Especially those in health care who are in the know. The establishment never talks about it. Enquiring minds want to know.
A google.com search turned up a article by The Atlantic, posted below. Certain healthcare professionals I’ve talked to have expressed concerns over Covid vaccinations. One concern is related to vaccine allergies and the difficulty in determining the cause of the allergy in shots that combine vaccines. In fact, one Covid vaccine manufacturer has stated they are planning to combine their Covid and Influenza vaccine into one shot. Covid does not seem serious enough to warrant mandatory mass vaccinations of low risk individuals. High risk and the fearful are welcome to get vaccinated and enjoy whatever protection the vaccines do provide, which is stated to be very high. Whatever the actual vaccine risks, these risks are multiplied by each jab taken. We are over a year and a half since Covid became pandemic and many people, especially the higher risk, have been recommended to have three jabs. The media, the healthcare industry, and public officials have lost credibility among many people because of the politicalization of Covid during Trump’s term, misleading use of statistics, censorship, and the vilification of the vaccine hesitant. Remember how “Basket of deplorables” comment went? It galvanized the speaker’s opposition. If more people realized the “Fact checkers” rely on Leftist 22 year old media interns, for example, to do the “fact-checking”, the previously mentioned entities would have even less credibility with the public than they have now. The Biden Administration will preside over more Covid deaths in the US than the Trump Administration in spite of having Covid vaccines the Trump Administration did not have. Sure, this statement is not fair, but neither is politicizing a pandemic. No wonder there is so much systemic mistrust. Sometimes you have to sleep in the bed you’ve made. Vaccine mandates are not without their economic hazards. For example, non-vaxxers who comply with various restrictions will not be spending their money on that particular activity or other related activities, such as air travel, hotels, and local transportation. These businesses will likely need to raise their prices in the long term to keep their doors open, reducing their value proposition among the vaccinated, potentially leading to a negative feedback loop. This could lead to tax revenue declines as well, along with their own associated impacts. Millions Are Saying No to the Vaccines. What Are They Thinking? Feelings about the vaccine are intertwined with feelings about the pandemic. By Derek Thompson About the author: Derek Thompson is a staff writer at The Atlantic, where he writes about economics, technology, and the media. He is the author of Hit Makers and the host of the podcast Crazy/Genius. Updated at 10:07 a.m. ET on May 4, 2021. Several days ago, the mega-popular podcast host Joe Rogan advised his young listeners to skip the COVID-19 vaccine. “I think you should get vaccinated if you’re vulnerable,” Rogan said. “But if you’re 21 years old, and you say to me, ‘Should I get vaccinated?’ I’ll go, ‘No.’” Rogan’s comments drew widespread condemnation. But his view is surprisingly common. One in four Americans says they don’t plan to take the COVID-19 vaccine, and about half of Republicans under 50 say they won’t get a vaccine. This partisan vaccine gap is already playing out in the real world. The average number of daily shots has declined 20 percent in the past two weeks, largely because states with larger Trump vote shares are falling off the pace. What are they thinking, these vaccine-hesitant, vaccine-resistant, and COVID-apathetic? I wanted to know. So I posted an invitation on Twitter for anybody who wasn’t planning to get vaccinated to email me and explain why. In the past few days, I spoke or corresponded with more than a dozen such people. I told them that I was staunchly pro-vaccine, but this wouldn’t be a takedown piece. I wanted to produce an ethnography of a position I didn’t really understand. Read: Vaccine refusal will come at a cost—for all of us The people I spoke with were all under 50. A few of them self-identified as Republican, and none of them claimed the modern Democratic Party as their political home. Most said they weren’t against all vaccines; they were just a “no” on this vaccine. They were COVID-19 no-vaxxers, not overall anti-vaxxers. Many people I spoke with said they trusted their immune system to protect them. “Nobody ever looks at it from the perspective of a guy who’s like me,” Bradley