More employers should mandate COVID-19 vaccines for workers

for the health of their business

Last Updated: July 22, 2021 at 10:07 a.m. ETFirst Published: July 21, 2021 at 8:14 a.m. ETBy 

Karen Mulligan and Jeffrey E. Harris

The trend is already unmistakable, led by higher education and healthcare providers

Although two-thirds of U.S. adults have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, vaccination rates are leveling off and risks of new outbreaks are rising, driven by the hypercontagious delta variant. For employers that is an intolerable situation. If they want to operate reliable in-person workplaces and attract customers, they will have to embrace a solution that government has so far shied away from: vaccine mandates.

The trend is already unmistakable, led by higher education and healthcare providers. More than 580 campuses nationwide will require vaccinations this fall for most students and employees, including the huge University of California system, which has ordered its 280,000 students and 227,000 faculty and staff to be fully vaccinated before returning to campus. 

Healthcare systems, which have an overwhelming interest in instilling confidence and protecting patients, are following suit. Penn Medicine, the largest employer in Philadelphia, RWJ Barnabas healthcare system in New Jersey, and New York-Presbyterian hospital system with 48,000 employees, have all recently instituted mandates.

Houston Methodist hospital threatened employees who failed to get vaccinated with suspension and termination. While some employees protested and even filed an unsuccessful lawsuit, the mandate has proven highly effective. Out of more than 25,000 employees, 97% have been fully vaccinated, and 2% received a medical or religious exemption. Less than 1% (153 employees) resigned or were terminated in June.

Read: Amazon will stop testing its workers for COVID-19 at warehouses this month

Plus: Mitch McConnell urges Americans: ‘Get vaccinated’ or risk another shutdown

Of course setting up different rules for those who are vaccinated and those who are not can be a minefield. There is no better example than the battered cruise industry, which is trying to resume embarkations from Florida ports. 

The big operators, including Norwegian Cruise Lines NCLH, -1.69%, Royal Caribbean RCL, -1.44% and Carnival Corp. CCL, -2.07%, clearly would like a vaccine requirement to avoid the onboard outbreaks that killed their businesses 18 months ago. They are stymied by a new Florida law that deems proof of vaccination to be discriminatory against un–vaxxed passengers. Norwegian is suing Florida in federal court and threatening to move operations out of the state.

Meanwhile the cruise lines are deploying some reverse incentives to persuade customers to get jabbed, including segregating the unvaccinated aboard ship (think smoking vs. nonsmoking sections), assessing fees up to $180 for pre- and post-trip COVID tests, and insisting on travel insurance policies in case they have to be medically evacuated. 

The cruise lines are also mandating vaccines for all crew members. The Florida law does not ban such a requirement, nor do similar laws or executive orders in other states. The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has ruled that employers can require employees to be vaccinated subject to reasonable accommodations for medical complications or sincerely held religious beliefs. 

Political objections have kept the federal government from going further and imposing a nationwide vaccine mandate. One recent survey found that only a bare majority of American supported proof of vaccination as a requirement for returning to work. The objections range from allegations that the FDA authorization for the vaccines was rushed to that a mandate is an affront to individual freedoms to that vaccination status is not readily verifiable.

But employers can rely on strong counter arguments. One federal court has already thrown out the argument that the vaccines are still experimental. Mandatory vaccinations against other infectious diseases in the past have taken precedence over individual rights. And fulfillment of immunization requirements for school and work are already being certified by healthcare providers in the private sector.

The fact that the Food and Drug Administration has issued only an emergency use authorization (EUA) for Covid-19 vaccines should be no cause for delay. These vaccines have been so successful in preventing serious disease and so devoid of serious side effects that they will undoubtedly receive full FDA approval in a matter of months. As another federal judge recently noted in his decision to deny a petition to block Indiana University’s vaccine mandate, “Not all EUAs are equal, and the one required for COVID-19 vaccines was more robust than usual.”

Read: American Academy of Pediatrics urges universal masking in schools for everyone ages 2 and up — whether vaccinated or not

We are tantalizingly close to crushing COVID, which makes vaccine resistance hugely frustrating for individuals and businesses trying to return to normal. 

Maybe the federal government will step in with a national mandate if vaccination resistance results in another damaging wave of hospitalizations and death. But employers can’t wait. If they depend on in-person workplaces and face-to-face connections with customers, they will have to be the ones to turn up the pressure. And that may be enough to get us to herd immunity.  

Karen Mulligan, Ph.D., is a fellow at the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy & Economics. Jeffrey E. Harris, MD, Ph.D., is a physician and an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  

Now read: Is it time for Americans to drop their infatuation with the PCR test? That’s what this COVID-19 testing expert thinks

Also: Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine may not perform as well against Delta variant, says study

Plus: Immunity provided by COVID-19 vaccines likely to ‘wane, not plummet,’ CDC director tells Congress

No sientas temor por tus hijos

No sientas pena ni temor por tus hijos porque el mundo en el que van a crecer no es el que era antes. Dios los creó y los llamó para el momento exacto en el que se encuentran. Su vida no fue una coincidencia ni un accidente. Levántalos para que conozcan el poder en el que caminan como hijos de Dios.
Entrénalos en la autoridad de Su Palabra.
Enséñalos a caminar en fe, sabiendo que Dios tiene el control.
Capacítalos para que sepan que pueden cambiar el mundo.
No les enseñes a tener miedo y a desanimarse por cómo se encuentra el mundo, sino a tener la esperanza de que pueden hacer algo al respecto.
Cada persona a lo largo de la historia ha sido colocada en el tiempo en que le correspondía de acuerdo al plan soberano de Dios.
Él sabía que Daniel podía con la fosa de los leones.
Él sabía que David podía con Goliat.
Él sabía que Ester podía con Amán.
Él sabía que Pedro podía con la persecución.
Él sabe que tu hijo puede con cualquier desafío que enfrente en su vida. ¡Él los creó específicamente para eso!
No tengas miedo por tus hijos, ¡pero siéntete honrado de que Dios te eligió a TI para ser su padre!  ¡Enséñales el amor de Dios y a compartirlo con todos!
Acepta el desafío.
¡Cría Danieles, Davides, Estheres y Pedros! 
Dios no se rasca la cabeza preguntándose qué va a hacer con este desastre de mundo. ¡Él tiene un ejército que está levantando para hacer retroceder la oscuridad y darlo a conocer en toda la tierra!
No dejes que tu miedo robe la grandeza que Dios puso en tus hijos.
Sé que es difícil imaginarlos como algo más que nuestros bebés, y solo queremos protegerlos de cualquier cosa que pueda ser difícil para ellos, pero nacieron para un momento como este.

