Sunday, September 12, 2021

PASKI ASKED WHY JOE BIDEN'S INVADING ILLEGALS ARE NOT VACCINATED - SHE RESPONDS: VIVA LA RAZA SUPREMACY!!!

With illegal migration surging to levels not seen in years, an efficient testing procedure for unauthorized migrants is clearly necessary. The job shouldn’t be outsourced to local governments and NGOs. If we’re going to require Americans to be tested before traveling back home, we should ask the same of anyone seeking asylum in our country.

FOR NAFTA JOE BIDEN, THERE ARE NO BORDERS, ONLY MILLIONS MORE 'CHEAP' LABOR VOTING DEM JUMPING OUR JOBS

JOE BIDEN WAS RIGHT THERE WITH BILLARY CLINTON ASSAULTING THE AMERICAN WORKER AND OUR BORDERS FOR CHEAP LABOR.

HOW CLOSE WILL THESE TWO LAWYERS, ADD LAWYER BARACK OBAMA, TO DESTROYING NOT ONLY OUR BORDERS, BUT JOBS AND CULTURE?


Chris Hedges | NAFTA Was CRIMINAL!




Psaki Grilled on Why Biden Didn’t Mandate COVID Vaccines for Migrants Crossing the Border

By Melanie Arter | September 10, 2021 | 6:37pm EDT

 
 
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC, September 10, 2021. (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki holds a press briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC, September 10, 2021. (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

(CNSNews.com) - White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki couldn’t explain Friday why the Biden administration is mandating COVID vaccinations for people who work but not for migrants crossing the southern border.

As CNSNews.com previously reported, Biden announced Thursday that he is mandating vaccines for the entire federal workforce and federal contractors. He also called on the Labor Department to require all employers with 100 or more employees to ensure their employees are fully vaccinated or show a negative COVID test once a week.


Fox News White House Correspondent Peter Doocy asked Psaki on Friday, “Why is it that you’re trying to require anybody with a job or anybody who goes to school to get the COVID-19 vaccine, but you’re not requiring that of migrants that continue to walking across the southern border into the country?”

“Our objective is to get as many people vaccinated across the country as humanly possible, and so the president’s announcement yesterday was an effort to empower businesses, to give businesses the tools to protect their workforces,” Psaki said.

“That’s exactly what we did, but certainly we want everybody to get vaccinated, and the more people who are vaccinated, whether they are migrants or whether they are workers, protects more people in the United States,” she said.

“But it’s a requirement for people at a business with more than 100 people but it’s not a requirement for migrants at the southern border. Why?” Doocy asked.

“That’s correct,” Psaki replied.


 

Migration and Double Standards

If Americans must be tested before returning home, the U.S. should ask the same of anyone who seeks asylum here.September 7, 2021 
Covid-19
The Social Order
Politics and law

Crossing borders is a hazardous business, or so our government and public-health experts would have us believe. But many of the same experts are strangely unconcerned about the influx of thousands of unauthorized migrants from countries with single-digit vaccination rates.

U.S. government agencies advise extreme caution for international travel. In recent months, I’ve traveled without incident with my family to countries that carry the State Department’s “reconsider travel” warnings. We’re all vaccinated, save for my 11-year-old son, but we had to take Covid tests prior to our departures and also for our flights back home. All of our tests were negative, but according to CDC guidelines, we still needed to self-quarantine at home for seven days after our trips—regardless of vaccination status or of whether the country visited has higher or lower infection rates than the United States. The State Department’s travel advisories, which mirror CDC country advisories, say that Americans should avoid or reconsider travel to most countries. At the moment, the federal government has the same “do not travel” advisory for Afghanistan as it does for countries with significantly lower Covid infection rates than the U.S., such as Andorra, Ireland, Greece, and Malta. (According to the New York Times, Malta has the highest rate of fully vaccinated citizens in the world at 82 percent.)

