Let's Fix This Country

The Big Lie Exposed, The Coup Plan Revealed, But Trump Will Run Again


From the election to the insurrection, more revelations
Without even touching on the troubles with Biden’s economic plan, the border crisis, the debt celing, it has been a whirlwind couple of weeks with new revelations about the Trump presidency pouring forth from the Bob Woodward and Robert Costa book, “Peril”, and capped by the comical announcement that Arizona recount #4 had found, contrary to its clear intent, that not only had Biden won (for the 4th time), but that they had found 360 additional votes for him than before.

Where to begin? How about how the lie became The Big Lie?

Two weeks after the election that Donald Trump said was rigged, his lawyers gathered on November 19 at Republican national headquarters to tell us in a widely viewed news conference that voting machines had used software developed in Venezuela that had been jiggered to keep Cesar Chavez in power; that the leadership of Dominion Voting Services, which produced the vote-tabulating machines, had ties to George Soros and the left-wing movement antifa. (Chavez died seven years ago.)

Hair dye trickling down his cheek, Rudy Giuliani exclaimed,

“This is real! It is not made up. It is not, there’s nobody here that engages in fantasies…You should be more astounded by the fact that our votes are counted in Germany and in Spain by a company owned by affiliates of Chavez and Maduro”.

But now comes the discovery that they knew all along they were turning a lie into The Big Lie. In a defamation suit filed by the actual Dominion employee who had done the software coding, an internal White House memo surfaced that had been circulated just days after the election showing the Trump legal team was indeed spewing nonsense.

The memo had been produced by a group who had been charged by the campaign’s communication’s director to “substantiate or debunk” the Dominion allegations. Debunk was the result. The memo said Dominion had no connection to Smartmatic, the software firm, had no ties to Venezuela, nor antifa, nor Soros, and “The only apparent evidence that votes were being counted in Spain was that Smartmatic is owned by a Spanish person”.

Imagining the power that would accrue to them if they were to turn the election upside-down and perpetuate the Trump presidency, the group had fallen in behind Trump, who a week earlier had tweeted the extravagant claim shown here. The lawyers went ahead with the lie which brought down upon them a lawsuit by Dominion asking for billions in damages.

infanticide

The lie metastasized into a full-blown attempt to overthrow the government. Woodward and Costa described the scene at the White House on January 5, the night before the rally that would boil over into insurrection.

Trump opened a door of the Oval Office to the outside and left it open to the January cold, the authors were told by people who had been in the room that night. Trump wanted to listen to the chants of his supporters in the streets of Washington. “He said to his aides, ‘Listen to them, these are my supporters, they want us to act tomorrow’”, Costa related. Woodward mused about Nixon, who, in the closing days of his presidency and probably fuelled by alcohol, took to talking to the portraits of presidents on the White House walls. For Trump it was listening to crowds cheering for him.

Costa said that on that night Steve Bannon was in the Willard Hotel blocks away with Giuliani and others in a “war-room type meeting” and Bannon had said to Trump, “It’s time to kill the Biden presidency in the crib”. The next day would see an attempt to do that precisely when thousands would assault the Capitol and 147 Republicans would vote against certification of the states’ electoral counts for the presidency.

Hearing himself quoted in a Woodward/Costa interview, Bannon confirmed he had said that.

“Yeah, because [of] his legitimacy. Let’s look at The Economist‘s poll…42% of the American people, four two…think that Biden did not win the presidency legitimately”.

For Bannon, that 42% of the American people have swallowed the Big Lie, never mind the true election results, is justification for us to take down Biden. Showing his concern for the good of the country, Bannon went on to say about the Biden administration,

“It killed itself. Just look at what this illegitimate regime is doing. It killed itself. Okay? But we told you from the very beginning, just expose it, just expose it, never back down, never give up and this thing will implode.”

The “Peril” authors had unearthed a memo that laid out just how Trump and his plotters were to kill the Biden presidency in its crib. By conservative legal scholar John Eastman, once a law clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas, the memo gives Vice President Pence a script to follow:

Pence is to open and accept the vote counts of the states in their alphabetical order starting therefore with Alabama. He next gets to Arizona but says, because he has received multiple slates of electors, he’ll defer action on Arizona until all the other states have been tallied. He holds up six other key states for the same reason and when counting is otherwise complete declares that no electors “can be deemed validly appointed in those states” which leaves only the counts of those states that were undisputed. Remembering that their counts are known — it’s two months past the election — their counts of their 454 electors are 232 for Trump and 222 for Biden. Trump is therefore declared re-elected.

