The same people who want to inject us with experimental “vaccines” are worried about our health because we eat sandwiches.
What the U.S. is missing (in its COVID response) is sufficient health-focused “soft power”: proactive, vigorous, coordinated, well-funded preventive and public health actions outside of the acute health care system. . To improve the nation’s health, soft power should include education, surveillance and monitoring, scientific research, public health leadership and infrastructure. Systems for interagency coordination and schools and workplace environments that promote health should be implemented in this soft power approach. Additionally, soft power should encompass community urban design, a healthy food system that not only ensures food security but is also sustainable in its production. Moreover, vaccines, tax policy and other economic incentives that reward consumers’ healthier choices and businesses that produce healthier products. Policy should include taxation of hazardous products, child-resistant packaging, product labeling, and quality and safety standards for air, water, housing, food products, toys, mattresses, cars, and much more.