The rules appear to have no limiting principle. They make no distinction between vaccinated and unvaccinated travelers. Meantime, the Associated Press recently reported that the Biden administration had considered implementing vaccination requirements for interstate domestic travel but elected not to do so to avoid a backlash. “That’s not to say (a vaccine requirement for interstate travel) won’t be implemented in the future,” the AP maintained, “as public opinion continues to shift toward requiring vaccinations as a means to restore normalcy.” The story cited the opinion of a public-health expert who maintained that such a requirement might be a good idea.

Compare this uber-cautious approach to travel with the government’s response to the migrant crisis on our southern border. Homeland Security officials recently told Politifact that all migrants are tested “at some point during their immigration journey.” But officials also recently admitted to the Wall Street Journal that they don’t have the capacity to test migrants or quarantine anyone with Covid.

And some migrants have been put on buses without being tested, as the El Paso Times recently reported from Laredo, Texas—where officials filed a lawsuit to prevent the government from sending the city additional migrants after alleging that 35 percent–40 percent of recent arrivals tested positive for Covid. Border Report revealed that officials in Laredo recently sent three busloads of untested migrants to Austin, Texas, and dropped them off at a Greyhound bus station because hospitals in Laredo are over capacity.

According to NBC News, more than 18 percent of migrant families and 20 percent of unaccompanied minors tested positive in recent weeks for Covid before leaving Border Patrol custody. The Department of Homeland Security says that testing is done via a number of federal agencies, local governments, organizations, and contractors at various stages of the immigration process. But the New York Times reported in late April that testing is often done late, well after migrants have been detained for days, sleeping in cramped quarters near strangers.

Despite the risks of our tardy and haphazard testing procedures for unauthorized migrants, prominent media outlets and fact-checkers are convinced that the chaos at the border isn’t a public-health threat. NBC News headlined a story, “No, the surge in Covid cases across the U.S. is not due to migrants or immigrants,” citing opinions from public-health experts, not data. Politifact rated Florida governor Ron DeSantis’s claims that illegal immigrants are fueling the Covid spike “false”—arguing, again, based on the claims of public-health experts that it was only a “contributing factor.” The AP ran a similar fact check, quoting an expert who said there was “no reason to suspect that [illegal migrants] would have higher rates of Covid-19 infection.” These putative experts pointed to low vaccination rates across the South as the cause of the recent caseload spike; none mentioned the shockingly low vaccination rates in the countries sending us the most migrants. According to the New York Times, 51 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated, compared with 30 percent in El Salvador, 23 percent in Mexico, 5 percent in Honduras, and 3 percent in Guatemala.

Conspicuously absent are calls to mandate vaccines, or even Covid testing, for migrants. With illegal migration surging to levels not seen in years, an efficient testing procedure for unauthorized migrants is clearly necessary. The job shouldn’t be outsourced to local governments and NGOs. If we’re going to require Americans to be tested before traveling back home, we should ask the same of anyone seeking asylum in our country.

Girl, 4, dies in her sleep a day after she and her unvaccinated parents tested positive for COVID

  • Kali Cook, 4, became the youngest COVID death in Galveston County, Texas, a day after her family began testing positive for the virus
  • Karra Harwood, Kali's mother, was unvaccinated when she contracted the virus on Monday, which spread and also hospitalized her 5-month-old son 
  • Kali awoke with a fever the next day and hours later died in her sleep
  • Harwood urged other parents to understand the risk of COVID-19 for children 
  • She said her daughter had no diagnosed immune disorders or health conditions but tended to get sicker than her siblings 

A four-year-old girl died in her sleep at her Texas home within a day after she and her unvaccinated parents contracted COVID-19

Kali Cook, of Bacliff, became the youngest COVID death in Galveston County since the pandemic began, and now her parents are regretting their decision not to get vaccinated against the virus. 

'I was one of the people that was anti [vaxx], I was against it,' said mother Karra Harwood. 'Now, I wish I never was.' 

Harwood told The Daily News in Galveston that her daughter had no diagnosed immune disorders or other health conditions, but that she did tend to get sicker than her siblings. 

