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A Monthly Dose of President Trump- Trump Family Train 7/1/2020
Free Republic ^ | 7/1/2020 | weston

Posted on 07/01/2020 4:02:42 PM PDT by weston



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine; Military/Veterans; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: america; trump; trump2020; trumptrain45
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To: NIKK

Hi NIKK!

Hope you had a nice 4th of July! And that it carries right through the 5th of July!

I thought this announcement of cooperation was way too soon, but I think it’s possible they’re putting this out there to get people worried. They may make some moves and try something. This may flush out the bad guys - maybe even the ones who suicided Epstein.


1,321 posted on 07/05/2020 8:18:47 AM PDT by JudyinCanada
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To: lysie; weston; exit82; hoosiermama; All

good morning Jessi.

https://www.history.com/news/smallpox-george-washington-revolutionary-war
UPDATED:MAY 18, 2020ORIGINAL:MAY 13, 2020
How Crude Smallpox Inoculations Helped George Washington Win the War

When George Washington took command of the Continental Army in 1775, America was fighting a war on two fronts: one for independence from the British, and a second for survival against smallpox. Because Washington knew the ravages of the disease firsthand, he understood that the smallpox virus, then an invisible enemy, could cripple his army and end the war before it began.

That’s why Washington eventually made the bold decision to inoculate all American troops who had never been sickened with smallpox at a time when inoculation was a crude and often deadly process. His gamble paid off. The measure staved off smallpox long enough to win a years-long fight with the British. In the process, Washington pulled off the first massive, state-funded immunization campaign in American history.

George Washington Had Contracted Smallpox in Barbados

In 1751, when Washington was 19 years old, he and his brother Lawrence sailed to Barbados in the hopes that the warm island air would cure his sickly sibling of tuberculosis. Just a day after landing, the brothers dined in the home of a wealthy local merchant, Gedney Clarke. In his diary, young Washington expressed some reservations.

“We went,—myself with some reluctance, as the smallpox was in his family,” wrote Washington.

Washington should have listened to his gut. Two weeks later, after the smallpox virus completed its incubation period, Washington was down for the count.

“Was strongly attacked with the small Pox,” was the last thing Washington wrote in his diary for 24 days. Even though his case was relatively mild, he would still have been bedridden for weeks, rocked by high fevers and chills, severe body aches, a twisted stomach and the telltale oozing rash.

Washington was lucky to escape with his life and few visible scars. In really bad cases, individual smallpox pustules ran together into a single pus-filled rash that seeped, cracked and sloughed off in large sheets. Those far more serious smallpox infections were often fatal or left the victim with hideous scars.

The National Library of Medicine

Fast forward to 1775, when Washington took the reins of a newly formed Continental Army laying siege to British-held Boston. That summer, smallpox was running rampant through Boston and one of Washington’s first orders of business was to safeguard his troops from a potentially debilitating outbreak.

“Washington knew what smallpox was like and he knew how it could incapacitate his Army,” says Elizabeth Fenn, a professor of early American history of the University of Colorado Boulder and author of Pox Americana: The Great Smallpox Epidemic of 1775-82.

Washington also knew that his American-born soldiers were far more susceptible to the disease than the European enemy. That’s because smallpox was endemic in England, meaning that a high percentage of British troops had already contracted the disease as children and now carried lifelong immunity.

In contrast, relatively few New Englanders and Southerners had ever been exposed to the virus. For example, only 23 percent of North Carolina soldiers who enlisted in 1777 had ever had smallpox.

Armed only with a primitive understanding of contagion and immunity, Washington had to decide between several anti-smallpox schemes, each with its own significant risks.

“It comes down to herd immunity,” says Fenn. “You either have to let people be exposed to the disease and naturally acquire immunity, which could be devastating for his troops and have devastating consequences for the war. Or somehow quarantine your troops, which means they’re not going to be able to fight. Or immunize them.”

But immunization in the 1770s was not what it’s like today with a single injection and a low risk of mild symptoms. Edward Jenner didn’t even develop his revolutionary cowpox-based vaccine for smallpox until 1796. The best inoculation technique at Washington’s disposal during the Revolutionary War was a nasty and sometimes fatal method called “variolation.”

“An inoculation doctor would cut an incision in the flesh of the person being inoculated and implant a thread laced with live pustular matter into the wound,” explains Fenn. “The hope and intent was for the person to come down with smallpox. When smallpox was conveyed in that fashion, it was usually a milder case than it was when it was contracted in the natural way.”

Variolization still had a case fatality rate of 5 to 10 percent. And even if all went well, inoculated patients still needed a month to recover. The procedure was not only risky for the individual patient, but for the surrounding population. An inoculee with a mild case might feel well enough to walk around town, infecting countless others with potentially more serious infections.

