Oct 24, 2021

COVID-19 Update





Reuters: (their ad feed is very intrusive and snoopy)

Americans can choose a COVID-19 booster shot that is different from their original inoculation but the recommendation is to stick with the vaccine they got first if it is available, White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci said on Friday.

"It's generally recommended that you get the booster that is the original regimen that you got in the first place," Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in an interview with CNN.

"But for one reason or other - and there may be different circumstances with people, availability or just different personal choices - you can, as we say, mix and match," Fauci said in an interview with CNN.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Thursday recommended the COVID-19 vaccine boosters for recipients of the Moderna Inc (MRNA.O) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N) shots, and said Americans can choose a different shot from their original inoculation as a booster.

Fauci's comments contrasted with the recommendations from the CDC and Food and Drug Administration this week, which said that Americans should get boosters but did not specify which combinations would be best.

The recommendations also opened the door for recipients of the one-shot J&J vaccine to get a dose of the Pfizer (PFE.N) or Moderna vaccines that have been shown to afford greater protection in a variety of studies.

"You can now mix and match one with the other, but in general it just makes sense to go with what your original regimen was," Fauci said.

U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy echoed the suggestion.

"If you got a Pfizer/Moderna and if you did well with your primary series, I think it's quite reasonable to stick with what you got originally," he said in an interview with CNBC.

Studies have shown that boosters from Pfizer, Moderna and J&J all enhance protection against the virus, he said.

"The bottom line is: We have good options now, we have flexibility in terms of which vaccine you get," Murthy said.

Although these vaccines have been highly effective in preventing serious illness and death, some government scientists have suggested that boosters are needed to keep immunity high, especially as the extremely contagious Delta variant can cause breakthrough infections among some who are fully vaccinated.

Today's GIF


Don't mind me - just checkin' out the smörgåsbord

Oct 23, 2021

COVID-19 Update





Mis-Information (and its evil progenitor, Dis-Information) are always with us.
'Twas ever thus, and ever thus 'twill be.

The only antidote is to keep hammering away at the fallacies, and pointing out the nefarious intent of it all.

A lie can make it halfway around the world
before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.

I imagine Edward Bernays would be proud of what's going on.



Five tactics used to spread vaccine misinformation in the wellness community, and why they work

When Kristina W. received her first dose of the coronavirus vaccine earlier this year, she was terrified. Until recently, she said, she believed that vaccines were so dangerous she was willing to “go into an all-out war” to protect her children from receiving any immunizations.

“I had this deep-rooted fear that they could, and possibly even would, kill my children,” said Kristina, 26, a mother of two who lives in New Mexico and spoke on the condition that her full name not be used out of concern for her safety.

Now, although she considers herself “pro-vax” and understands that vaccines are safe and necessary, that knowledge doesn’t always quell her anxiety. These lingering concerns, she believes, are a testament to the power of the anti-vaccination narratives she was exposed to in natural parenting and alternative health groups on Facebook, some of which had convinced her that routine childhood immunizations had nearly killed her eldest son.

“If you’ve never been anti-vax and back to vaccinating, you don’t quite understand the level of anxiety” that can come with resuming vaccinations, Kristina said. “You have that logical knowledge that vaccines are just fine. They’re this great thing. But emotions aren’t logical.”

Experts say the content shared in some wellness communities has powerful emotional and psychological foundations that can cause even science-minded people to question the public health consensus on the ability of vaccines to help curb the spread of the coronavirus. Some voices within the wellness space are adept at building connection, gaining trust and sowing doubt — all while appealing to widely held beliefs about healthy living.

“This is what makes some in the wellness community so dangerous,” said Stephanie Alice Baker, a sociologist at City, University of London, who is careful to add that not everyone in the wellness space is trying to cast doubt on vaccines. “It’s not that the wellness community per se is conspiratorial, or that everyone has these kinds of nefarious interests where they intend to manipulate and deceive,” she said. “It’s that once you trust leaders and influencers in this space, then when they become more conspiratorial and extreme, you are susceptible to go down that path with them because you already trust them.”

In some ways, the messaging and themes used by some vaccine-hesitant members of wellness communities reflect those that have been documented in the broader anti-vaccine movement. But there are certain approaches, experts said, that especially key in on the interests and vulnerabilities of people who are invested in wellness culture.