Stop right there, Democrats will “howl” (Eastman’s word). A count of 270 — just more than half of all electors — is required.

Pence is told to accede, because the 12th Amendment stipulates that “the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President” with “the representation from each state having one vote” irrespective of the hugely disparate population counts that have evolved since 1787. The delegations from Republican states outnumber counterparts from Democratic states, 26 to 24. Trump is now constitutionally re-elected.

This page laid out close to that same scenario, leading to the House choosing the president, in July of 2020 in “To Stay in Power Will He Steal the Election?” We don’t know how seriously Trump and his retinue — Giuliani, Bannon, Meadows, Powell — pursued this plan for a coup d’état to overthrow the government but it is unmistakable that 147 Republicans in Congress voted against certification attempting to throw the decision to the House where Trump would be declared president for a second term.

Former Vice President Mike Pence was declared something of a hero for refusing to overstep the role the Constitution prescribes. The 12th Amendment says he is only to “open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted”. But “Peril” tells us of Pence consulting with Dan Quayle, hoping Quayle might come up with some way to help Pence help Trump pull off his caper — two Hoosier ex-vice presidents deciding the fate of the nation. “You don’t know the position I’m in”, said Pence. Quayle replied,

“I do know the position you’re in. I also know what the law is. You listen to the parliamentarian. That’s all you do. You have no power.”

When Pence pressed, elder statesman Quayle took away Pence’s hero garlands, countering with,

“Mike, you have no flexibility on this. None. Zero. Forget it. Put it away.”

Trump had the crowds in mind as we saw the night before. Congress should not be allowed to certify the election of Joe Biden in the January 6 ritual. His believers know nothing other than what he says and he urged them to come to Washington. “Be there, will be wild!”, he tweeted. And they came. He would incite the huge crowd to march on the Capitol to disrupt the certification process,

preemptive precaution

That was the backdrop of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley’s phone calls to his China counterpart Gen. Li Zuocheng of the People’s Liberation Army. The insurrection had been just two days before his second call to assure China that we would not attack them. China, observing Trump, feared that he just might.

And yet we listen to the Republican reaction, best described as comatose, numbly making no allowance for what ought to be done when the country faces a possible national security threat posed by an unstable president:

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, accusing Milley of “treasonous” and “reckless behavior” and “a dangerous precedent”, urged Biden to fire him for “basically ignoring the Constitution deciding he’s going to call a potential adversary and an enemy [sic] of the United States and collude with them”.

Florida Representative Matt Gaetz on Newsmax thought “Gen. Milley actually placed himself above the president of the United States. I think these are very dangerous people. I think they need to be removed from their positions of power.”

Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley on Laura Ingraham’s Fox News show: “Gen. Milley — he needs to resign. If he doesn’t resign, he needs to be fired. This is dangerous territory that we’re in and there’s got to be accountability.”

Milley’s actions drew the first headlines when Woodward’s and Costa’s book was released. “While these calls to Gen. Li were held on a top secret back channel, they were not secret”, Costa could say on the basis of the extensive interviews they say were conducted for the book. Milley “was reading people in throughout the national military and security community”, Costa said. Army Col. Dave Butler, Milley’s spokesman, said the chairman’s calls with the Chinese were routine and staffed by other agencies. Sources told Fox News that 15 people were on the teleconferences between the two generals. “The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs regularly communicates with chiefs of defense across the world, including with China and Russia”, Butler said. “These conversations remain vital to improving mutual understanding of U.S. national security interests, reducing tensions, providing clarity and avoiding unintended consequences or conflict.” Former Defense Secretary Mark Esper also worked back channels with the Chinese to assure them the U.S. would not launch a nuclear strike, according to Axios.

Rubio wrote in a letter to Biden, “It threatens to tear apart our nation’s longstanding principle of civilian control of the military”, but it is a single civilian in control of the military. What should be done when that individual is in mental decline?

There was Sean Hannity telling Fox News audiences that Milley was taking “away the president’s ability to do his job as commander in chief, one of those jobs would be, perhaps, to launch a nuclear weapon”. The Trump cheerleader ironically added, “Our republic is designed to prevent a military and political coup”.

