Knowingly linking to disinformation is, itself, a form of disinformation.
Yes
No
Knowingly linking to disinformation is, itself, a form of disinformation.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
Well, I apologize for expecting you to be interested in being informed about an official (and related issues) in your state. Anyway, I hope the situation you continue to report on is unique to your industry and location. Those rates of vaccine hesitancy or rejection and those rates of infection (35%) and morbidity/mortality in your workforce are not only a human tragedy but a political catastrophe. Hypothetical (which I know you'll ignore): if you had an entirely vaccinated workforce and 20% reported breakthrough cases, would you share that information here?
Sure.
Bikes and Vaccines in this one:
https://itsgoingdown.org/reflections...-rotterdam-nl/
I don’t know where to start writing about this. On the one hand I’m overtaken by emotion, still processing the things I witnessed last night. On the other hand I’m trying to make sense of what has happened from the perspective of someone who believes in social revolution. I don’t think the latter will be something that I can fit into this short, emotionally laden piece of text, but some things need to be said about this right now. What happened last night was so much more than the supposed “fascist riot” many are dismissing it as.
Last night a protest against the (renewed) Coronavirus measures was called. This protest was clearly initiated by people that should, for the most part, be called fascist. These protests draw a crowd much more diverse than just fascists, however, and the discontent is broadening, especially now that the state is imposing more and stricter repression to control the spread of the virus.
lol when will you guys learn
Comparing forced vaccination to forced abortion is straight out of the disinformation playbook.
Interesting quote from an article on boosters in Israel. The data suggests that boosters may last 9-11 months or longer. The novel insight was that maybe the booster is really the 2nd shot in that insufficient time lapsed between the first and second dose. 3 weeks really is a short gap -Mike G
Well, I can't report anything beyond what I've seen with my own eyes and heard from family and friends over there.
As to all Swiss people speaking all four languages perfectly, obviously I'm being facetious. But the percentage of Swiss people who are fluent at a conversational level in at least three languages is amazing, and this often includes French, German and Italian and many are also excellent English speakers as well.
Last edited by Saab2000; 11-22-2021 at 07:49 AM.
La Cheeserie!
OK a little research for those who use the fact Covid still exists to argue against the efficacy of vaccines,particularly the Covid vaccine.
In 1796 the first attempt at inoculation against smallpox was given to an 8 year old boy. (if your not familiar with that read up on it.....A bold move IMO) In 1977 the last verified case of smallpox occurred in Somalia.It takes time effort and patience to defeat Mother Nature. Odds are everyone reading this has been vaccinated against it.
Count on people to turn a public health issue into this mess. Just get vaccinated.
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