Recognizing these strategies is “essential in helping social media users develop resilience to harmful content and allowing them to report this type of content to platforms,” Cécile Simmons, a researcher with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, wrote in an email.

Encouraging skepticism of institutions

The online wellness community rose to prominence amid an erosion of trust in traditional authorities, such as government, health and science institutions and mainstream media, said Baker, co-author of “Lifestyle Gurus,” which explores how authority and influence are created online. This loss of faith has only been exacerbated by the pandemic, which has produced conflicting and confusing guidance from public officials.

In a “low trust society,” Baker said, “you look for other sources to trust and where to place your trust because we can’t be experts on everything. We need other authorities and influential people to guide us.” In the wellness world, those authorities might include nutritionists, physical trainers, lifestyle bloggers, spiritual coaches, naturopaths, yoga teachers and holistic health experts. Among them are online influencers with large and small followings. Sometimes, in fact, a more modest following can lead to more trust; marketers say that micro-influencers (10,000 to 50,000 followers) and nanoinfluencers (fewer than 10,000 followers) may be seen as more truthful and authentic.

Ashley Taylor, who says she is a registered nurse and holistic health coach, posts frequently about “freedom” on Instagram to more than 51,000 followers. In one colorful post that was deleted after the publication of this article, Taylor wrote, “Approval from a 3 letter agency does not override your right to autonomy and to decide what goes into your body.” While she emphasized in the post’s caption that she wasn’t trying to make decisions for her followers, she also listed multiple reasons she doesn’t “have a lot of trust in the [U.S. Food and Drug Administration].”

Taylor did not respond to requests for comment but afterward shared a public post on Instagram that said, in part, “I am not you. So I will never try to tell you what is right for you. I am here to remind you that it is your choice to make.”

Kristina, the former anti-vaccine mother, recalled seeing comments casting doubt on the motives of public health agencies in the Facebook groups she visited.

For example, she said, she became “suspicious” after reading a misleading claim about the CDC holding patents for a number of vaccines, and “that seemed to scream a financial motive.” While the CDC does license vaccine technology developed within the agency, some of which is patented, it does not sell vaccines.

Promoting distrust can be especially effective when it plays into a person’s existing doubts about traditional institutions — doubts that often stem from legitimate concerns about health and safety or poor experiences with the health care system.

Lydia Greene, a mother of three who was a self-described “anti-vaxxer” for more than a decade, vividly recalls the nurse who dismissed her concerns when she thought her first child had a reaction to vaccinations.

“The nurse basically blew me off and made me feel dumb,” said Greene, 40, who was a quality control chemist at a pharmaceutical plant before she left her job to start a family. Greene said she increasingly turned to online parenting forums for guidance, where she was exposed to anti-vaccination beliefs that convinced her to stop vaccinating her children.

“You just feel so lost,” she said, “and these are your people, and they tell you what to do when you’re not sure.”

Framing themselves as truth-seekers

In this climate of distrust, experts said, many people in the wellness community present themselves as truth-seekers at constant risk of being silenced by mainstream authorities or online moderators.

When these people’s posts are flagged online, Greene said, they often claim the platform’s moderators are just “trying to get the sheep to take the vaccine.”

Heather Shields, a “Health + fitness motivator,” according to her Instagram bio, with about 10,400 followers, has posted during the pandemic about sharing “truth.” In one photo, Shields poses with what appears to be a strip of black tape over her mouth, holding a finger up against the tape in a shushing signal. The post’s caption says, “Why are people like me being hidden, shadow-banned, fb jailed and cyber-attacked? Because WE ARE THE VOICE OF TRUTH…” and includes the hashtag “#wewillnotbesilenced.” Shields did not respond to requests for comment.


heathershields_wellness Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear.
Harry Truman

Why are Doctors, scientists, journalists, mothers, and injured victims are being silenced?

Why are people like me being hidden, shadow-banned, fb jailed and cyber-attacked?

Because WE ARE THE VOICE OF TRUTH and truth doesn’t fill dirty politicians and pHARMa’s pockets.

But I will never be silenced. I will always fight for my kids. I will fight for the victims. I will even fight for those of you who still think this is about your health. I have always, and I will always fight for truth.

