The President of the United States is stigmatizing citizens unwilling to get an experimental treatment with unknown long term effects, known complications, and uncertain benefits as lazy and causing people to die.
Joe Biden on Tuesday delivered remarks on his administration’s efforts to get more jabs in people’s arms.
www.thegatewaypundit.com
Not far at all from declaring us public health problems requiring federal government intervention.
WTF is going on in this country?
Here is that same guy demonstrating his vigilance. Wears his mask on Zoom calls and alone outside, but he and his brilliant wife take theirs off to visit two people in their 90s and give them hugs and hand shakes.
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I prefer to call those people who refuse to get the vaccine a name that more accurately portrays who and what they are. Stupid
How would you like a concrete example?
In Greenville, TN, there's a man named Walt Cross. He's the proprietor of the Mustard Seed, a shop in
Newport just over the county line, that takes its name from the Gospel of Matthew and carries herbs, nutritional supplements and local produce. Apparently, the residents trust him because he gets a lot of calls from people asking about treatments for various ailments.
Mr. Cross, who is also a volunteer fire chief for Cocke County, is a tall, lanky east Tennessean with a blue-eyed focus and a warm mountain drawl, whether he’s describing his preferred method to rouse people who have overdosed (ammonia rather than Narcan) or answering questions from Covid patients about how to treat their symptoms (hydrate, eat, take herbal extracts, apply hot and cold compresses).
Before going to the doctor, many people phone Mr. Cross. Or after the doctor’s medicines don’t seem to be working.
Although his father died of Covid, Mr. Cross won’t get the vaccine. “We jumped into bed with the vaccine too fast!” he said. While he won’t tell people to get it or not, he says pointedly, “Do your due diligence.”
Mr. Cross, who
lectures around the country and in Rwanda about preventive wellness, is studying for an advanced degree in naturopathic medicine. His shop evokes themes dear to Appalachians, with people calling these early April weeks the “redbud winter” — the
spring chill during which
redbud trees swell with mauve-pink blossoms. A store wall is lined with Mason jars filled with herbaceous plants like
jewelweed, passionflower and
elderberry, which Appalachians were taught to use by the Cherokee.