Baca, a 39-year-old truck driver in Colorado, told me. “As an essential worker, my life was never going to change in the pandemic, and I knew I was going to get COVID no matter what. Now I think I’ve got the antibodies, so why would I take a risk on the vaccine?” Some had already recovered from COVID-19 and considered the vaccine unnecessary. “In December 2020 I tested positive and experienced many symptoms,” said Derek Perrin, a 31-year-old service technician in Connecticut. “Since I have already survived one recorded bout with this virus, I see no reason to take a vaccine that has only been approved for emergency use. I trust my immune system more than this current experiment.” Others were worried that the vaccines might have long-term side effects. “As a Black American descendant of slavery, I am bottom caste, in terms of finances,” Georgette Russell, a 40-year-old resident of New Jersey, told me. “The fact that there is no way to sue the government or the pharmaceutical company if I have any adverse reactions is highly problematic to me.” Many people said they had read up on the risk of COVID-19 to people under 50 and felt that the pandemic didn’t pose a particularly grave threat. “The chances of me dying from a car accident are higher than my dying of COVID,” said Michael Searle, a 36-year-old who owns a consulting firm in Austin, Texas. “But it’s not like I don’t get in my car.” And many others said that perceived liberal overreach had pushed them to the right. “Before March 2020, I was a solid progressive Democrat,” Jenin Younes, a 37-year-old attorney, said. “I am so disturbed by the Democrats’ failure to recognize the importance of civil liberties. I’ll vote for anyone who takes a strong stand for civil liberties and doesn’t permit the erosion of our fundamental rights that we are seeing now.” Baca, the Colorado truck driver, also told me he didn’t vote much before the pandemic, but the perception of liberal overreach had a strong politicizing effect. “When COVID hit, I saw rights being taken away. So in 2020, I voted for the first time in my life, and I voted all the way Republican down the ballot.” After many conversations and email exchanges, I came to understand what I think of as the deep story of the American no-vaxxer. And I think the best way to see it clearly is to contrast it with my own story. My view of the vaccines begins with my view of the pandemic. I really don’t want to get COVID-19. Not only do I want to avoid an illness with uncertain long-term implications, but I also don’t want to pass it along to somebody in a high-risk category, such as my grandmother or an immunocompromised stranger. For more than a year, I radically changed my life to avoid infection. So I was thrilled to hear that the vaccines were effective at blocking severe illness and transmission. I eagerly signed up to take both my shots, even after reading all about the side effects. The under-50 no-vaxxers’ deep story has a very different starting place. It begins like this: The coronavirus is a wildly overrated threat. Yes, it’s appropriate and good to protect old and vulnerable people. But I’m not old or vulnerable. If I get it, I’ll be fine. In fact, maybe I have gotten it, and I am fine. I don’t know why I should consider this disease more dangerous than driving a car, a risky thing I do every day without a moment’s worry. Liberals, Democrats, and public-health elites have been so wrong so often, we’d be better off doing the opposite of almost everything they say. David A. Graham: It’s not vaccine hesitancy. It’s COVID denialism. Just as my COVID-19 story shapes my vaccine eagerness, this group’s COVID-19 story shapes their vaccine skepticism. Again and again, I heard variations on this theme: I don’t need some novel pharmaceutical product to give me permission to do the things I’m already doing. This isn’t even an FDA-approved vaccine; it’s authorized for an emergency. Well, I don’t consider COVID-19 a personal emergency. So why would I sign up to be an early guinea pig for a therapy that I don’t need, whose long-term effects we don’t understand? I’d rather bet on my immune system than on Big Pharma. For both yes-vaxxers like me and the no-vaxxers I spoke with, feelings about the vaccine are intertwined with feelings about the pandemic. Although I think I’m right about the vaccines, the truth is that my thinking on this issue is motivated. I canceled vacations, canceled my wedding, avoided indoor dining, and mostly stayed home for 15 months. All that sucked. I am rooting for the vaccines to work. But the no-vaxxers I spoke