Experts said it’s also important to recognize potential financial motives behind the truth-seeker framing: It can help influencers promote and sell alternative therapies, such as herbal tinctures and essential oils, which undergo far less regulation than vaccines and drugs approved by the FDA.“There’s a lot of content that heads down the path of ‘You shouldn’t take this vaccine. Instead, you should buy my colloidal silver. Instead you should buy my essential oil,’” said Renee DiResta, the research manager at the Stanford Internet Observatory who studies the spread of malign narratives across social networks.

Taking science out of context

The public is observing the scientific method up close and in real-time. The uncertainty inherent in the process, and the rapidly-changing public policy based on it, has eroded trust further in authorities and made it easier for members of the wellness community who are vaccine hesitant to present scientific material in a misleading way, experts said.

“The size of the following and the certainty of a voice have substituted for getting in there and understanding if this is peer reviewed or if there’s any science behind it,” said Doreen Dodgen-Magee, psychologist and author of “Deviced!: Balancing Life and Technology in a Digital World.”

“Do your own research” is a common refrain in anti-vaccination spaces, said DiResta. But, she added, it’s often said by people “sharing links to sites that are very aligned in a particular way, usually an anti-vaccine way.”

Another tactic is cherry-picking data. For example, some will point to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, known as VAERS, as evidence of widespread deaths and injuries from vaccines, while ignoring the broadly acknowledged limitation of its data. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, which co-sponsors the database with the CDC and FDA, a report alone cannot be used to determine if a vaccine caused or contributed to an adverse event. Furthermore, anyone can file a report to the database with “incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental and unverified information.”

Gigi Winters, who runs the Instagram account “informed_mothers” and uses hashtags such as “#conservativememes” and “#conservativewomen,” encouraged her 49,500 followers to “Research everything!” in a short video referencing the coronavirus vaccines on Instagram Reels that has been viewed more than 86,000 times. In the video, Winters cites a misleading statistic about the coronavirus survival rate, writing, “I’ll take my 99.9% chance and trust my immune system instead…”

That often-cited statistic, which has been circulating for more than a year, has been identified by fact-checkers as an apparent misuse of modeling data from the CDC, which noted that the parameters it was using in its scenarios “are not predictions of the expected effects of COVID-19” (emphasis in the original). This statistic also doesn’t take into account the long-term health impacts and cost of treatment many covid-19 survivors may face. Winters did not respond to requests for comment.

Appealing to natural and holistic health interests

An interest in natural remedies and holistic health can be a gateway into the vaccine-hesitant community, experts said. Kristina said her journey down the “rabbit hole” started with a desire for a nonmedicated birth. In the Facebook groups she joined, she noticed that many people “seemed to be inherently anti-vax and there was a sort of unspoken rule about not advocating for vaccinations.”

In some Instagram accounts featuring natural and holistic living content, vaccine misinformation is slipped in between general posts about well-being and designed to blend in with a profile’s overall visually pleasing aesthetics: vibrant photographs of food, flowers and landscapes as well as serene palettes and attractive fonts.

“This content is ‘prettified’ for Instagram and often couched in the fairly ambiguous language of personal choice and self-realization that is characteristic of these communities,” said Simmons, of the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. “Subtle anti-vaccine messaging appears alongside pictures of sunset and yoga poses and posts about meditation and raw food, making it look seemingly innocuous.”

Vaccine-hesitant voices within wellness communities also post frequently about impure, man-made products — and put the vaccines in that category, sometimes calling them “poison.”

Yolande Norris-Clark, who goes by “bauhauswife” on Instagram, describes herself as a “Writer, birth educator, freebirth coach, iconoclast.” She shares information about natural birth practices and photos of herself and her children in scenic landscapes with her 46,500 followers, along with posts questioning vaccines and the medical establishment. In one post, Norris-Clark shared a minimalistic text graphic that read, “The very notion of injecting a foreign substance into a human being’s body to promote ‘health’ is not only absurd, but utterly perverse.” Norris-Clark did not respond to requests for comment.

Anti-vaccine messaging also tends to emphasize strengthening the immune system through natural foods and fitness, rather than relying on man-made interventions, experts said.

The common argument: “You don’t need this. Here is an alternative thing for you. If you only boost your immune system and wash your hands, then you’re not going to catch disease X,” DiResta said.

Building community

Online wellness spaces also can feel welcoming, validating and intimate, in contrast to institutions, which often deliver dry and fact-based information.