Autor desconocido

Vacunas en niños y adolescentes

Publicado por saludbydiaz 21 julio, 2021

Coronavirus: lo que debe saber sobre la vacunación en niños y adolescentes

¿Deben los niños mayores de doce años vacunarse contra el COVID-19?, se preguntan muchos padres actualmente en América Latina. DW resume junto al Dr. Felix Drexler lo que hasta el momento se sabe, y lo que no.

Siguiendo las estrategias de Estados Unidos, Israel y algunos países europeos, cada vez más países en América Latina están empezando a vacunar contra el SARS-CoV-2 a los menores de 18 años. A Chile, Uruguay o República Dominicana se suma ahora Argentina, que planea inocular a jóvenes de 13 a 17 años en agosto.  

En EE.UU., los Centros para el Control y Prevención de Enfermedades (CDC) recomiendan sin restricciones dicha vacunación para niños y adolescentes. Por su parte, la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) aconseja la vacunación de los mayores de doce años, pero solo después de que otros grupos más vulnerables hayan sido inmunizados. En Alemania, en cambio, la Comisión Permanente de Vacunación (Stiko) recomienda la vacunación contra el COVID-19 para los menores de 12 a 17 años solo en condiciones muy específicas, como enfermedades graves.

¿Qué vacunas contra el COVID-19 están aprobadas para niños y adolescentes?

Hasta el momento, los niños y adolescentes a partir de 12 años en EE.UU., Europa o Israel están siendo vacunados solo con el preparado de Pfizer/Biontech. En el caso de Europa, las otras tres vacunas autorizadas para su uso en adultos -Astrazeneca, Moderna y Johnson & Johnson- aún están siendo sometidas a estudios para aclarar si también son adecuadas para los menores.

El virólogo alemán Felix Drexler, de la Clínica Universitaria Charité de Berlín, resalta que en especial las vacunas de ARN mensajero, Pfizer/BioNTech y Moderna, han demostrado alta seguridad y eficacia al ser aplicadas en los menores de edad, pero también hay esperanzas depositadas en nuevas vacunas: “La de Novavax, por ejemplo, que se basa en la generación de proteínas, podría ser de mucha ventaja para el uso en niños. Además, su mantenimiento será mucho más fácil, teniendo en cuenta el contexto latinoamericano, porque se puede transportar a temperaturas de nevera”.

¿Por qué todavía no se puede vacunar a los menores de doce años?

La investigación al respecto también está en curso. Mientras no haya resultados fiables sobre la eficacia y los efectos secundarios en dicho grupo etario, estos todavía no pueden ser vacunados. Por ahora, Pfizer/BioNTech y Moderna siguen realizando ensayos clínicos para ver cómo funcionan sus preparados en niños menores de 12 años. La farmacéutica Pfizer ha dicho que la vacuna para los niños más pequeños recién podría estar disponible a finales de año o a comienzos de 2022.

“Estamos teniendo mucho cuidado para proteger a los más pequeños, por eso estamos esperando más estudios. Lo mejor sería que gran parte de los adultos estén vacunados para no tener que vacunar a los menores de edad. Pero para esto necesitaríamos tasas por encima del 85% de la población adulta, que no es el caso en ningún lugar. La principal razón para vacunar a los niños, después de saber que el SARS-CoV-2 les afecta menos, es para evitar que transmitan el virus a los ancianos no vacunados. Con esto no quiero minimizar las consecuencias por infección en los niños”, explica el Dr. Drexler.

¿Qué riesgo existe con la vacuna contra el COVID-19 en los niños y adolescentes?

En Estados Unidos, actualmente, unos cuatro millones de niños y adolescentes ya han sido vacunados y no se han reportado mayores complicaciones. En Israel tampoco se habrían producido eventos adversos. Según el virólogo de la Charité, efectivamente, a corto plazo, todo parece bastante seguro, pero falta saber si hay efectos a largo plazo.

“Lo bueno es que los datos actuales, que son muy recientes, indican que no hay ningún problema en la vacunación de los niños. Esto es muy positivo. De modo que no tenemos que preocuparnos mucho. Sin embargo, tenemos que seguir evaluando los tipos de vacuna”, asegura el Dr. Drexler.

En EE.UU. se han observado casos de inflamación del músculo cardíaco (miocarditis) tras la vacunación. ¿Qué tan grande es este peligro?

Hasta fines de junio, se habían producido 300 casos de inflamación del músculo cardíaco en hombres jóvenes y adolescentes varones en Estados Unidos. Para entonces, el número total de personas vacunadas en ese grupo de la población ya había alcanzado los 20 millones. En otras palabras, el problema se ha observado tres veces entre 200.000 personas vacunadas, es decir, en el 0,0015% de los inoculados. Si bien, por un lado, todavía no está claro desde un punto de vista científico cuál es la relación entre la miocarditis y la vacunación, por otro lado, esta observación muestra cuánta atención se está prestando a la supervisión médica de los vacunados.

En ese sentido, el experto alemán recuerda que, también en los adultos en general, este riesgo es muy bajo: “No hay que olvidar que el riesgo de una inflamación del músculo cardíaco también aparece por infección del propio virus. Además, siempre hay un costo-beneficio con una vacuna o cualquier medicamento”.

¿Cómo están manejando otros países la vacunación de niños y adolescentes?

En Estados Unidos, los mayores de doce años pueden recibir sin ninguna restricción la vacuna de Pfizer/BioNTech. Muchos países de la UE, como Francia e Italia, hacen lo mismo. En España, la campaña de vacunación para niños y adolescentes debe comenzar dos semanas antes del próximo curso escolar.