with just don’t care. They’ve traveled, eaten in restaurants, gathered with friends inside, gotten COVID-19 or not gotten COVID-19, survived, and decided it was no big deal. What’s more, they’ve survived while flouting the advice of the CDC, the WHO, Anthony Fauci, Democratic lawmakers, and liberals, whom they don’t trust to give them straight answers on anything virus-related. The no-vaxxers’ reasoning is motivated too. Specifically, they’re motivated to distrust public-health authorities who they’ve decided are a bunch of phony neurotics, and they’re motivated to see the vaccines as a risky pharmaceutical experiment, rather than as a clear breakthrough that might restore normal life (which, again, they barely stopped living). This is the no-vaxxer deep story in a nutshell: I trust my own cells more than I trust pharmaceutical goop; I trust my own mind more than I trust liberal elites. So what will change their minds? I cannot imagine that any amount of hectoring or shaming, or proclamations from the public-health or Democratic communities, will make much of a difference for this group. “I’ve lost all faith in the media and public-health officials,”said Myles Pindus, a 24-year-old in Brooklyn, who told me he is skeptical of the mRNA vaccines and is interested in the Johnson & Johnson shot. “It might sound crazy, but I’d rather go to Twitter and check out a few people I trust than take guidance from the CDC, or WHO, or Fauci,” Baca, the Colorado truck driver, told me. Other no-vaxxers offered similar appraisals of various Democrats and liberals, but they were typically less printable. From my conversations, I see three ways to persuade no-vaxxers: make it more convenient to get a shot; make it less convenient to not get a shot; or encourage them to think more socially. 1. Try something like “DoorDash for vaccines.” To get people to participate in an activity they don’t really care about, you make it as easy and tantalizing as possible. Some people have already suggested offering money, free food, or even lottery tickets in exchange for vaccination. But one source who asked to remain anonymous suggested that state health departments should offer something like DoorDash for vaccines. With any new technology, the early adopters are the ones most willing to tolerate glitches and a bad experience. That’s fine when supply is limited, but as you try to get to mass market, you need to perfect the product and experience. All of which to say: Cities should start to roll out a vaccine in-home service, which people can book on short notice. Providers come to you, and maybe bring you some sort of gift along with the vaccine. Cities should have enough capacity and staff to do that at this point, and a service such as this would be key to getting young people in particular to take it. 2. Make it suck more to not be vaccinated. Governments and companies may find that soft bribery is the best way to get the no-vaxxers to the clinics. Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, for example, has linked her state reopening policies to progress in shots, letting restaurants and bars increase their occupancy once 60 percent of the state has been vaccinated, and promising to lift mask orders when 70 percent of Michiganders have received both doses. Read: America is now in the hands of the vaccine-hesitant Millions of people want to go to sporting events, attend concerts, or travel internationally. If those who cannot prove that they’ve been vaccinated are denied service, I expect that some will sign up for shots purely as a means of reengaging in their favorite activities. “If all or most countries instituted vaccine passports, that might change [my mind],” Younes, the attorney, told me. But the cultural backlash against domestic restrictions could be prodigious. If blue-state governors and sports stadiums deny economic activities to the unvaccinated while red-state stadiums allow anybody to sit at a bar or in the bleachers, it will deepen the culture-war tensions between scolding liberals and accommodating conservatives in a way that might not be good for Democrats politically, even if they have the upper hand in the public-health argument. 