When Washington weighed the risks at Boston in July 1775, he feared that a large-scale inoculation would sideline his troops, or worse, lead to a full-blown epidemic. So during the Siege of Boston, Washington opted for a strict quarantine of both sickened soldiers and civilians. Civilians showing smallpox symptoms were held in the town of Brookline, while military cases were sent to a quarantine hospital located at a pond near Cambridge.

“No Person is to be allowed to go to Fresh-water pond a fishing or on any other occasion as there may be a danger of introducing the small pox into the army,” wrote Washington on July 4, 1775, his second official day as general.

The quarantine did its job, isolating the sick long enough for the British to surrender Boston. But as the fight for independence moved elsewhere, smallpox followed the American army like an unshakeable curse. Army life in the 18th-century was cramped and unsanitary with new recruits mingling microbes with soldiers from entirely different parts of the country. Needless to say, smallpox thrived.

By the following winter, Washington and his troops were camped in Morristown, New Jersey, where the threat of smallpox was as dire as ever. America’s stoic general waffled back and forth on whether to inoculate or not, even making the mass inoculation order and then rescinding it. Finally, on February 5, 1777, he made the call in a letter to John Hancock, president of the Second Continental Congress.

“The small pox has made such Head in every Quarter that I find it impossible to keep it from spreading thro’ the whole Army in the natural way. I have therefore determined, not only to innoculate all the Troops now here, that have not had it, but shall order Docr. Shippen to innoculate the Recruits as fast as they come in to Philadelphia.”

Fenn says that inoculating all troops without natural smallpox immunity was a daunting task. First, medical personnel had to examine each individual to determine if they had contracted the disease in the past, then they conducted the risky variolation procedure, followed by a month-long recovery process attended by teams of nurses.

Meanwhile, this entire process—the first of its kind and scale—had to be conducted in total secrecy. If the British caught wind that large numbers of American soldiers were laid up in bed with smallpox, it could be the end.

“I need not mention the necessity of as much secrecy as the nature of the Subject will admit of,” wrote Washington, “it being beyond doubt, that the Enemy will avail themselves of the event as far as they can.”

Thankfully for the Americans, the 1777 inoculations in Philadelphia went off without a hitch and without tipping off the British. Even more remarkable was that a second major round of smallpox inoculations was conducted in the middle of the infamously unforgiving winter of 1778 when Washington’s troops were quartered at Valley Forge.

“Notwithstanding the Orders I had given last year to have all the Recruits innoculated, I found upon examination, that between three and four thousand Men had not had the Small Pox,” wrote Washington in January 1778, “That disorder began to make its appearance in Camp, and to avoid its spreading in the natural way, the whole were immediately innoculated.”

It’s hard enough to imagine the deprivations that Continental soldiers experienced during that bitter cold Pennsylvania, but almost impossible to think that many of them also willingly contracted smallpox during the grueling episode.

“It was one of the things that made that Valley Forge winter of 1778 so difficult,” says Fenn. “We’re all familiar with the bloody footprints in the snow, and the shortages of food and clothing. Add to that the fact that soldiers who had not had smallpox also underwent inoculation that winter.”

By the spring of 1778, the ranks of the Continental army swelled with smallpox-immune recruits ready to take the fight to the British. And while Washington’s risky decision to inoculate the whole army against smallpox didn’t win the war by itself, Fenn believes it deserves a place among the most important deciding factors in the American victory.

“The general,” she writes in Pox Americana, “had outflanked his enemy.”
*************************************
NIKK.....this was our Pastor’s sermon today. It tied into with “The Battle Within The Flesh”


1,322 posted on 07/05/2020 8:25:03 AM PDT by STARLIT ("And those who were dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.".)
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To: JudyinCanada

Could be.


1,323 posted on 07/05/2020 8:25:08 AM PDT by Rusty0604 (2020 four more years!)
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To: exit82

1,324 posted on 07/05/2020 8:26:37 AM PDT by exit82 (Democrats are unfit to govern--they hate America, the Constitution and those they don't agree with.)
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To: weston

Dress worn by Melania

Check out Alexander McQueen

London, England (CNN) — Fashion designer Alexander McQueen hanged himself in his wardrobe and left a suicide note, a coroner told a London inquest Wednesday.

Click on link, look at picture...

Picture might say a lot....Satanic?

Lady Gaga was one of his clients.....Satanic?

https://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/02/17/britain.alexander.mcqueen/index.html


1,325 posted on 07/05/2020 8:26:37 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old!!!!)
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To: Lakeside Granny

I like that painting.

All the Karens will go nuts.