Many people in these spaces create a perception of openness by documenting daily activities such as meals, workout routines and self-care regimens. Members of groups also share personal stories that are often relatable and compelling. The perceived intimacy and authenticity of these online interactions can create what experts call parasocial relationships, or a sense of closeness to a person you don’t actually know.

“Western medicine kind of goes, ‘Here’s a fact, believe it,’” said psychologist Dodgen-Magee, whereas the wellness community “appeals to something very unique and shiny and missed for many people in daily life, which is this sense of being known and being seen and feeling felt.”

Isabel Klibanoff, a small-business owner who runs the Instagram account “junebug.co,” which has more than 19,600 followers, describes her page as “a community for beings of light.” Klibanoff has called for that community to resist “tyranny” and “forced injections.” In a now-deleted post alongside a neutral-toned graphic that read, “There is nothing wrong with you. There is everything wrong with the world,” she praised people for “not following the crowd and daring to be different!!” She added, “[You] should all be commended for your incredible bravery and strength.”

In an emailed statement, Klibanoff said, in part, “I firmly believe in each individual’s right to choose what pharmaceutical products they put into their bodies, particularly when there is no long-term safety data available on said products. I believe in informed consent for all medical procedures, and coercion is not consent.”

That sense of community helped draw moms Greene and Kristina into the anti-vaccine movement. “After a while, you have this online family where you can post a paragraph and then five minutes later you’ve got all these replies and all this advice and all this support,” Greene said. “You come to value their opinion and their thoughts and their approval even. It gets deep really quickly.”

But an online community also played a major role in Kristina’s return to vaccine acceptance. In early 2020, Kristina, who had begun to question her anti-vaccination stance, joined the evidence-based Facebook group “Vaccine Talk,” whose co-founder emphasized to The Washington Post in a recent profile that civility is critical to the group’s success.

“What we envisioned when Vaccine Talk was first created was that it could be a place where people could ask questions and get answers from people who are understanding and sympathetic, but giving them evidence-based information that they can rely on,” said Kate Bilowitz, the group’s co-founder. “The people who are active in the group are there because they really care about the group and the members that come in and ask questions are looking for guidance.”

For years, Kristina had been convinced through online natural parenting and natural health groups that vaccination was linked to her son’s severe gastrointestinal issues. But when she posted on Vaccine Talk, its members — who she felt were mostly understanding and patient — helped her find more plausible reasons for her son’s condition. They “helped me critically think about why I had these views,” Kristina said.

These days, Kristina is an active member of another online community — Back to the Vax — a support group for vaccine hesitant people and former anti-vaxxers. Greene, who co-founded the group, said she abandoned her anti-vaccination beliefs after she reexamined them during the pandemic. She is now in nursing school with the goal of using her education to fight vaccine hesitancy.

Both women acknowledge that one of the more difficult aspects of changing their stance on vaccination was coming to terms with the fact that they had been so mistaken.

“It was extremely psychologically difficult to really face what I was wrong on,” Kristina said. “When you have deep-rooted beliefs, anything that goes against that can feel like a personal attack.”

Greene now likens the fear of being wrong to a prison. “It keeps you in this box and it doesn’t allow for growth,” she said. “Just lean into it, you’ll be fine.”

Oct 22, 2021

The Money

At the risk of invoking the Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc Fallacy, it can't come as any kind of shock to anyone that the money started to square up almost immediately after the CrooksЯUs gang got the boot.

Because there's a thing called elasticity, which means, in part at least, that Biden doesn't get all the credit, and Trump doesn't get all the blame. But still...


The U.S. budget deficit totaled $2.77 trillion for 2021, the second highest on record but an improvement from the all-time high of $3.13 trillion reached in 2020. The deficits in both years reflect trillions of dollars in government spending to counteract the devastating effects of a global pandemic.

The Biden administration said Friday that the 2021 deficit, for the budget year that ended Sept. 30 was $360 billion lower than 2020 as a recovering economy boosted revenues, helping to offset government spending from pandemic relief efforts.

Before the deficit ballooned during two years of a global pandemic, the highest the biggest deficit had been a shortfall of $1.4 trillion in 2009 as the U.S. spent heavily to lift the country out of a severe recession following the 2008 financial crisis.