En Gran Bretaña, ya fuera de la UE, el gobierno quiere esperar los resultados de más estudios antes de recomendar masivamente el uso de Pfizer/Biontech en niños y adolescentes, a pesar que el preparado ya ha sido aprobado por la autoridad sanitaria del país para dicho grupo etario.

¿Cuáles son los riesgos para los niños si no se vacunan?

Aparentemente, el riesgo a que se enfermen de gravedad por COVID-19 es bajo. Esto se podría deber, reitera Drexler, a que por lo general, “el sistema inmunológico de un niño está más apto para enfrentar nuevas infecciones, porque para un menor muchas infecciones ocurren por primera vez. Pero, repito, la infección también puede traer graves consecuencias en algunos niños”. 

Por otro lado, las interrogantes de los padres frente a las vacunas se deben también al hecho de que sus hijos puedan regresar a las escuelas después de un año y medio de pandemia. “Entiendo perfectamente las dudas de los padres. Por eso tenemos que enfatizar en que los padres y todos los adultos a su alrededor se vacunen para que las escuelas no vuelvan a cerrar”, insiste el Dr. Drexler, recalcando que, en las escuelas, millones de niños pobres en América Latina recibían la única comida buena del día.

Ten Ways to Help Cultivate Patience

By your patience you will save your souls.” (Lk 21:19)

All of us must strive to practice patience. But of primary importance, and Saint Ignatius of Loyola insists on this, we must beg for the grace from God to be patient. 

Therefore, we would like to offer a brief strategy, a clear and practical program on how we can eventually, with the help of God’s grace, attain that most important and most needed virtue of patience. With God’s grace all is possible. Or, if you like: “Nothing is impossible with God!” (Lk 1:37)

1. God’s Infinite and Permanent Love

God loves you. Most of us have heard this countless times, such that it may seem to be a trite, a hackneyed phrase, a pious platitude, a common cliché. However, this short but most profound Biblical truth must descend from our head to our heart and it is this: God really and truly loves me! Most certainly we have heard and read this truth numerous times, but maybe it is like water running off a duck’s back in that it has never really sunk into the depths of our heart.

In a word, are we really convinced not only that God is love, but also that this God of love has an infinite and permanent love for me in all times, all places, and all circumstances? And yes, it must be stated, God loves me even when I fail Him due to my moral failures that we call sin.

Jesus came not for the perfect but for the sinners, and all of us fall into that category. As Saint Paul so clearly reminds us in Romans: “Where sin abounds, the mercy of God abounds all the more.” (Rom 5:20) Therefore, pray and meditate upon this most simple but profound truth: God really does love me always and without limitations. His love is both eternal and infinite.

This is our Great God!

2. Contemplate the Crucifix

In the life of Saint John Bosco, his mother, Margarita, stayed with him to help with with tasks of his Oratory, even in the midst of rambunctious teenage boys. However, she had reached her limit with these mischievous teens, and so she packed her bag, ready to return home.

Her saintly son, John Bosco, said nothing but only lifted his finger to the wall where there was a crucifix, with Jesus hanging from it. After gazing upon Jesus hanging and suffering on the cross, Mama Margarita understood how much Jesus loved these abandoned youths and how Jesus wanted Margarita to practice patience. Thereupon, this holy woman and mother of a saintly priest dropped her baggage and spent the rest of her life assisting John Bosco with the youth!

Therefore, in your life, when it seems as if the cross you are carrying is unbearable, lift up your eyes to contemplate Jesus hanging on the cross, loving all of humanity and patiently enduring the pain for all. You will receive a special grace to practice patience.

3. Ask for Grace

Saint Augustine states: “We are all beggars before God.” That means we are all in dire need of God’s help at all times and in all places because we are very weak. It is so true that we are weak; however, God is strong.

As the Psalmist reminds us: “Our help is in the name of the Lord who made heaven and earth.” (Ps 124:8) Even the great Apostle Paul cried out: “When I am weak, it is then that I am strong.” (2 Cor 12:10)

After begging the Lord to remove the thorn in his flesh, Saint Paul was told by the Lord: “My grace is sufficient.” (2 Cor 12:9) Indeed, if we beg the Lord for the grace to be patient, He will rush to our aid. God hears and responds to a humble, pure, and persevering prayer!

4. Make the Way of the Cross

On one occasion, I was speaking to a Spiritual Director and he made this comment: “When I find myself in a state of desolation, when things appear to be dark, dreary, and hopeless, I make the Stations of the Cross and inevitably the desolation disappears.” I believe this can be applied to patience.

When you feel as if the weight of the cross is unbearable, not able to be supported for another minute, then slowly walk the Way of the Cross with the Lord and you will receive renewed strength and vitality!

With Saint Francis of Assisi may we pray: “We adore you, O Christ, and we praise you, because by your holy cross you have redeemed the world.”

5. Honest Conversation With Jesus, Mary, and Saint Joseph

Our prayer, to be authentic, must be honest. Indeed, if we find our life situation very difficult, to the point of being almost impossible, then it is time to sit down in front of Jesus. You might also invite Saint Joseph and Mary to be present, and then pour out your heart to your Best Friends—Jesus, Mary, and Saint Joseph.

Jesus said: “Unless you become like a little child, you cannot enter the Kingdom of God.” (Mt 18:3)

Take for a model, if you like, the movie Marcelino Pan Y Vino, also known as The Miracle of Marcelino (1955 version). This little boy with holy abandon opens up to Jesus, expressing the deepest desire in his heart as well as his greatest suffering—the lack or absence of the love of a mother, and his great desire to have one—he unloads to Jesus. Jesus hears the little boy and accedes to his request.

So must we be like a little child, so must we imitate the holy abandon, trust, and simplicity of Marcelino, and tell the Lord how difficult it is at times to bear the cross and beg for the sorely needed patience. The Lord, Mary, and Saint Joseph will not delay in coming to your assistance!

6. Meditate Upon Heaven—Your Ultimate Destiny

It must be stated with bold truth: we do not meditate or contemplate enough on the reality of heaven.

Our life is very short, like the flower that rises in the morning and withers and dies as the sun goes down or like smoke blown by the wind. Saint Augustine states that our life in comparison with eternity is a mere blink of the eye. Our Lady of Fatima said that if humanity would only meditate upon eternity, they would be converted immediately!