Kali Cook, 4, was the youngest person to die of COVID-19 in Galveston County, Texas

Kali Cook, 4, was the youngest person to die of COVID-19 in Galveston County, Texas

Kali's mother, Karra Harwood, went into quarantine after contracting the virus on Monday. It quickly spread throughout the family, claiming Kali's life the following day

Kali's mother, Karra Harwood, went into quarantine after contracting the virus on Monday. It quickly spread throughout the family, claiming Kali's life the following day

Most of the family was under quarantine after Harwood tested positive for the virus on Monday and had to be sectioned off away from the family. 

Despite their efforts, the virus quickly spread, infecting her fiancé and her 5-month-old son, who had to be taken to the hospital. 

By about 2 a.m. on Tuesday, Harwood noticed Kali had a fever, so she gave her some medicine and helped her go back to sleep. 

By 7 a.m., when Harwood and her fiancé left for work, Kali had died.  

But Kali's condition continued to worsen, and by 7 a.m., she was dead. 

'She died in her sleep,' Harwood said. 

Kali, who had just started preschool, is among the 466 Galveston residents who lost their lives due to COVID, and she is the first resident younger than 20-years-old who succumbed to the virus. 

Kali is among the 466 Galveston residents who lost their lives due to COVID

Kali is among the 466 Galveston residents who lost their lives due to COVID

Galveston County Local Health Authority Philip Keiser called the death a tragedy that underlies the need for more vaccinations and caution during this phase of the pandemic. 

'This is a terrible thing, but I think people need to know about it,' Keiser said. 

'It's very important, if your kids are sick, not to say, 'Oh, they're going to be OK.' 'If your kids are sick, go seek out medical care.'

Harwood hoped that sharing her daughter's story would change people's minds about COVID.  

She encourage people to understand that although statistically rare, children can die from COVID and are left susceptible as vaccines are only available for those ages 12 and up. 

Harwood's mother, Terena Pike, had previously posted skepticism about the vaccine, but now Harwood said that she and her fiancé, who she says has a lung condition, were considering getting vaccinated. 

The family also started a GoFundMe to help pay for Kali's funeral costs. 

'We are all so broken and lost and just trying to figure out how we are gonna get [through] this life without her light,' Harwood wrote on the site.  

Neither Karra or her fiancé were vaccinated against COVID-19. Now she says both of them are considering getting vaccinated after the virus killed her daughter and hospitalized her son

Neither Karra or her fiancé were vaccinated against COVID-19. Now she says both of them are considering getting vaccinated after the virus killed her daughter and hospitalized her son

Kali enjoying a meal with her grandmother, Terena Pike, who spoke out against the vaccine

Kali enjoying a meal with her grandmother, Terena Pike, who spoke out against the vaccine

Kali's grandmother made social media posts questioning the COVID vaccine's effectiveness

Kali's grandmother made social media posts questioning the COVID vaccine's effectiveness 

Kali's joins more than 60,000 Texans who have died from COVID as the delta variant continues to ravage the Lone Star state. 

The Texas Department of State Health Services reported nearly 20,000 new COVID cases and 400 new deaths as of Friday. 

The delta surge had also brought national daily COVID-19 cases up to nearly 300,000 in August, and although cases began to dip in September, the U.S. had experienced another dramatic uptick on Thursday. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported more than 163,000 new cases, and nearly 1,650 new deaths nationwide. 

The American Academy of Pediatrics reported that 200,000 children tested positive for COVID-19 in the week of August 26, the second highest weekly total recorded during the pandemic.

Children also accounted for over 19,000 of the 812,000 hospitalizations recorded that week. While week-over-week totals did increase, it was at a much lower rate than the 50 percent increase from the previous week.

As of September, about 0.04 out of every 100,000 children ages 17 and under were hospitalized for COVID-19. 

More than 75% of adults eligible for the vaccine in the U.S. have gotten at least one jab, according to the CDC. 

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