For 2021, the joint report from Treasury and the Office of Management and Budget said that government spending increased 4.1% to $6.82 trillion. This was offset by an increase of 18.3% in government revenues, a gain that reflected an improving economy as millions of people who had lost jobs at the start of the pandemic went back to work and corporate profits were rejuvenated after a horrendous 2020.

“Under President Biden’s leadership, the U.S. economy is getting back on track and Americans are getting back to work,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Shalanda Young, acting director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a joint statement.

The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office expects the deficit will fall to $1.15 trillion in the current budget year, which began Oct. 1, and will dip below $1 trillion for three years from 2023 through 2025 before rising again above $1 trillion for each year through 2031.

That forecast does not include the spending that will occur if Biden is able to get two pending measures through Congress, a $1 trillion proposal for traditional infrastructure projects such as roads and bridges and his plan to bolster the social safety net and combat climate change.

The safety net measure has a price tag of $3.5 trillion but is expected to be scaled back to around $2 trillion to meet the objections of moderate Democrats such as Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia.

As a percentage of the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, the 2021 deficit represents 12.4% of GDP, down from the 2020 deficit, which was 15% of GDP.

In their comments Yellen and Young credited Biden’s economic policies for contributing to a lower deficit, including Biden’s “swift action to mount a historic vaccination effort” and his success in getting Congress to approve $1.9 trillion in extra spending in the stimulus bill passed in March.

“While the nation’s economic recovery is stronger than those of other wealthy nations, it is still fragile,” Yellen said. “In order to build upon the progress that has been made ... Congress should pass President Biden’s Build Back Better plan.”

Today's Factoid


Here in USAmerica Inc, there are about 560,000 homeless people. We could provide all of them with healthcare, a 1-bedroom apartment including all utilities and wi-fi - plus a monthly stipend of $1,000 for some food, clothes and a movie once in a while - solely at the expense of America's billionaires, and every one of those billionaires would still be a billionaire.

The way we're doing things is stoopid - we have to do better.

USAmerica, Inc


Thank You Brandon


It's pure anathema to me to think that I'm being some kinda fuckin' cheerleader for any politician.

But as long as the other side is hell-bent on fucking this all up and pushing us into a Daddy State Plutocracy, I'm all in for just about anybody trying to make government do some good work at a reasonable price.