Trump said he had no intention of attacking China and called Milley a “dumbass” and a “nutcase”. With no hint of self-awareness of his own actions, Trump said Milley “should be tried for treason”.

Moments after Donald Trump took the inaugural oath in 2017, we published “Psychiatrists Say Trump ‘Dangerous’ and ‘Untreatable’” and that followed a couple of similar articles still earlier, during the 2016 campaign. A year later we ran “One Finger on the Button? Are We Crazy?” about the frightfully dangerous policy that the single person who sits in the Oval Office can decide to annihilate civilization. But in this country nothing is ever fixed, least of all the Constitution and its rigid adherence that endangers us.

obsessive compulsion

Trump continues in a world of his own creation, untethered from reality by narcissism so advanced that his psyche could not tolerate a loss. He won the election, he insists repeatedly, not just won but “won by a lot”.

He had expected reinstatement as president in August. Mike Lindell, the “pillow guy”, played to his ego, assuring him of that. That the date came and went did not deliver Trump from his mania. In September, ten months after the election, he said on right-wing Gateway Pundit, “We won the election by a lot, and it’s a terrible thing, and I do believe they’re going to decertify this election”. Decertification is Trump’s invention. No such process exists.

His response to the 4th Arizona recount?

“Huge findings in Arizona! However, the Fake News Media is already trying to ‘call it’ again for Biden before actually looking at the facts — just like they did in November! The audit has uncovered significant and undeniable evidence of FRAUD!”

Trump’s every utterance aims to discredit the democratic electoral process. “Until we know how and why this happened, our Elections will never be secure”, he added about Arizona’s secure electoral process. “This is a major criminal event and should be investigated by the Attorney General immediately.” So that any loss can be branded a fraud, he spreads distrust of every election in his bid to destroy democracy. The day before the California election, he said, “Does anybody really believe the California Recall Election isn’t rigged?”. Gavin Newsom got twice the votes of his nearest opponent. But how many of his devoted know that?

The defeated president refuses to believe that Georgia went for Biden. “There’s no way we lost Georgia. There’s no way”, Trump said at a rally there. In a notorious phone call to Georgia’s Secretary of State, Trump asked him to find to find enough votes to win the state. “So what are we going to do here, folks?”, he said to Brad Raffensperger, “I only need 11,000 votes. Fellas, I need 11,000 votes. Give me a break.” The state counted its votes three times, by hand and by machine, with the results the same.

Despite that earning him a criminal investigation by the state’s attorney general for tampering with the state’s electoral processes, Trump has just written to Raffensperger, now over 11 months after the election”, asking him to “start the process of decertifying the election…and announce the true winner”. The Georgia Star News, a pro-Trump website had averred on August 30 that the chain of custody was violated in predominately Black DeKalb County. Rather than immediately, ballots picked up from a drop box were not transferred until the next day. Trump called the procedural slip-up “large scale Voter Fraud” that demanded that all 43,000 ballots should be nullified, giving him the win. Raffensperger held him off again, advising that a procedure violation would not invalidate the ballots themselves.

The September 18 protest in D.C. against the detention and arraignment of January 6 insurrectionists turned out to be a dud, fortunately. Trump preferred golf at his Bedminster club. But just before came a statement showing no second thoughts about the attack on the government.

“Our hearts and minds are with the people being persecuted so unfairly relating to the January 6th protest concerning the Rigged Presidential Election. In addition to everything else, it has proven conclusively that we are a two-tiered system of justice. In the end, however, JUSTICE WILL PREVAIL!”

The House select committee investigating January 6 just subpoenaed four key figures in the Trump White House. Trump has said he will cite “executive privilege to prevent their testifying. “There’s no such thing as a former president’s executive privilege,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a member of the investigative committee who also teaches constitutional law. President Biden might have the authority to invoke executive privilege for a former president, but is disinclined. He views the attack on the Capitol as “a dark stain on our country’s history” and is “deeply committed to ensuring that something like that can never happen again, and he supports a thorough investigation.”

Costa described the Woodward interview technique as spending lots of time with an interviewee and more than once. Sooner or later the subject would come around to whether Trump will run again. The authors say that most are convinced he will. Trump is buoyed by the difficulties Biden is having — the Afghanistan pull-out debacle, the thousands at the border, his fractious party destroying his agenda — and sees Republicans taking the House and Senate in 2022, bolstered by restrictive voting laws and extreme gerrymandering. He still is in total control of the party; other aspirants will scatter however late he chooses to announce.

