the blowback his opinion generated.
He was not alone and remained in distinguished company. Successful, credentialed physicians, such as Dr. Scott Atlas and Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, who challenged the preferred narrative, came under attack professionally and personally. Dr. Anthony Fauci personally went after Dr. Risch when Risch continued to speak out. On Sunday night, he spoke out again.
Host Mark Levin noted the number of times Dr. Fauci has contradicted himself and expressed concern about the quality of information available to the public. Risch noted how the current flow of information works. āWell, as far as I can tell, itās a top-down structure, and most doctors do not get their information by going back and reading the original studies and making up their own minds.ā So even if you like your doctor, take all the information youāve found to your appointment with you.
https://pjmedia.com/columns/stacey-lennox/2021/10/26/stunning-statements-from-a-yale-epidemiologist-on-vaccines-and-early-treatment-n1526850
Radio Silence: Where's Dan Bongino?
The Fox News contributor, successful podcaster, and tech entrepreneur added ānationally syndicated talk hostā to his resume in May. But, curiously, The Dan Bongino Show is all reruns this week.
Bongino filled the spot left behind by Rush Limbaugh on many radio stations across the country when the radio icon succumbed to lung cancer in February.
The host is currently in a showdown with his radio syndicator, Cumulus, over the companyās COVID-19 shot mandate. The company wonāt comment on the battle with Bongino. He, however, is anything but silent, telling his podcast listeners that heās lost a lot of sleep over the conflict, but believes heās right to use his position to fight on behalf of Cumulus employees who will lose their jobs if they canāt or wonāt get the shot.
Bongino, who battles Hodgkinās lymphoma, got a COVID-19 shot on the advice of his doctor.
Industry publication RadioInk.com reported that Bongino said his fight with Cumulus is getting downright āugly.ā
They didnāt consult with us content providers. I strongly object to the mandate. The fight with them is having a real impact. Behind the scenes itās getting a little ugly here. I wasnāt on the radio today. I donāt know what they did, played the ābest ofā or whatever. You donāt treat people this way.
Bonginoās website calls the nationwide protest against compulsory injections a ārebellionā against āthe immoral, unethical, anti-science vaccine mandates.ā
Bongino says he got a gut punch when he received an email from a Cumulus employee, who requested a religious exemption but was denied. It motivated him to fight harder for people like them.
[T]hey denied his religious request. It was a slap in the face to not be legitimately considered. When Cumulus needed him during the pandemic he was there for them. Folks, you donāt treat people that way. Iām not going to let it happen. This fight has been wearing me down but itās not wearing me out.
https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/victoria-taft/2021/10/28/radio-silence-wheres-dan-bongino-n1527635
Everybody needs to read this
The Hundred-Year Lie: How to Protect Yourself from the Chemicals That Are Destroying Your Health
Combining the impact of the classic bestseller Silent Spring with Fast Food Nation, The Hundred-Year Lie presents a devastating expose of how chemicals in everyday products are ruining our health. Over the past one hundred years, we have been guinea pigs in a vast chemistry experiment that uses our bodies, our health, and our good will to test the proposition that modern science can improve upon nature. In The Hundred-Year Lie, investigative journalist RandallFitzgerald shatters dozens of myths being perpetuated by the chemical, pharmaceutical and processed food industries. Find out why you would never be FDA-approvedand why humans are becoming one of the most polluted species on the planet: The average American now carries a body burden of 700 or more synthetic chemicals, including Teflon, plastics, and dozens of pesticides. Musk fragrances used in detergents and air fresheners are not filtered out by our current water treatment facilities, ending up in our drinking water. The artificial sweetener aspartame, an ingredient in 1,200 food products from diet drinks to chewing gum, has been linked to eighty-eight toxic symptoms.Fitzgerald not only sheds light on the problems we face from the unprecedented chemical onslaught, he presents suggestions for what we can to do to turn the tide
Audio from the "Live 88" album (unknown location and date).
Video from Italian TV broadcast (Rome, 11 April 1988).
World Migration Tour. Song from the album "Even in the Quietest Moments" (1977), which was written by Rick Davies & Roger Hodgson.