We must meditate upon the shortness of our life, the purpose of our life, and the eternal reward that awaits us. The simple Catechism teaches us this eternal truth: “We are here on earth to know God, love God, and serve God, so that we will be with Him forever in heaven.” 

Even the greatest crosses and sufferings can be supported if we meditate more often upon Heaven—its joy, rewards, and reality! Saint Paul breaks out with this radiant and consoling truth: “Eye has not seen, ear has not heard, nor has it entered into the mind of man the wonderful things that God has prepared for those who love Him.” (1 Cor 2:9)

The thought of Heaven can attain for us patience, patience, and even more patience!

7. Offer It Up, Do Not Waste It!

Of course, the whole concept and virtue of patience is related to suffering. Our patience can be tried with respect to our health, finances, social conflicts, family problems, academic or work challenges or failures, ruptured relationships, mental and emotional turmoil and uncertainties of all kinds—all of these and more can put our patience to the test! However, instead of complaining and becoming bitter over your crosses, why not accept the crosses, beg for patience to carry them? Offer the crosses as well as your patient endurance to God for the conversion and salvation of sinners—there are many out there who need special graces, even in our own families.

With this supernatural view or perspective, the crosses become lighter and patience comes easier. Try it! Lift up your mind and cultivate a more supernatural vision of your life and your crosses, and their eternal value.

8. Don’t Hide It, but Share It

One of the key aspects of Ignatian Spirituality is that, in our spiritual life, we are not made to be loners, rugged individualists. On the contrary, to make it to heaven, we have to learn to work with others. Therefore, we must have some form of spiritual direction or accompaniment to persevere until the end in our spiritual journey.

Of capital importance for our spiritual progress is the need to have a spiritual director and to be able to open up with great humility, trust, and transparency, especially when the crosses seem heaviest and our patience is really being put to the test. You might be surprised that once you have unloaded, articulated, and expressed your cross and your need for patience to your spiritual director, how the cross seems to diminish in size and the patience that seemed almost impossible is indeed very possible. Jesus said: “My yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Mt 11:30)

9. Three Areas Where We Must Especially Be on Guard and Beg for the Grace

Jesus said: “By your patience, you will save your souls.” (Lk 21:19) Much of our spiritual victory can be achieved through awareness, vigilance, self-knowledge, and a Daily Examen.

In our short lives there will usually be three areas where we most need patience:

  • 1) with God,
  • 2) with others,
  • 3) with ourselves.

Let us briefly address these three areas.

Patience With God

First, with respect to God: it may happen that you have been praying to God for something and it seems that He is not listening. Nothing could be further from the truth! God always hears us, but He often makes us wait so that we can grow in the two virtues of patience and prayerfulness.

Saint Monica prayed for more than 30 years for the conversion of her family! But, through patience, it happened. Not only was her son, Augustine, converted, but also her husband and mother-in-law!

Patience With Others

With respect to patience with others, of great help might be the simple reminder of our own faults and sins, and how patient God has been with us. So should we be patient with the limitations of others.

Patience With Ourselves

Finally, Saint Frances de Sales insists that we must be patient with ourselves. Scripture says: “The just man falls seven times a day, but rises again.” (Prov 24:16) Saint Junipero Serra was famous for saying: “Siempre Adelante, Siempre Adelante y nunca atras.”(“Always forward, always forward and never look back.”) The Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary, Venerable Bruno Lanteri coined the two word axiom: NUNC COEPI—meaning that if I fall, I will get up as many times as need be and try again trusting in God’s infinite patience, mercy, and love.

Indeed, as the Psalmist teaches us: “God is slow to anger and rich in kindness.” (Ps 103:8)

10. Maria Cogita, Maria Invoca (Think of Mary and Invoke Mary)

Once again, a hallmark of the spirituality of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary is a tender, total, and unlimited trust in the presence, power, prayer, perseverance, and purity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In the prayer, the Memorare, Saint Bernard offers us these most consoling words: “O most gracious Virgin Mary, never was it known that anyone who fled to your protection, implored your help, or sought your intercession was left unaided…”  

Why not form this habit, consecrate your days to the Immaculate Heart of Mary and the Sacred Heart of Jesus. However, during the course of the day, especially during trials and tribulations when the cross seems most heavy, lift up your eyes and call upon the Holy Name of Mary. As a most loving and tender Mother, she will never fail you!

By Fr. Ed Broom, OMV

Father Ed Broom is an Oblate of the Virgin Mary and the author of Total Consecration Through the Mysteries of the Rosary and From Humdrum to Holy. He blogs regularly at Fr. Broom’s Blog.

Two Shots, Two Paralyses After COVID Vaccine + More

The Defender’s COVID NewsWatch provides a roundup of the latest headlines related to the SARS CoV-2 virus, including its origins and COVID vaccines.

By Children’s Health Defense Team

The Defender is experiencing censorship on many social channels. Be sure to stay in touch with the news that matters by subscribing to our top news of the dayIt’s free.

Two Shots, Two Paralyses After COVID Vaccine

Medpage Today reported:

A man experienced two discrete contralateral facial palsies, one after each dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

The first episode developed 5 hours after the 61-year-old man received the first dose of the vaccine, reported Abigail Burrows, MBBS, of Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in Guildford, England, and colleagues.

The second occurred 2 days after he received the second dose and was more severe, they wrote in BMJ Case Reports. On both occasions, the patient was diagnosed with Bell’s palsy.

Federal Lawsuit Seeks Immediate Halt of COVID Vaccines, Cites Whistleblower Testimony Claiming CDC Is Under-Counting Vaccine Deaths

The Defender reported:

America’s Frontline Doctors (AFLDS) filed a motion July 19, seeking immediate injunctive relief in Alabama Federal District Court to stop the use of Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) COVID vaccines — Pfizer/BioNTechModerna and Johnson & Johnson (J&J) — for three groups of Americans.

According to a press release, AFLDS is asking to immediately stop administration of experimentalCOVID vaccines in anyone 18 and younger, all those who have recovered from COVID and acquired natural immunity, and every other American who has not received informed consent as defined by federal law.