Brad Parscale, who engineered Trump’s successful social media campaign in 2016 and ran his 2020 digital campaign for a time, says Trump’s motive for running this time is “revenge”.

The Forever Pandemic: Americans Decide to Keep It Going

Consider where we were with the pandemic. America had developed powerful vaccines to thwart the coronavirus and in the spring, President Biden was on track to reach his goal of at least one dose into the arms of 70% of the adult population by the 4th of July.

Then he hit a wall, coming up against the solid core of those fighting for the freedom to do as they pleased. No government could tell them what to do. No vaccine and no masks either, because no virus could violate their constitutional right to endanger all around them.

So, hope of herd immunity forsaken, along came the Delta mutation to gain a foothold in what Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) head Rachel Walensky accurately called the “pandemic of the unvaccinated”. Cases zoomed, currently at 150,000 a day. The U.S. is gaining on its January peak of 140,000 sick abed in hospitals with over 100,000 going into September, leading to over 1,500 deaths per day for
the first time since March. City after city, state after state, are sounding the alarm of no remaining beds; one in five ICUs report occupancy at 95% of capacity. The United States passed the 40 million mark in total Covid cases over the Labor Day weekend. Deaths now exceed 650,000.

Hospitals across the nation report that as high as 97% of the sick are unvaccinated. Southern states are the most affected, tracking nicely with the lowest vaccination rates. The overflow sees patients on gurneys lining hospital hallways. At the University of Mississippi, two of its hospital’s parking garages were converted to Covid wards. That state’s hospital system is on the verge of collapse, says its hospital association. States are looking for refrigerated trailers to store the dead, just as we saw in the first major outbreak in New York City a year ago March. “They’re dying in droves”, said a doctor in Knoxville, Tennessee, the state currently with the highest rate of illness. Doctors report disbelief of family members who refuse vaccination even after losing a family member, a degree of inexplicable vacuity.

What’s caused this? The more transmissible variant, to be sure, but it got a strong assist from Americans of two sorts: One, those who bravely reject vaccines and masks, spurred on by right-wing talk radio and cable news to preserve their constitutional rights, engaging in combat against an infinitesimal foe that measures a 100 billionths (0.000000001) of a meter or so in diameter. The other, state governors who played to that faction by enacting executive orders that forbid mask and vaccine mandates. Together they proclaim the freedom to get sick and die.

at the front

Beyond the idiocy, their conduct is deeply immoral. Consumed by their narcissism, both factions give no thought to America’s nurses and doctors whose boundless morality will take care of them when they show up at the emergency department of their local hospital.
Nurses are being driven to the brink for having to suffer through yet another surge. That is, if they don’t quit, which many are understandably doing, leading to a shortfall. Why risk their lives for these irresponsible egotists who have refused vaccination, who left it to others be vaccinated to protect them, and then expect to be saved by medical personnel they expose to the disease? More than 1,200 nurses have died having lost their lives taking care of strangers.

Nineteen months into the contagion, nurses are exhausted physically and emotionally from the psychic trauma of dealing helplessly with so many deaths. A New York nurse writes,

“I am routinely expected to care for upward of 12 patients at a time by myself. I’ve had 20 patients by myself for entire shifts. I risk patient safety and human dignity and my license every time I come to work. It feels like a war zone”.

They are even cursed by patients, “some of whom brim with hostility stoked by misinformation”, as a New York Times reporter put it. “Patients urinate on the floor on purpose while yelling abuses at me”, said one nurse. The Tennessee Medical Association had to issue a statement in support of their exhausted heroes reminding the angry public that “the enemy is the virus, not health care workers”.

So nurses are quitting, retiring from nursing or switching to less stressful and hazardous nursing jobs at corporations or schools. In
some hospitals, beds lie empty not for lack of the ill, but for lack of nurses to care for them. Mississippi has 2,000 fewer registered nurses than at the beginning of the year with coronavirus cases doubled over the past two weeks. A Denver nurse writes,

“Your health care workers will pull from deep wells of resilience and give everything, right up to the day we melt into tears, throw our badges down and leave with our middle fingers in the air. If you get sick, I hope there are health care workers left to take care of you. We stopped feeling like heroes long ago.”

collective insanity

The rebellion against common sense and the insensate anger over masks and vaccines has been stoked by a diet of contrarian misinformation from right-wing media and the internet and from conspiratorial paranoia shared on social media, an authoritative source where someone just read something that must be true because a friend thinks so.