What has Joe Biden done for us?
  1. passed $1.9T of much-needed relief for the American economy
  2. expanded/boosted vaccine testing, vaccine manufacturing, vaccine distribution, PPE manufacturing, PPE distribution thru the Defense Production Act
  3. canceled student loan debt for more than 300,000 people with severe disabilities
  4. canceled student loan debt for more than 92,000 students who were victims of fraud (eg: Trump University, etc)
  5. increased overall spending on public education programs
  6. instructed the Department of Education to pay teachers or school officials who had their pay withheld for instituting mask mandates and other safety protocols
  7. increased the benefits for disabled veterans
  8. restored veterans programs that were cut under Trump
  9. rejoined the United Nations Human Rights Council after the Trump administration left it
  10. revoked the permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline
  11. rejoined the Paris Climate Accord
  12. stopped the issuing of new leases for oil/gas drilling on public lands
  13. increased funds for FEMA & for communities affected by natural disasters
  14. increased fuel emission standards for EPA & the Department of Transportation
  15. revoked the Muslim travel ban
  16. pension relief for more than 100 retirement plans for millions of people
  17. increased food & nutrition benefits by 25%
  18. increased SNAP benefits by 15% for lower income children to have free or affordable lunches at school
  19. increased funding to Obamacare, lowering costs & providing new options for people
  20. increased relief for minority farmers
  21. issued an executive order making American supply chains less reliant on foreign companies
  22. revoked a Trump executive order that mandates stricter work rules on people seeking welfare assistance
  23. told Putin the U.S. would no longer “roll over” for his aggressive actions
  24. preserved the protection of various national monuments and wildlife reserves
  25. rejoined the World Health Organization
  26. created a Gender Policy Council, rolling back a Trump decision to cut a similar program under Obama
  27. extended fair housing protections for LGBTQ+ Americans
  28. added more inclusive rhetoric to American paperwork such as passports, etc
  29. signed the K-12 Cybersecurity Act which protects sensitive information maintained by schools across the country
  30. directed Housing & Urban Development to implement policies that help increase the supply of affordable homes
  31. expanded the access to therapy dogs for veterans
  32. has the narrowest pay gap between men & women ever
  33. established rules protecting patients from unexpected medical expenses
  34. expanded access to legal representation for poor people
  35. released his tax returns
  36. increased the minimum wage for federal contractors to $15/hr
  37. increased funds to specifically address America’s mental health & addiction crises
  38. restored labor rights at the Department of Defense
  39. is requiring his political appointees to take an ethics pledge due to the excess number of violations during the Trump administration
  40. got rid of a Trump-era mandate that used Covid as an excuse for deregulation
  41. supported the DACA program
  42. reinstated the Central Minors Program for children to reunite with a guardian(s) living legally
  43. deleted a Trump agreement that put up roadblocks to families trying to help undocumented immigrant children
  44. revoked a Trump executive order which suspended the issuing of immigration visas that used the pandemic as an excuse for denying those visas
  45. doubled the availability of military assistance to American hospitals for COVID
  46. got us out of a “never-ending” unnecessary 20-year war in Afghanistan
  47. expanded COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan programs for businesses in need
  48. ordered more TSA travel restrictions on people who refused to follow safety protocols
  49. ordered the businesses employing more than 100 people to ensure paid time off for getting vaccinated
  50. extended the pause on student loan repayment until January 31, 2022 due to the global pandemic
  51. has already been more inclusive to tribal communities
  52. awarded Congressional Medals to Capitol Police who responded to the Jan6 failed insurrection
  53. barred Donald Trump from intel briefings citing his multiple impeachments, incitement of the Jan6 insurrection, 30,000+ lies & misleading statements, Twitter tantrums, etc
  54. sanctioned Russia in retaliation for poisoning opposition leaders & US intel hacking of the 2016 election
  55. ordered a halt on the federal death penalty
  56. signed an executive order to make the Department of Justice work on reducing the use of “ghost guns” in America
  57. Biden negotiated agreement for 24/7 operations at California ports in order to alleviate supply chain issues
  58. making childcare more affordable with a Child Tax Credit worth $300/month, which equates to a tax cut for middle and lower income families
  59. 26 Federal judges seated, 27 awaiting confirmation 
  60. passed $1.2 infrastructure bill - the biggest investment in America in the last 80 years.
And this is in no way an exhaustive, all-inclusive list.

Biden's gang has been in place for right about 10 months now, and they're doing what good government is supposed to do.

COVID-19 Update

America The Bizarre


What does your star sign say about your covid vaccination status? One Utah county crunched the numbers.

Leos are apparently most likely to be vaccinated, and Scorpios the least. An astrologer weighs in.


And take a closer look at the disclaimer:

It's not quite as bad as all that makes it look, but Jesus H Fuq, what exactly does it take to get you people to do the one simple thing that has to be done so we can kill this fucking monster and move on?


More Americans are getting their boosters than first vaccine doses

The number of Americans getting coronavirus vaccine boosters is outpacing the number of those getting their first vaccine shots, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. For the week ending Tuesday, a daily average of roughly 340,000 people received booster shots. Meanwhile, an average of 157,605 people each day received their first vaccine shot during the comparable period of time, government data shows.

The numbers represent the vaccination gap among Americans. As additional vaccines are authorized by federal regulators as boosters, more people who had already been immunized will get further protection. At the same time, a large number of people nationwide remain unvaccinated, underscoring the challenge of improving protection against the coronavirus for the general population.

About 66 percent of the nation’s population has received at least one coronavirus vaccine dose, according to data tracked by The Washington Post.
A growing number of industrialized countries have surpassed the United States on this count, even though many had later starts in their vaccine rollouts.


The JHU site wasn't cooperating today
This is from World-O-Meter


Today's Tweet



A Ruling Minority is not what we had in mind.

Oct 21, 2021

Todays Beef


This is the bur under my saddle today:

Jesse Unruh was not exactly the soul of integrity and straight dealing. He became California State Treasurer and turned that office into one of the most powerful public finance positions in the country. He politicized the shit out of it, and did plenty of questionable things with that power.

But oddly, he'll forever be something of a hero to me because of a quote that floats around in various forms:

"If I can't take your money, drink your whisky, fuck your women - and then vote against your interests tomorrow in committee, then I have no business being in government. Thank you, gentlemen, and goodnight."

Why the fuck can't we get some of that out of the congress critters we've got now? 