3. “What if natural immunity isn’t enough to protect your grandmother?” The most common argument against the vaccines is: My immune system is good enough for me. One counterargument is: That’s right, but the vaccines are even better at protecting others. Even for people who have already recovered from COVID-19, getting fully vaccinated strengthens the antibody and T-cell protection against the disease and likely provides superior protection from variants that can pierce our natural immunity. Why do more levels of protection matter? Because the vaccines aren’t just about building a defensive wall around safe young bodies. We’re also collectively building a wall around the more vulnerable members of society. And little holes in the wall can lead to unnecessary deaths. In April, the CDC reported that an unvaccinated health-care worker set off an outbreak in a mostly vaccinated Kentucky nursing home. Several vaccinated seniors got sick and one vaccinated resident died.* the COVID-19 vaccines won’t stop all infections, especially for some people with weak immune systems. I made this case to several no-vaxxers: Your grandparents, elderly neighbors, and immunocompromised friends will be safer if you’re vaccinated, even if you’ve already been infected. I played with the “COVID is no worse than driving” metaphor that many of them offered. I agree that driving is acceptably safe for most people, I said. But imagine, I added, if you could have a forward collision warning system installed in your car for free? An already-pretty-safe activity would become an even safer activity; and what’s more, you’d be protecting other people on the road at minimal cost to yourself. I can’t tell you this argument got a lot of people to drop the phone, sprint to a vaccine clinic, and sign up for a Fauci tattoo on their arm. The truth is that I’m not sure that I changed anybody’s mind. But I can honestly say that this argument gave several no-vaxxers a bit of pause. They responded by talking about chains of transmission throughout the community, rather than focusing on their own immune system. Several of them asked to see evidence of my position so that they could examine it for themselves. The United States suffers from a deficit of imagining the lives of other people. This is true of my side: Vaccinated liberals don’t take much time to calmly hear out the logic of those refusing the shots. But it’s also true of the no-vaxxers, who might reconsider their view if they grasped the far-ranging consequences of their private vaccination decisions. Instead of shaming and hectoring, our focus should be on broadening their circle of care: Your cells might be good enough to protect you, but the shots are better to protect Grandpa. *This article previously misstated that two vaccinated seniors died in a Kentucky nursing home. In fact, only one vaccinated person died. https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/05/the-people-who-wont-get-the-vaccine/618765/
They kind of are now. And I know you personally could care less about these folks, but several NBA players have been getting a sounding board in the last week. An MSM sounding board. Of course they're being suspended, but at least they're speaking up. Pissin' in the wind more than likely, but some do have a degree of celebrity.
I have also heard stories of the police, firemen, teachers, healthcare professionals, pilots, and military objecting to the jabs. Realclearpolitics.com is a frequent source of these stories. I would imagine OANN, Newsmax, and Fox provides coverage of the vaccine hesitant. Another source is from an airline employee I talked to. Even CNN covered a few related stories, at least lopsided coverage of those stories. In a country where public opinions and worse are often manipulated, who knows what actual public sentiment is regarding vaccinations for a virus of seemingly moderate impact and risk.
Because we keep hearing about stuff like this? If this is true, not good. Growing trend of cardiovascular problems in vaccinated pilots Army Doctor & Aerospace Medicine Specialist LTC. Theresa Long Calls On Pentagon To Ground ALL Pilots That Have Taken COVID Shots September 28, 2021 •By Johanna Anim Caviezel Lieutenant Colonel Theresa Long, who is an Army Doctor and Aerospace Medicine Specialist, provided an affidavit in which she recommends the Secretary of Defense to ground all pilots that have received the COVID shots. The affidavits reads in full below. Do a search of this article for the word “pilot” and you will notice the petition of LTC. Long in point 39 below. I, Lieutenant Colonel Theresa Long, MD, MPH, FS being duly sworn, depose and state as follows: Read the full petition at.. https://www.citizensjournal.us/army...round-all-pilots-that-have-taken-covid-shots/
This lady is a laughable idiot — and everything in her lawsuit put together by “America’s Frontline Doctors” has been debunked as completely false. Her affidavit is a compilation of anti-vaxxer misinformation.