Supertramp - From Now On (Live 1988)
>This fight has been wearing me down but itās not wearing me out.
Some of us have been in this fight for a lot long then Danā¦Tell him to toughen ..WE Do/Did it for Freeā¦ he's making money ā¦STOP Cryingā¦.WE don't
You Get what you put inā¦And People get what they deserveā¦ā¦Idiots
āWe gotta take these motherf**kers outā: Rutgers professor says white people ācommitted to being villainsā
Brittney Cooper, a professor at Rutgers University, has caused outrage over comments she made at an event about ācritical race theoryā (CRT) where she suggested white people should be ātaken out.ā
During an event entitled āUnpacking the Attacks on Critical Race Theoryā hosted by The Root, Cooper made several comments that have since spread across social media and caused uproar. The event was held on September 21, but was only recently noticed by her critics.
āThe thing I want to say to you is we got to take these motherf**kers out. But, like, we can't say that, right?ā Cooper said, before quickly adding: āI do not believe in a project of violence. I truly don't.ā She claimed critical race theory is the āproperā teaching of American history.
She went on to refer to āwhitenessā as āan inconvenient interruptionā in black peopleās history.
āWhiteness is going to have an end date, because despite what White people think of themselves, they do not defy the laws of eternity.ā
Cooper later claimed white people are ācommitted to being villains in the aggregateā and said they ādeserveā a low birth rate.
https://www.rt.com/usa/538897-rutgers-professor-white-people-villains/
Not in my life timeā¦
KEK..Gave me a chuckle ..And SHIEEEEEEET..kekeke
Student at Michigan State University Cafeteria Hands Out Face Masks āFor Minorities Only!!āā¦ā$10 For White People!!ā
Michigan State University, known for being less liberal than its top rival, the University of Michigan, has been making the news recently, but for all the wrong reasons.
Yesterday, we wrote about an email from MSUās Dean of Students and parents telling them to choose their costumes wisely, warning them that ācostumes can elicit trauma if they poke fun at the experiences of historical harm, bigotry or displacement.ā
In their letter to adult students that provides guidelines about how they can or cannot dress for Halloween, they share a list of inappropriate Halloween costumes that include pandemic victims, body-shaming costumes, cultural stereotypes, or national tragedies. National tragedies???
Yesterday, Chrissy Clark, a reporter who covers education for the Daily Mail, shared an incredible photo of a masked black student sitting outside of a cafeteria at MSU with a sign that reads: āFree Masks and Glove for MINORITIES ONLY!! $10 per mask for White People!!ā
Students at a Michigan State cafeteria are handing out masks for āminorities onlyā pic.twitter.com/TY3wMMCNkp
ā Chrissy Clark (@chrissyclark_) October 27, 2021
https://100percentfedup.com/students-at-michigan-state-university-cafeteria-handing-out-face-masks-for-minorities-only-10-for-white-people/
You're welcomeā¦Glad I could help ..
>If Flynn and Trump got fucked, whatās going to happen to (You)?
WE..Will Surviveā¦.Been doing it long beforeā¦Trump and Flynn ā¦How Stupid do you think people really are..kekekeke
>when the employers are sitting their with their fucking thumbs up their asses unable to make product,
GET More Government Handouts ā¦.THEY don't care ā¦Watch what happens why the economy collapses ā¦..Don't be deceivedā¦ ITS COMING ā¦Will make 1929 Look like a Church picnic
This is not the version of āDonāt Let Me Downā heard on the single but the version from the Let It Beā¦ Naked album ā a composite of both versions that were performed on the roof of Apple in Savile Row
During filming on the roof of Apple, two days after the recording of the track, the band played āDonāt Let Me Downā right after doing two versions of 'Get Backā and it led straight into 'Iāve Got A Feelingā. Michael Lindsay-Hogg was once again directing a Beatlesā shoot. He and Paul met regularly at the tail end of 1968, while Hogg was directing The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus, to discuss the filming of The Beatlesā session in January. By the time that fateful Thursday came around, the penultimate day of January would be the last time The Beatles ever played together in front of any kind of audience.
The Beatles - Don't Let Me Down