COVID-19 Update

For something they keep telling us is on the wane, this COVID shit seems to be hangin' in there pretty fuckin' hard.

Every weekend, the prospect of hitting 800,000 dead Americans recedes, and every Thursday morning, it looks a lot closer.





And in the meantime, we continue to see the teeth of a legal system that occasionally works the way we need it to work.

WaPo: (freebie)

Unvaccinated Oregon workers who had covid-19 argued they don’t need a vaccine. A judge denied their request.

An Oregon federal judge has denied an emergency motion brought by seven unvaccinated workers who sought to block the state’s vaccine mandate or create an exemption for people like themselves who already had the virus and argue they do not need to be vaccinated.


U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken wrote in her opinion Tuesday that the U.S. Constitution offers no fundamental right for someone to refuse a vaccination, adding that the shots are in Oregon’s best interest to help slow the spread of the virus. In her 26-page opinion, Aiken said that people’s safety was more important than whatever individual challenges unvaccinated workers might face by not getting immunized.

“Whatever hardships Plaintiffs face in choosing between accepting vaccination or leaving their employment are substantially outweighed by the interests and needs of the State of Oregon and her people,” Aiken wrote.

Aiken is the second federal judge in the state this week to block an emergency motion from unvaccinated workers attempting to avoid the immunization requirement put in place by Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D). It is the sixth time that a federal or state court judge in Oregon has denied an effort to stop the vaccine mandate.

Like her colleague U.S. District Judge Michael H. Simon, who ruled in a separate case Monday, Aiken decided that the seven unvaccinated workers failed to show that they would suffer irreparable harm from the mandate.

“The benefits inherent in requiring all healthcare personnel, school staff, and state executive employees to be vaccinated are clear and obvious, both in terms of protecting the newly vaccinated workers themselves and, of at least equal importance, in protecting the people around them,” she wrote.

Aiken is the second federal judge in the state this week to block an emergency motion from unvaccinated workers attempting to avoid the immunization requirement put in place by Oregon Gov. Kate Brown (D). It is the sixth time that a federal or state court judge in Oregon has denied an effort to stop the vaccine mandate.

Like her colleague U.S. District Judge Michael H. Simon, who ruled in a separate case Monday, Aiken decided that the seven unvaccinated workers failed to show that they would suffer irreparable harm from the mandate.

“The benefits inherent in requiring all healthcare personnel, school staff, and state executive employees to be vaccinated are clear and obvious, both in terms of protecting the newly vaccinated workers themselves and, of at least equal importance, in protecting the people around them,” she wrote.

They filed a lawsuit last month arguing for the state to carve out an exception for them, and people like them, who have some degree of natural immunity after they were infected with the virus. Attorney Rebekah Millard wrote in the plaintiffs’ motion that the state forcing previously infected workers to get vaccinated violated their “privacy, bodily autonomy, and personal liberty.” The group contended that the governor’s mandate forced workers like them “who have robust natural immunity, to choose between their health, their personal autonomy, and their careers.”

While the employees argued that getting vaccinated “would involve more risks than benefits” and they were “exceedingly unlikely” to spread the virus to others, a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month found that unvaccinated people who recovered from covid are more than twice as likely to catch the coronavirus again compared to fully vaccinated people who were previously infected.

Melissa Sutton, the medical director of respiratory viral pathogens for the Oregon Health Authority, supported the CDC’s findings in sworn testimony. Sutton wrote to Aiken that immunity after infection is “not as durable or reliable as the protection” provided by the vaccines. She added that the durability of such immunity varies widely between individuals compared to protection from immunization.

Though Millard argued this week that Oregon did not acknowledge “a fundamental right to bodily integrity,” the state’s attorney, Christina Beatty-Walters, pointed to the U.S. Supreme Court decision that community vaccination does not violate the Constitution.

“They hinge their whole case here on the existence of a fundamental right, but there isn’t support for the existence of such a right. In fact, all of the case law goes the other way and supports the state in this case,” she said to the Register-Guard. “Many, many courts … have concluded that there’s no fundamental right to refuse a vaccination required by state or local officials.”

In her opinion, Aiken noted that most of the seven workers who brought the lawsuit against the state either have already received an exception to the mandate or are awaiting a decision on an exemption request. Two did not apply for an exemption and one had theirs denied, Aiken wrote.