That so many are persuaded not to get vaccinated owes a special thanks to talk radio. Conservative radio host and anti-vaxxer Phil Valentine even wrote and aired “Vaxman”, a parody with his lyrics substituting those of the Beatle’s “Taxman”. Guess what he died from at age 61. Florida-based radio host Dick Farrel called coronavirus a “scam-demic” and “Vaccine Bogus Bull Shid!” and told listeners to ignore shots, until after three weeks in hospital he changed his mind. But too late. He died at 65.

Jimmy DeYoung had vaccine skeptics on his show and asked of vaccination campaigns “could this be another form of government control of the people?” before dying of Covid in August.

Conservative talk show host Marc Bernier said to one guest, “I’m not taking it … Are you kidding me?” calling himself “Mr. Anti-Vax”. Before he died from Covid at 65 he tweeted that the government was “acting like Nazis” telling us to “Get the shot!”.

Charlie Sykes, a conservative talk show host himself who is now editor-in-chief at The Bulwark, came up with these cases and a few more — a Texas Party official who slandered a doctor advocating Pfizer’s vaccine as “an absolute enemy of a free people” and then died from Covid at age 45, and another Texan who founded a group “to educate and empower citizens… to secure God-given and constitutionally protected rights” who self-treated with ivermectin, a de-wormer for livestock that is talked up on Fox News, and then died from Covid at age 30.

mask wars

Everyone became an expert — columnists, radio hosts, people whose knowledge extended no further than internet posts about mask efficacy they’d just read posted by others with similar lack of knowledge. Rand Paul, Kentucky’s other Republican senator, was suspended from YouTube for a video he made saying cloth masks were useless. He’s a doctor (but an ophthalmologist) but just being a doctor doesn’t make one an expert on masks. Fox News’ Tucker Carlson regularly attacked mask wearing as a “sign of political disobedience” and said we should “call the police immediately, contact child protective services” upon seeing kids wearing masks, for him “child abuse”.

Violence became a by-product. In September, health officials in two Colorado counties had to take three mobile vaccine clinics off the road due to attacks by anti-vaxxers who threw exploding fireworks and garbage at the units, drove a car up a curb toward a worker, hurled an unidentified liquid at a nurse, ran over signs, and screamed profanities that threatened the crew.

You may have seen video of men screaming “We know who you are” and “You should die” at a car with a doctor and his children. These were members of Tennessee Stands, an anti-vaccine, anti-mask, evangelical group that threatens vaccine supporters and organizes large, anti-mask protests outside school-board meetings, which have become flash points ignited by outrage over masks.



How to explain the phenomenon of Americans ignoring medical professionals and instead following political extremists whose advice has led uncounted listeners and viewers to their deaths?

governor malpractice

Of the 10 states with the most cases per capita, nine voted Republican in 2020. Nine states, all with Republican governors, have enacted bans variously forbidding school districts from mandating masks in the classroom or vaccination for teachers. To woo the Trump base, should the former president decline to run again, Republican presidential hopefuls among them have been intent on performing Trump strongman impersonations, using their states’ school children as expendables.

The renewed pandemic has ravaged Florida where the Republican governor, assumed presidential aspirant Ron DeSantis, urges vaccination but has imposed no requirements, proclaiming Florida a “free society” where “people are going to be free to choose to make their own decisions”. Those people decided to make August the worst month for Florida since the pandemic began 18 months ago, with more than 16,000 Floridians in hospitals in the week before Labor Day, 20,000 new infections a day, and an average of 262 virus deaths reported daily as August ended, a record for the state and leading all other states by a wide margin.

When several Florida school boards considered mandating that school children wear masks, DeSantis on July 30 issued an executive order that banned school districts from doing so. A Quinnipiac University poll says 6 in 10 Floridians support requiring masks in schools, but DeSantis has put his political ambitions first and the health of the children of Florida somewhere beyond concern. Sixteen of 67 Florida school districts have defied the governor’s desist order, refusing to risk the lives of children in obedience to his political ambitions. One week into the new school year 8,400 kids in one Florida school district had to be quarantined.