You have a habit of Ad Hominem attacks on those professionals who don’t support your narratives. Theresa Long’s credentials are as follows: Experience & Credentials 3. I am competent to testify to the facts and matters set forth herein. A true and accurate copy of my curriculum vitae is attached hereto as Exhibit A. 4. After receiving a bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas Austin, completed my medical degree from the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Medical School in 2008. I served as a Field Surgeon for ten years and went on to complete a residency in Aerospace and Occupational Medicine at the United States Army School of Aviation Medicine, Fort Rucker, AL. I hold a Master’s in Public Health, and I have been trained by the Combat Readiness Center at Ft. Rucker as an Aviation Safety Officer. Additionally, I have trained in the Medical Management of Chemical and Biological Causalities at Fort Detrick and USAMIIRD. 5. I am board certified in flight Aerospace Medicine and board eligible in Occupational Medicine. 6. I am currently serving as the Brigade Surgeon for the 1st Aviation Brigade Ft. Rucker, Alabama and am responsible for certifying the health, mental and physical ability, and readiness for all nearly 4,000 individuals on flight status on this post. 7. My appended curriculum vitae further demonstrates my academic and scientific achievements by me over the past thirteen years. 8. Prior to the outset of the pandemic, I received specialized military training from Infectious Disease doctors from the Army, Navy and Air Force on emerging infectious disease threats, FEMA training, Emergency preparedness training, Medical effects of Ionizing Radiation, OSHA, Aerospace Toxicology, Epidemiology, Biostatistics, medical research and disaster planning. More recently I have functioned as a medical and scientific advisor to an Aviation training Brigade seeking to identify risk mitigation strategies, and bio statistical analysis of SARS- Cov-2 (“Covid 19”) infections in both vaccinated and unvaccinated Soldiers. In so doing, I have identified, diagnosed and treated Covid 19 pathogenic infections. I have observed vaccine adverse events following the administration of EUA vaccines, and followed the success of Soldiers who obtained various Covid 19 therapies outside the military. The majority of the service members within the DOD population are young and in good physical condition. Military aviators are a subset of the military population that has to meet the most stringent medical standards to be on flight status. The population of student pilots I take care of are primarily in their 20s-30s, males and in excellent physical condition. The risk of serious illness or death in this population from SARs-CoV-2 is minimal, with a survival rate of 99.997%. I, Lieutenant Colonel Theresa Long, MD, MPH, FS, declare under the penalty of perjury of the laws of the United States of America, and state upon personal knowledge that: THERESA MARIE LONG, MD, MPH, FS LTC, MEDICAL CORPS, U.S. Army Medical Education United States Army School of Aviation Medicine Aerospace/Occupational Medicine Residency University of West Florida Graduate Student -MPH 06/2019-6/2021 Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center, Fort Hood, Texas Family Medicine Internship 06/2008-11/2010 Unrestricted Medical License, IN 09/2003 – 06/2008 University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Houston, Texas 06/2008 M.D. 08/2001 – 08/2004 Undergraduate – University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 05/2004 B.S. Neurobiology Research Experience 08/2018 – 5/2020 School of Aviation Medicine University of West Florida MPH program https://tml526.wixsite.com/website Performed a cross-sectional study on Intervertebral Disc Disease Among Army Aviators and Air Crew 08/2002 – 05/2003 University of Texas at Austin, Texas Research Assistant, Dr. Dee Silverthorn Performed academic research in effort to update medical facts and the latest research information for the publication of the fourth edition of Human Physiology 09/2000 – 11/2000 Neuropharmacology Research, Texas Lab Tech, Dr. Silverthorn Acquisition of rat cerebellums for research in gene sequencing. The focus of the project was to determine the DNA sequence of the receptor in the developing fetal brain that binds to ethanol and induces apoptosis leading to fetal alcohol syndrome. Publications/Presentations/Poster Sessions Presentations/Posters Poster: Intervertebral Disc Disease Among Army Aviators and Air Crew, presented during the 2021 American Occupational