Super Bowl Champ Tells RFK, Jr.: 6 Months After Moderna Vaccine, Wife’s Injury ‘Progressively Worse’

The Defender reported:

Green Bay Packer hall-of-famer and Super Bowl champion Ken Ruettgers said his wife suffered a “severe reaction” to the Moderna COVID vaccine — and when she connected with other vaccine-injured people on Facebook, the private groups were shut down.

In an interview with Children’s Health Defense Chairman Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. on the “RFK Jr. The Defender Podcast,” Ruettgers said within 48 hours of being vaccinated, his wife Sheryl experienced swollen lymph nodes and a numbness and tingling sensation that progressed from her face all the way down to her legs.

It’s been six months since she received the shot, said Ruettgers, and the sensations of tingling and numbness have grown “progressively worse.”

Drugmakers Testing New mRNA Vaccines Despite Evidence of ‘Serious Danger’

Mercola reported:

Story at-a-glance:

  • Despite evidence of serious danger, a number of mRNA “vaccines” are in the pipeline. Among them is a COVID-flu RNA vaccine combo, which is currently being tested on ferrets, and several different mRNA seasonal influenza vaccines, which have already entered human trials.
  • Companies currently testing mRNA flu “vaccines” on human subjects include Moderna, Sanofi and Translate Bio. Pfizer/BioNTech is also pursuing plans for an mRNA flu shot.
  • Influenza vaccination confers narrow immunity against a specific viral strain or strains, leaving your body open to other viruses. The mRNA shots confer even more specific immunity, as your body is responding to the antigen alone rather than the whole virus.
  • Pfizer plans to ask for EUA authorization for a third COVID booster shot in August, citing evidence of waning immunity.
  • Researchers are working on transmissible vaccines to control viral reservoirs and diminish possibility of spillover. Are human transmissible vaccines next?

George Soros and Bill Gates Backed Consortium to Buy U.K. Maker of COVID Tests for $41 Million

Forbes reported:

Billionaires George Soros and Bill Gates are part of a consortium set to buy Mologic, a U.K.-based maker of COVID tests, in an effort to increase access to “affordable state-of-the-art medical technology” around the world, according to a statement released Monday.

The Soros Economic Development Fund and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced the launch of a new initiative, Global Access Health (GAH), aiming to strengthen the global rollout saving medical technology and the subsequent acquisition of Mologic Ltd, best known today for the deep-nostril technology used to deliver rapid COVID-19 tests. The technology can also be used to test for dengue, bilharzia and river blindness.

Coronavirus Antibodies Persist at Least Nine Months After Infection: Study

Fox News reported:

A study in northern Italy found coronavirus antibodies persisted in detectable levels for at least nine months after infection, regardless of a symptomatic or asymptomatic course of illness, though results differed depending on test used.

Researchers from Imperial College London and the University of Padova published findings in Nature Communications on Monday, stemming from an analysis in Vo’, Italy, where a mass testing campaign saw 86% (2,602 people) of the community tested in February/March and May 2020, about 6% of whom tested positive and were tested again in November.

Results indicated 98.8% of COVID-positive individuals had detectable levels of antibodies by November, and nearly 20% had increased levels or reactivity since May, suggesting potential reinfection. Scientists tracked antibody levels through three tests manufactured by Roche, DiaSorin and Abbott and found differing rates of decay in antibody levels.

Global Quest Underway to Speed COVID Vaccine Trials

Reuters reported:

Scientists are working on a benchmark for COVID-19 vaccine efficacy that would allow drugmakers to conduct smaller, speedier human trials to get them to market and address a huge global vaccine shortage.

Researchers are trying to determine just what level of COVID-19 antibodies a vaccine must produce to provide protection against the illness. Regulators already use such benchmarks – known as correlates of protection – to evaluate flu vaccines without requiring large, lengthy clinical trials.

Tennessee Postpones Vaccine Summit as It Continues to Dial Back Vaccination Outreach

USA Today reported:

The Tennessee Department of Health abruptly postponed a virtual vaccine summit intended to provide training to medical professionals across the state as the agency continues to dial back its vaccination outreach despite widespread condemnation.

The Tennessee Immunization Summit was scheduled for August as recently as last Wednesday but was indefinitely postponed as of Monday morning, according to the health department website. No new date was set, and all information about the coming summit was removed from the site.

World Is ‘Moving Further Away’ From End of COVID Pandemic: WHO Official

Fox News reported:

A top scientist at the World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Monday that the world is shifting further away from the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, owing to factors like viral variants, social mixing, the flouting of public health measures and vaccine inequities.

Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, epidemiologist and WHO COVID-19 technical lead, noted an 11.5% increase in global cases over the last week, with a 1% increase in deaths. Europe saw a 21% uptick in infections last week, while the Western Pacific experienced a nearly 30% increase, for instance. Though data reflects a slight dip in the African region, Kerkhove warned Africa is experiencing a high level of cases and an approximate 60% increase in deaths.

Cooper: Vaccine Facts Tell Different Story Than Media Stereotype

Chattanooga Times Free Press reported:

What is the national media scenario about COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in the United States?

The overwhelming story being pushed is that the great majority of the hesitancy comes from white Republicans, and mostly in the South. But is that true?

Anecdotally, many conservative people say they have chosen not to get the vaccine, and, frankly, the reason for most of the hesitancy is not clear. Some cite religious reasons, some aren’t sure the vaccine had enough testing, and some probably want to take it out on President Joe Biden, who they may or may not believe actually won the 2020 presidential election.

But what do the figures say?

Don Rafa, capellán de Tecnun

“La Escuela tiene su potencial en el servicio a cada persona”

El capellán don Rafa Hernández pone en marcha una biblioteca informal en Tecnun antes de apartarse de la vida académica

Foto: Ignacio Villameriel/Don Rafa en el campus de Ibaeta poco antes de su jubilación

El Dr. Rafael Hernández, más conocido en el campus como don Rafa,se retira a finales de agosto después de 25 años en la Universidad de Navarra. Fue capellán y profesor de Ética e Introducción al Cristianismo en ISSA School Of Applied Management durante 16 años y en el 2012 llegó a Tecnun como capellán y profesor de las mismas asignaturas, además de Antropología.  Antes de apartarse de la vida académica, ha puesto en marcha un proyecto que permitirá a la comunidad universitaria «vivir la Economía Circular dándole una función social».