1,326 posted on 07/05/2020 8:28:09 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old!!!!)
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To: NIKK

That is good.

Doctor said the other day to get 10 minutes of sunshine also and take Vitamin D3.

The bestest of wishes for good health for all Trump Train people around this beautiful country.


1,327 posted on 07/05/2020 8:30:55 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old!!!!)
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To: Rusty0604

A good example of WHY getting a divorce is so important. Its apparent Claudia is using her mom and dad's situation to her benefit. She has been poisoned and hopefully later in life when and hope she matures....she'll take responsibility for her own actions and not whine and point fingers.


1,328 posted on 07/05/2020 8:31:06 AM PDT by STARLIT ("And those who were dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.".)
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To: NIKK
This is very suspicious to me. She was most certainly the main evil in this. Why would she cooperate? There's nothing in it for her.

That's what I have been thinking. I'm thinking "fully cooperate" means made-up fiction. I expect her to fabricate Trump stories and others.

1,329 posted on 07/05/2020 8:35:03 AM PDT by gubamyster
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To: JudyinCanada

IT must be so hard for Kellyanne.

She is one strong woman.


1,330 posted on 07/05/2020 8:44:05 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old!!!!)
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To: NIKK

Thanks,NIKK.

This was news to me, and I thought I knew a lot.


1,331 posted on 07/05/2020 8:45:48 AM PDT by exit82 (Democrats are unfit to govern--they hate America, the Constitution and those they don't agree with.)
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To: NIKK

Fantastic story of Washington and smallpox.
Thank you for sharing.


1,332 posted on 07/05/2020 8:48:45 AM PDT by weston (As far as I'm concerned, it's Christ or nothing)
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To: NIKK

Thanks for posting.


1,333 posted on 07/05/2020 8:49:42 AM PDT by Rusty0604 (2020 four more years!)
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To: sweetiepiezer

This happened in 2010, so what dress worn by Melania is this referring to?


1,334 posted on 07/05/2020 8:52:26 AM PDT by Rusty0604 (2020 four more years!)
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To: exit82

Norton said that link was a spam risk, wouldn’t let me open it.


1,335 posted on 07/05/2020 8:52:40 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old!!!!)
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To: exit82

Norton said that link was a spam risk, wouldn’t let me open it.


1,336 posted on 07/05/2020 8:53:47 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old!!!!)
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To: NIKK

I wonder how her siblings are doing?


1,337 posted on 07/05/2020 8:53:53 AM PDT by Rusty0604 (2020 four more years!)
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To: sweetiepiezer
IT must be so hard for Kellyanne.

Why? She's the one with the money ($40 million) so the longer she stays married to George the further she can keep him from her fortune.

I'm guessing it's a game to her and a blood sport for him.

I just wish they'd thought longer and harder about becoming parents.

1,338 posted on 07/05/2020 8:55:02 AM PDT by Right_in_Virginia
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To: gubamyster; NIKK

I hope Epstein made videos
There have been suggestions that Epstein made secret videos of all the men who had sex in his houses and planes. I hope he did and they are all revealed, because they will prove I am not among them. I hereby waive any right of privacy in Epstein videos.— Alan Dershowitz (@AlanDersh) July 5, 2020


1,339 posted on 07/05/2020 8:57:16 AM PDT by Lakeside Granny (Vote RED~R.emove E.very D.emocrat~D&S)
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To: gubamyster

Michigan Passes Controversial Bill To Microchip Humans Voluntarily “To Protect Their Privacy”

The Michigan House of Representatives has passed a controversial bill to microchip humans voluntarily in the state under the guise of protecting their privacy. The Microchip Protection Act would allow Michigan employers to use microchipping of their workers with their consent. However, research has shown that RFID transponders causes cancer.

With the way technology has increased over the years and as it continues to grow, it’s important Michigan job providers balance the interests of the company with their employees’ expectations of privacy.”

“Microchipping has been brought up in many conversations as companies across the country are exploring cost-effective ways to increase workplace efficiency. While these miniature devices are on the rise, so are the calls of workers to have their privacy protected.”

- Rep. Bronna Kahle, the Republican who sponsored the bill, said in a press statement

In May, the plan to chip humans globally through a digital ID was exposed in the Italian Parliament. Sara Cunial, the Member of Parliament for Rome denounced Bill Gates as a “vaccine criminal” and urged the Italian President to hand him over to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. She also exposed Bill Gates’ agenda in India and Africa, along with the plans to chip the human race through the digital identification program ID2020.

https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/michigan-passes-controversial-bill-microchip-humans-voluntarily-protect-their-privacy


1,340 posted on 07/05/2020 8:57:17 AM PDT by Rusty0604 (2020 four more years!)
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