Healthcare Conference. Long, Theresa M., Sorensen, Christian, Victoria Zumberge. (2003, May). Sodium dependent transport of Chlorophenol red uptake by Malpighian tubules of acheta domesticus. Poster presented at: University of Texas at Houston; Austin, TX. Volunteer Experience 08/ 2005 – 09/2005 University of Texas – Houston, Health Science Ctr, Texas Medical Student -Provided medical aid and support for Acute Care and triage of Hurricane Katrina evacuees. Work Experience 06/2021- Present 1st Aviation Brigade TOMS Surgeon Serve as the Medical Advisor to the 1st Aviation Brigade Commander regarding health and fitness of over 3600 officers, warrant officers and Soldiers. The Brigade is comprised of three aviation training battalions, responsible for initial entry rotary wing/ fixed wing flight training, advanced aircraft training. as well as Specific duties include ensuring safety of flight in Army Aviation operations by functioning as Flight Surgeon, while ensuring the health and fitness of military police, firefighters and military working dogs that support Ft. Rucker. Tasked with conducting epidemiological and biostatistical analysis of injuries and illnesses (SARs CoV-2) and medical trends that occur during training and identify and implement strategies to mitigate delays or lost training time. 05/2018-06/2021 Aerospace and Occupational Medicine Resident Graduate Medical Education training in Aerospace and Occupational Medicine while obtaining a Master’s in Public Health. Specialty training included the Flight surgeon course, The Instructor/Trainer course, Space Cadre Course, Medical Effects of Ionizing Radiation, Medical Management of Chemical and Biological Casualties course at USAMIIRD, Ft. Detrick, NASA, 7th Special Forces, Aviation Safety Officer Course, Global Medicine Symposium, OSHA, Dept of Transportation, Textron Bell Helicopters, Brigade Healthcare Course, Preventative Medicine Senior Leaders Course, Joint Enroute Critical Care Course, Army Aeromedical Activity, research on Intervertebral Disc Disease. 05/2015-05/2018 Department of Rehabilitation Services General Medical Officer Assigned to Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center Physical Medicine clinic with special duties Function as General Medical Officer, to mitigate the number of high risk patients get referred off-post to Pain management and PM&R clinics. Functioned as the Performance Improvement officer for PM&R, the Chiropractic Clinic OIC, and the MEB/IDES Subject Matter Expert to IPMC multi-disciplinary team. Significantly increased access to care to the Physical Medicine clinic. Was instrumental in leading the hospital transition for the Chiropractic clinic, contributing to the subsequent successful Joint Commission inspection. Increased access to care in the Chiropractic clinic by 500%. 9/2013- 5/2015 Department of Pediatrics/ Department of Deployment & Operational Medicine General Medical Officer Assigned to the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical center Pediatric Clinic with special duties within the Department of Deployment & Operational Medicine. Provided acute and routine medical care for newborn to age 18 and collaborated with Lactation Team Leader to develop research matrix to ensure effective use of resources to meet Perinatal Core Measures PC-05 for Joint Commission Accreditation. Demonstrated initiative by providing emergency medical care to one of the victims of the April 2, 2014 FT Hood shooting. 10/2012-9/2013 Department of Deployment Medicine/ Emergency Medicine General Medical Officer Assigned to the Department of Deployment & Operational Medicine at Carl R Darnall Army Medical Center (CRDAMC) with specific duties directed by the CRDAMC DCCS. Supported soldier deployment/redeployment from combat, while also performing clinical rotations within the Emergency and Internal Medicine Departments to increase access to care for acutely ill patients. Improved productivity of the SMRC by conducting ETS, Chapter, Special Forces, Airborne, Ranger, SERE, and OCS/WOCS physicals. Ensured DODM success with 90% CRDAMC staff compliance of their annual PHA’s. Selected to become an ACLS instructor. 