Don Rafa ha querido reflexionar sobre su paso por la Universidad y agradecer el trabajo de las personas con las que ha trabajado.

1- ¿Con qué se queda de su paso por Tecnun?

He aprendido mucho de todas las personas: del equipo de limpieza, que son artistas profesionales que nos enseñan a ser persona, de los bedeles que muestran la primera línea imagen de Tecnun como familia.  Secretarias que gestionan todo lo que parece irreconciliable con paciencia, trato humano exquisito y eficacia imbatible. Mantenedores que saben más ingeniería práctica que todos los catedráticos del mundo. Informáticos “buenos samaritanos” que acuden inmediatamente en ayuda de los que padecemos incidencias cuando los dispositivos nos dejan tirados en el camino y además siempre solucionan los problemas imposibles. Claustro académico cercano que sale en tu ayuda casi sin que tengas que pedirlo cuando te ven en apuros. Equipo de comunicación que sabe cómo hacernos entender hacia el exterior del campus y además promueven con su cariño y profesionalidad la comunicación interna. Tantaka dando cauce a los deseos solidarios de las alumnas y alumnos cuando les planteo esta posibilidad a comienzo de cada curso. Por cierto: el potencial de conocimientos Tecnun genera servicios de altura profesional entre los y las voluntarias.

2- Anteriormente también estuvo en ISSA. ¿Qué recuerdos tiene de esa etapa?

Casi veinte años trabajando en ISSA forman una fascinante historia de aprendizaje.  Aprendí en la práctica qué es ser capellán y profesor universitario rodeado de la mejor gente del mundo, tanto entre el claustro académico como entre la genialidad de las alumnas.  Sólo eran chicas al principio y a partir de 2003 alumnos que supieron aprovechar esos estudios para situarse muy alto en el mundo profesional. Todos mis recuerdos en ISSA son buenos: cercanía, amistad, servicios como capellán que el Señor hacía fructificar en conversiones y crecimiento en la vida de fe y en la excelencia humana. En ISSA nació el primer libro del mundo que propone una ética específica para Asistentes de Dirección:  “Crecimiento personal: Excelencia corporativa”, que escribí en sinergia con los trabajos y experiencias del alumnado y profesionales de este campo.

ISSA fue la primera facultad universitaria para Asistentes de Dirección en España. Pero, sobre todo, lleva en sus raíces y código genético el humus de sinergias entre el estilo de las empresas y organizaciones guipuzcoanas, y en general de Euskadi, que configuraron de manera muy nítida su identidad académica.

Sueño con que la Universidad, desde la sede ISSA de Pamplona, y sin abandonar su actual desarrollo allí, vuelva a acercarse a Donostia para fortalecer el contacto con las 3.000 alumni de este territorio en encuentros informales. Muchas veces de boca- oído y otras más formales continuando el diálogo cercano, que de algún modo se interrumpió al terminar su presencia en Donostia en junio de 2016.

Constituirá siempre una sinergia beneficiosa entre Navarra y Gipuzkoa y fortalecerá sin duda la personalidad, para mí única, de ISSA. Mutatis mutandis, pienso que Tecnun y Ceit tienen unas raíces identitarias que nacieron de sinergias únicas entre el emprendimiento de los primeros claustros académicos y los investigadores y la realidad industrial, económica y financiera de Gipuzkoa. Esta riqueza merece la pena ser recordada con iniciativas que conserven y fortalezcan un modo de ser y de operar plenamente unido a los objetivos generales del campus de Pamplona.  Y al mismo tiempo, promotor de las iniciativas propias del campus donostiarra. 

3- ¿Qué último mensaje le gustaría dejar a los alumnos y personal de Tecnun?

No soy quién para aconsejar pero hay algo que me viene recurrentemente al corazón y a la cabeza. Ni Tecnun ni la Universidad de Navarra han de confundirse jamás con lo que comúnmente se denominan multinacionales en el sentido fuerte y peyorativo de la palabra. Las competencias profesionales indiscutibles y excelentes de Tecnun, lo mismo que las de Ceit, suponen un potencial que tiene su sentido en el servicio a cada persona, tanto dentro de la “empresa” como proyectado al bien común. Las multinacionales buscan objetivos y resultados, muchas veces inmediatos, y ponen a las personas al servicio de esas metas, pasando, lamentablemente por encima de sus situaciones concretas y las dejan heridas. Esto sucede, la mayoría de las veces, sin mala voluntad, aunque con más frecuencia por falta de empatía o cortes en la comunicación interpersonal. Tanto Tecnun como Ceit nacieron con un clima de colaboración y amistad mutua admirables que motivó a lo largo de los años a las personas el empeño por dar lo mejor de sí mismas con un espíritu de entrega e incluso sacrificio generosísimo. Sigamos entre todos inspirándonos en estas raíces históricas admirables que son la manifestación más convincente del ideario cristiano.  Sueño e impulso real de San Josemaría, fundador de la Universidad: “El hombre no debe limitarse a hacer cosas, a construir objetos. El trabajo nace del amor, manifiesta el amor, se ordena al amor”.

Bombshell: Arizona ballot audit has finally revealed what we suspected – enough tainted ballots to wipe out Biden’s “victory”

(Natural News) For months, President Donald Trump has warned that the 2020 election was rigged and thus stolen from him, and for the same period of time, Democrats who are likely in on the theft have pushed back, along with their minions in the ‘mainstream media.’

But ‘Trump the liar’ has once again been proven correct, at least in Arizona.

Preliminary results from an ongoing audit of some 2.1 million ballots cast in Arizona’s most populous region, Maricopa County, home to Phoenix, reveals enough fraudulent ballots to overturn Joe Biden’s ‘victory’ by orders of magnitude.

“Among the audit’s findings so far: 11,326 people in the county who voted in the November 3 election were NOT on the voter rolls on November 7, but were added to the voter rolls by December 4,” the National File reported.

