I saw this.
Just disgusting.
I’m glad folks are FINALLY waking up, to the dangers of these experimental, unproven and dangerous shots.
I feel like I am hoarse from preachin’ it, for so long. And, dealing w/the likely plants (on the main forum), is unreal.
The important thing is that all of this (about the nefarious funding, EUA, suppression of adverse effects, etc.), is finally reaching the sheeple/masses.
Thx....keep informing everyone, Rusty.....here and everywhere!
The fact that they are now pushing this on KIDS!!, who have a 99++% chance of this being a nothing burger, is SO telling.
What is it about these shots that they’re determined to attempt to get as many as possible jabbed??
Money? Future illnesses???
Scary deal.
Did you notice this?
“Pfizer said it intends to use its mRNA technology underpinning its COVID-19 jab for other therapies and vaccines. For example, the company is working on creating seasonal flu shots using the same RNA lipid nanoparticle technology.”
Blue Texas? Not if Hispanic Republicans in South Texas Keep Winning Elections
The Democrats and the left try to make people believe they will flip Texas. They make gains in Houston, Dallas, and Austin, but not in the place most think would vote Democrat.
Props to The New York Times for casting a spotlight on the Hispanic Republicans in south Texas, who took everyone by surprise in November.
Hispanic Republicans, especially women, have become something of political rock stars in South Texas after voters in the Rio Grande Valley shocked leaders in both parties in November by swinging sharply toward the G.O.P. Here in McAllen, one of the regionâs largest cities, Mr. Trump received nearly double the number of votes he did four years earlier; in the Rio Grande Valley over all, President Biden won by just 15 percentage points, a steep slide from Hillary Clintonâs 39-point margin in 2016.
That conservative surge â and the liberal decline â has buoyed the Republican Partyâs hopes about its ability to draw Hispanic voters into what has long been an overwhelmingly white political coalition and to challenge Democrats in heavily Latino regions across the country. Now party officials, including Mr. Abbott, the governor, have flocked to the Rio Grande Valley in a kind of pilgrimage, eager to meet the people who helped Republicans rapidly gain ground in a longtime Democratic stronghold.
âPolitics down here did scare me because you didnât go against the grain,â she said. âIf someoneâs going to tell you: âOh, youâre brown, you have to be Democrat,â or âOh, youâre female, you have to be a Democratâ â well, who are you to tell me who I should vote for and who I shouldnât?â
Ms. Pena-Garza said she was called a coconut â brown on the outside, white on the inside â and a self-hating Latino, labels that have begun to recede only in recent years as she meets more Hispanic Republicans who, like her, embrace policies that they view as helping small business owners and supporting their religious beliefs.
Hispanics Across America
I googled âHispanic Republicansâ and found Latino Trump supporters in Florida still support him:
âWe are Republican, but what we really like is what Trump promotes,â Laureano Chileuitt, the groupâs leader, said. A physician, Chileuitt practiced neurosurgery in his native Colombia until he came to the U.S. in 2001.
âThatâs why we consider him our caudillo,â Chileuitt said, using the Spanish word for strongman. While the term has a negative connotation in the U.S., it doesnât for Chileuitt. âIt just means heâs âthe leader,â like Uribe,â he said, referring to Ălvaro Uribe, the right-wing former president of Colombia. âWe are anti-globalization and anti-communism.â