06/2012-10/01/2012 Department of the Army Inspector General Agency Disability Medicine Subject Matter Expert (SME) – Temporary Dept of the Army Inspector General Assistant Inspector General on Medical Disability (Subject Matter Expert) Selected above my peers, from across the Army AMEDD as one of three medical NARSUM Subject Matter Experts to function as a temporary assistant Inspector General, in a SECARMY directed inspection of the MEB/IDES system. Planed, coordinated, and conducted inspections of agencies/commands and to gather required data and perspectives relevant to the inspection topic. Developed inspection concepts, objectives, methodologies while coordinating inspection site requirements with major Army Commands ASCC, DRUs, Installations and Components. Identified trends, analyzed root causes to systemic problems and proposed solutions to the IG, Army Chief of Staff and Secretary of the Army for service-wide implementation. 06/2011-06/2012 Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center Integrated Disability Evaluation System Increased patient access to care by conducting 203 acute care appointments in four months. Increased productivity by 25% by completing 202 NARSUMs, 12 TDRLs, 42 Psychiatric addendums in nine months with only a single case returned from the PEB. Performed duties of MEB chief and QA physician in their absence by performing QA on seven NARSUMS, and reviewing 13 cases for initial intake. Functioned as IDES Physician Training officer, applying PDA training to develop a comprehensive training program for new MEB/IDES NARSUM physicians. 11/2010-05/2011 Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center, Hospital Operations, Clinical Plans and Medical Operations Officer Served as Clinical Plans and Medical Operations Officer for Hospital Operation (HOD), responsible for the synchronization of external and internal MEDCEN operations supporting over 3,000 MEDCEN employee as well as the DoD’s largest military installation and surrounding civilian population; assisted in development and execution of medical plans supporting Installation, Garrison, MEDCEN and Civilian AT/FP and MASCAL events 06/2005 – 07/2005 United States Army, Texas, Officer Basic Course – Class 1st Sergeant Supervised 306 medical, dental, and veterinarian HPSP scholarship recipients for Officer Basic training. 10/2002 – 08/2003 United States Army – Texas National Guard, Texas Flight Medic –EMT/BCLS Instructor Training 10/2001 – 10/2002 United States Army Reserve, Texas, Instructor/Trainer https://www.citizensjournal.us/army...round-all-pilots-that-have-taken-covid-shots/
She pushing a set of completely false information in her affidavit. Her nonsense has already been debunked point by point. Let's take a look at reality... Bizarre lawsuit against Pentagon claims vaccines are made with antifreeze: 'What form of alchemy has FDA discovered?' https://www.rawstory.com/lt-col-theresa-long/ The right-wing medical group that's been pushing horse paste and hydroxychloroquine as treatments for COVID-19 is now suing the Pentagon to block its vaccine mandate. The lawsuit brought by lawyers working with America's Frontline Doctors (AFLDS) isn't likely to overturn Defense secretary Lloyd Austin's order requiring coronavirus vaccines for active-duty service members, 95 percent of whom have already had at least one shot, and its claims are based on a number of false and easily debunked falsehoods about the shots, reported The Daily Beast. "I cannot discern what form of alchemy Pfizer and the FDA have discovered that would make antifreeze into a healthful cure to the human body," reads an affidavit filed as part of the suit by Lt. Col. Theresa M. Long, who serves as the brigade surgeon for the Army's 1st Aviation Brigade. The lieutenant colonel hasn't appeared on a primetime Fox News program yet, as a handful of other anti-vaxx field-grade officers have, but her bogus claims have been promoted by AFLDS and Overstock CEO and election conspiracy theorist Patrick Byrne. "Long's affidavit traffics in a number of false and easily disproved anti-COVID vaccine talking points," The Daily Beast reported. "In particular, she singles out the presence of a small amount (.5 micrograms) of polyethylene glycol, which she calls 'a derivative of ethylene oxide' — a key ingredient in antifreeze — in the Pfizer vaccine to insinuate that the jab is somehow dangerous." Those claims have become popular among anti-vaxxers, but health officials point out that polyethylene glycol isn't the active ingredient in antifreeze, but is commonly found in over-the-counter products like laxatives. Long's affidavit also falsely claims 13,000 deaths have been linked to COVID-19 vaccines, based on unverified reports submitted to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, and recommends the military instead treat infected troops with, among other medications, hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin -- neither of which have been proven as coronavirus therapies.