“This number is higher than Joe Biden’s supposed statewide ‘lead’ in Arizona of 10,457 votes. Additionally, more than 74,000 mail-in ballots were counted in the county even though there is no recorded evidence of the ballots being sent to the ‘voters’ in the first place — and Maricopa County withheld all photographic evidence of the mail-in ballot envelopes from the Republican audit team (meanwhile, photographs show ballot printers and boxes getting loaded onto a ‘Destruction’ truck in Phoenix during the Senate hearing),” the site added.

The findings were relayed to state Senate Republicans late last week by officials from Cyber Ninjas, the firm conducting the audit. The news reached President Trump, as expected, and he issued a statement that also singled out the garbage media for ridicule.

“AP and other media outlets are doing major disinformation to try and discredit the massive number of voter irregularities and fraud found in both Arizona and Georgia,” the 45th president said.

“When the real numbers are released people will be shocked,” he added, “but this is a concerted effort of the Fake News Media to discredit and demean.”

“There has never been anything like it,” Trump continued. “Numbers will be released shortly, and they are extraordinarily big and highly determinative!”

He also addressed Cyber Ninja’s preliminary findings directly.

“They spew the gross misinformation purposefully put out by the county and the Associated Press, and IGNORE the very important Arizona Senate’s hearing yesterday, which showed 168,000 fraudulent ballots printed on illegal paper (unofficial ballots), 74,000 mail in ballots received that were never mailed (magically appearing ballots), 11,000 voters were added to the voter rolls AFTER the election and still voted, all the access logs to the machines were wiped, and the election server was hacked during the election,” Trump noted.

In addition to the tens of thousands of ballots that were counted without there being any evidence they were sent out, the audit team also discovered that thin paper used for about 1268,000 ballots led to “bleed through” which damaged them after a polling official ordered staff to hand out Sharpie markers to same-day voters even though she was aware they could taint ballots.

“Another round of subpoenas is expected, as state senators call for the Republican-controlled Arizona legislature to decertify the election and ‘recall’ Joe Biden’s electors in the state,” the National File reported.

“Activists on the ground are fighting to get a warrant from necessary Arizona senators to compel Maricopa County to hand over more evidence.”

Interestingly, a new poll released this week found that a solid majority of Republican voters in Arizona are confident that the election was stolen.

The Arizona Public Opinion Pulse survey, conducted by OH Predictive Insights, found that 62 percent — nearly two-thirds — of state GOP voters believe the audit will show that Trump pulled out a victory there last year.

“Republicans are counting on this audit to prove the rhetoric they have heard on Fox News and other conservative news sources – that Trump won Arizona and the entire election,” said Mike Noble, OHPI chief of research.

We’re sure Arizona was tampered with, along with several other “battleground states” in 2020.

Sources include:

NationalFile.com

USAFeatures.news

Trump.news

The Devil Hates Latin, Says Exorcist

DAVID CLAYTON

I just attended a talk by the exorcist for diocese of San Jose, Fr Gary Thomas. He is the subject of a book and a film called The Rite, starring Anthony Hopkins. (The talk was organized by a group called Catholics at Work.)

First, he was a great speaker. He described how almost by accident, and after 20 years as a parish priest, he found himself sent to Rome to learn how to perform the Rite of Exorcism. He was very clear in saying that, in his opinion, the recent rise in interest in New Age paganism has opened the door to adherence to the occult for greater numbers of people than before, which in turn opens the way to diabolical possession. He has always been inundated with requests, even before the publicity. The fact that he described these things pretty much in the same straightforward, matter-of-fact way that one might describe what goes on in a marriage or baptism in a parish RCIA class only served to reinforce the truth of it all for me. And I would say that if anything is to increase your faith, it is listening to accounts of how the Church overcomes the effects of possession by the devil and demons, and the suffering of those poor people who are affected by them.I wanted to pass on one little comment that he made almost in passing. I do not know where he stands liturgically in regard to the Mass – there was nothing in what he said that led me to believe that he celebrates the Latin Mass, for example. However, he did explain that the Rite of Exorcism is only said in Latin. One reason is practical – there is no approved translation in English as yet. He gave another reason why he was so strongly in favor of the use of Latin in the Rite of Exorcism: “The Devil hates Latin, it is the universal language of the Church.” I asked him about this afterwards, and he repeated it, saying that his personal experiences as an exorcist who has performed many, many exorcisms have convinced him of this. He told me he had heard from exorcists who did exorcisms in Italian, Spanish and Portuguese (the only approved vernaculars for this Rite) that Latin was the most effective language.

‘DEMONS I’VE FACED AS AN EXORCIST’ – FR. GARY THOMAS

By Shirley Aaron | 

IN his 2011 film, Anthony Hopkins plays a priest who casts out the Devil… but the churchman who advised him on set reveals here how he has dealt with the real thing…

The images are terrifying. Girls scream in agony, their bodies inhumanly contorted. They spit curses and growl in unknown tongues. Demonic possession, and those who battle it, have been a recurrent theme in films from 1973’s classic The Exorcist to the thriller movie ‘The Rite’. 

But to Father Gary Thomas The Rite is no Hollywood fantasy. It’s his life. The movie tells the story of the clergyman’s own chilling journey to becoming an exorcist, learning all he knows about battling the Devil from a venerable priest, played on screen by Oscar winner Sir Anthony Hopkins.

“I don’t think I’d ever seen Satan until I became an exorcist,” says Father Thomas, who spent a week on the movie set in Hungary as an adviser. “I’m not offended if someone doesn’t believe it. What I’ve described, I’ve seen.” Hopkins plays Father Lucas, based on Father Thomas’s mentor, Rome’s leading exorcist Father Carmine De Filippis. In the film, Father Thomas is renamed Michael Kovak, played by Colin O’Donoghue, Irish star of TV series ‘The Tudors’.

But as filming progressed, the cast grew nervous of demonic possession. “The producer and the two key actors all asked me privately if they could be attacked by doing this movie,” says Father Thomas. “I said: ‘I can’t absolutely say yes or no,’ which led me to say: ‘possibly.’ They were afraid.”

Hopkins pressed ahead with the role but when he walked the red carpet at the Los Angeles premiere, the Welsh star was sure to keep Father Thomas at his side as cameras swirled around them. Father Thomas, 64, who ministers to the Sacred Heart Parish in Saratoga, California, is one of the rare American priests trained as an exorcist.