A defiant DeSantis ordered his education department to withhold state funds from districts that refuse his orders and threatened not to pay the salaries of their school board members.

A judge in Tallahassee has twice sided with parents by overruling DeSantis close to the end of August and ten days later, saying the governor had overstepped his authority. Kids far from his mind, DeSantis filed an appeal within hours.

Not to be outdone, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who also has hopes to be the Republican candidate for president, forbade local officials from mandating mask use and added an executive order that prohibits local governments and state agencies from mandating vaccines. Unsurprisingly, the state’s vaccination rate is only 46%, and Abbott has seen ICUs in the state’s hospitals overflow with Covid patients. At least 45 school districts had to shut down in-person classes, affecting more than 40,000 students.

The Texas Supreme Court stepped in to allow schools to continue requiring masks, but only while a legal battle between the governor and local officials gets sorted out in lower courts.


The CDC advises that teachers and children wear masks, but in Tennessee, when certain school districts followed that guideline and issued mask mandates, Republican Gov. Bill Lee issued an executive order allowing disgruntled parents to exempt their children, effectively neutering the mandates. The upshot? The highest number of cases per 100,000 of population in the country and some 1,200 children every day getting sick. A video showed a doctor from Vanderbilt University outside a Knoxville school imploring “the help of our community to prevent…” but was heckled by parents on their way into a school board meeting, one saying, “I have children in grade school that I want to live free and this is all smoke and mirrors. This is tyranny”.

In August, South Dakota once again staged its Motorcycle Rally, a year after last year’s superspreader, with a half a million bikers pouring into the town of Sturgis, bringing the virus to the townspeople and surrounding area or acquiring it in the bars of Sturgis and giving it a ride back to where they came from. That was just fine with with Gov. Kristi Noem, an avid Trump worshipper who again rode into town on horseback and who hasn’t invoked a single mandate since the pandemic began. She is another who thinks of self as presidential material. Noem on Fox News said the left was “accusing us of embracing death when we’re just allowing people to make personal choices.”

Additional to the Arizona legislature passing a state law prohibiting schools from mandating mask wearing, in August, Republican governor Doug Ducey even created two grant programs to give funds to school districts that rejected mask mandates.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson expressed regret over a law he signed in April that banned mask mandates. But in now promoting vaccination he is faced with constituents such as a woman who told him she had been “praying that God himself will step in so that Christians are not forced by the employers and a mandate to get the vaccine”.

what’s coming

This fight by Republican governors to keep masks out of schools is at the expense of what’s new about this outbreak, that younger people are falling ill. Pediatric hospitalizations, almost non-existent during the original Alpha contagion, are now higher than ever. The American Academy of Pediatrics says more than 1 in 5 Covid cases in the last week of August were in kids.

It is a political fight that these governors choose to wage just as a fourth wave of the disease threatens to overwhelm the medical system. For what that will look like, we turn to Idaho. Well to the right politically and home to a number of militia groups, Idaho has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the country. Covid cases have shot up more than 40% in the last two weeks, hospitalizations are up 25%. Brian Whitlock, CEO of the Idaho Hospital Association, says almost all of the patients and certainly those in the ICU are unvaccinated. Hospitals are moving patients into classrooms and hallways to try to meet the demand that’s coming through the doors. At capacity, they are faced with rationing. Whitlock posited “somebody in an ICU that’s been on a ventilator for a couple of weeks and is not showing any sign of improvement” and giving that ventilator to someone younger “whose conditions may not be as acute…to hopefully save the life of another patient.”

In a speech September 9th, the president announced all out requirements for vaccination. Any business with more than 100 workers must be vaccinated or tested weekly. So must any workers at health facilities that receive payment from Medicare or Medicaid. All administration employees and government contractors must take in the vaccine — and with no option for weekly testing. “This is not about freedom or personal choice. It’s about protecting yourself and those around you”, he said.

Republican governors exploded and are suing. Could they have made it any clearer that they have become sociopathic in their sole concern for political imagery over the lives of children, medical workers, and their own citizens? Republican governor of South Carolina Henry McMaster tweeted, “Rest assured, we will fight them to the gates of hell to protect the liberty and livelihood of every South Carolinian”. And to make this pandemic endemic, he could have added.