Demand for exorcism is at an alltime high in the US and priests can’t keep up. Father Thomas receives a new request about every two days. Yet he fears no evil. “You don’t have to be afraid of demons,” he says, unabashed about his belief in demonic possession, despite sceptics even within his own church. “You have to give evil a certain amount of respect because demons are more powerful than humans and without Christ we are dead. But no, I’m never scared.”

He was selected by his bishop to attend a Vatican-sponsored course in Italy in 2005 in response to a disturbing increase in reported cases of possession. He was later apprenticed to Father Carmine, attending dozens of demon-battling rites. His initial scepticism and training were chronicled in a best-selling book The Rite, by Matt Baglio, which became the basis for the film.

Father Thomas recalls when “Lisa”, a married woman in her 20s, was brought to his parish office by family members worried about her sudden violent outbursts. “I felt a huge presence in the room,” says Father Thomas, who began to pray. “Her face started to distort, she started speaking in a language not known to me that she hadn’t been competent in before.

She was hissing and spitting and exhibiting a serpentine look both in her body language and her face. She kept rolling her eyes.” He had seen this before – demonic possession. “I laid my crucifix on her. She let out an incredible scream. I took my stole, which represents my authority as a member of the Catholic Church and as a priest, and I laid it on her. She slid out of the chair and on to the floor to get away from it. I said: ‘That’s enough for today.’”

A woman possessed in The Rite spits up metal nails and Father Thomas admits: “I have never actually seen that but another priest in Rome told me himself that he had seen that more than once.” To many, exorcism seems a relic of the Dark Ages that has no place in the modern Catholic Church as it tries to recover from the scandal of child abuse by priests. But Father Thomas insists: “Satan hasn’t gone away. He is relevant in and out of season.”

It was the late Pope John Paul II who sent a letter to all US dioceses asking each bishop to appoint and train an exorcist, propelling Father Thomas to Rome in 2005. Classes at the Vatican-sponsored Regina Apostolorum taught the history and theology of exorcism but Father Thomas quickly realised that he needed a mentor and began attending rites with Father Carmine De Filippis.

Being able to be apprenticed under an exorcist in Rome was far more profound,” he says. Father Thomas witnessed and assisted in more than 80 exorcisms while in the Italian capital, ranging from the sedate to the disturbingly violent, before returning to the US to perform his own rites. But most people seeking exorcism don’t receive the rite. 

“Often they’ll begin the conversation with: ‘Father, I need an exorcism,’ and my answer is: ‘I don’t do them on demand.’ In five years I’ve probably met 100 people. I’ve performed 40 exorcisms on only about five of them.” Exorcists are trained to be the ultimate sceptics, always looking for logical explanations for the disturbing phenomena they witness.

“A lot of the time it is mental health,” says Father Thomas. “On my team I have a clinical psychologist, a psychiatrist and a physician – all of whom believe in the possibility of Satan’s existence but they’re not people who say there’s a demon under every rock or chair. “Then there are things that happen that we can’t explain. When people show signs of some kind of demoniacal manifestation such as foaming at the mouth or rolling of the eyes or taking on the appearance of a serpent sometimes, or speaking in a language that they have no competency in but all of a sudden do, those are the classical signs.”

But months of questioning, prayers and psychiatric examinations precede the decision to perform an exorcism. The rite involves prayer, gospel readings, a litany of the saints, a homily, a blessing and the command for the demon to leave his victim. The ritual can take up to two tense hours. “I say: ‘In the name of Our Lord Jesus Christ I demand that you leave,’ and I will say that repeatedly in the midst of prayers of exorcism from the Solemn Rite that I pray over people,” says Father Thomas.

“The tools are very simple: holy water, stole, book of deliverance, a crucifix, the rite of exorcism and that’s it.” The demon invariably lashes out at the exorcist, either physically or emotionally. “The exorcist does get attacked,” says Father Thomas. “Most priests I know want nothing to do with it. Demons attack where the exorcist is weakest. I have never experienced a physical attack. Mine have been more spiritual, psychological, emotional. Sexual temptation, trying to jeopardise my celibacy, creating emotional disturbances in me, exacerbating the experiences of loneliness that appear in a priest’s life at times.

“I recently delivered a very powerful demon whose name was Shroud. I got attacked and so did the other priest who was with me. He had a numbness down his leg for weeks, some kind of nerve damage. In my case it was emotional. We had a hard time delivering this demon. He just wouldn’t come out.” Father Thomas defends himself by chanting protection prayers and prayers taking on authority in the name of Christ. But fighting the Devil can be a lengthy battle and often requires repeated rituals.

Demons are deceivers,” he says. “But once you get them to divulge their name, they have lost.” People open themselves to possession by dabbling in the occult and paganism, he believes. “A demon has to be invited in. Refrain from being involved in things that would be considered New Age: rituals of the occult, things such as Wicca or tarot cards, ouija boards, superstitious practices, black magic, white magic, anything that would be idolatrous.

“I think as long as people have a relationship with God and stay close to God, they don’t have anything to fear.” Father Thomas wishes more priests would become exorcists. “The people who come to me, whether it’s something diabolical or whether it’s psychological, these are mostly people who are enduring great suffering,” he says.

It’s not hocus-pocus. It’s not smoke and mirrors. It’s a profoundly healing ministry.” And the need for exorcists is soaring. “There are too many people coming. I’m not surprised given the times we live in. There’s more  demonic activity. There’s the absence of God in the lives of a lot of people.” His exorcism of Lisa was one of his most successful: three rites evicted the demon and Father Thomas says: “She was able to resume her normal life and could go back to church.” He believes that the film The Rite offers the most realistic, orthodox depiction of exorcism thus so far from Hollywood.

There aren’t any levitating beds, spinning heads or pea-green soup,” he says. Yet he watched the movie spellbound. “It was very emotional for me,” he says. “I found some of those scenes riveting. I found some very profound. They’re very accurate. That’s what I’ve seen in real life.” Now Father Thomas must leave Hollywood behind and return to his parish, knowing that soon he will yet again stare into the face of pure evil, fighting the Devil for possession of another human soul.