Because people like you relentlessly spread antivaxx propaganda.
Now 400k+ Americans are dead of covid that could have been saved by the vaccines.
Great work!
That's it ? The latest Covid vax NOT taken by 78% of adults and 88% of children (despite CDC guidance) and the reason is your weird illusion of "propaganda" ?
Try restarting the enticements. How about bringing back free donuts.
I think 400k preventable deaths is more than “that’s it” to me. Personally
That's it ? The latest Covid vax NOT taken by 78% of adults and 88% of children (despite CDC guidance) and the reason is your weird illusion of "propaganda" ?
Try restarting the enticements. How about bringing back free donuts.
I think 400k preventable deaths is more than “that’s it” to me. Personally
Canadians are among the most conformist people on earth. Even they will no longer accept the grift.
Infectious disease experts are urging seniors to get the latest COVID-19 booster shot as uptake plunges five years after the coronavirus pandemic struck.
So is Harambe, who wants as many killed by the clot shot as possible.
Provably safe and effective. Millions of lives saved and billions for Pharma. Enraging, huh?
Keep fighting the good fight, Harambe, instead of taking your L's and hoping people forget about it by just being quiet, you're doing everything in your power to double down on stupid.
"I feel bad for Liberals, because they going to take away Gay marriage at this rate, they're going to get rid of it." (by refusing to drop trans/etc, the reaction from the majority of the country will ban gay marriage, etc, before ever accepting it).
Bryson DeChambeau's irresponsibility threatens America's Ryder Cup chances
Now though, DeChambeau has gone to a new level – one with potentially dangerous implications. Just before the Olympics, he tested positive for the coronavirus and had to be replaced on the US team by Patrick Reed. When DeChambeau first spoke to the media after being cleared to play in Memphis last week, he admitted he had not been vaccinated and said he didn't intend to change that anytime soon.
It was his excuse that left people shaking their heads. He claimed he wasn't getting vaccinated because he was afraid he might take a dose away from someone who needed it more. As everyone knows, there is more than enough vaccine to go around, and with the surge of the delta variant, health officials are begging the unvaccinated to get one of the three vaccines currently available.
DeChambeau also claimed the vaccine wasn't a guarantee against getting the virus, which it's not. But the chances of getting it – and getting very sick – go way down if you are vaccinated. And, according to the Center for Disease Control, more than 90 per cent of those hospitalised with Covid-19 in recent months were unvaccinated.
Those are facts – health-related facts. They have nothing to do with politics. DeChambeau claimed that because he's young and strong he can “handle” having the virus. That's fine. But what about the people he comes in contact with as a public figure. What about kids too young to be vaccinated?
And, what about his Ryder Cup team-mates? Ryder Cup captains always talk about the importance of the team room, the bonding that is so important to a team's chances for victory.
But the problem now goes beyond the perennial issue of personalities. Now, who is vaccinated and who is not might become a serious problem.
So what do Stricker and the PGA of America do? Simple. If you want to play in the Ryder Cup; caddie in the Ryder Cup; work at the Ryder Cup or watch the Ryder Cup, you show up with a vaccination card. This will be a minor inconvenience – if an inconvenience at all. Everyone has to go through a security check; you just hand over your vaccination card with your phone.
Bryson DeChambeau has become a pariah among his fellow professionals and even with the relatively benign golf media.
If people – players included – want to scream that their rights are being violated, let them. The PGA of America is not the government; it is a private business, which has the right to mandate who can and cannot come into a venue they control. It is no different than a restaurant requiring shoes and a shirt or, nowadays, a mask indoors. It is less a violation of freedom than what we all go through to get on an airplane. Almost no one complains about that, because we understand it is a public safety issue.
DeChambeau and any other potential Ryder Cuppers who are unvaccinated should get their first shots today – the matches begin on September 24, a little more than six weeks from now. Of course, that's not happening. The PGA has said nothing on the subject other than a gobbledygook statement about continuing to monitor the situation. Not helpful.
Bryson DeChambeau's irresponsibility threatens America's Ryder Cup chances
Now though, DeChambeau has gone to a new level – one with potentially dangerous implications. Just before the Olympics, he tested positive for the coronavirus and had to be replaced on the US team by Patrick Reed. When DeChambeau first spoke to the media after being cleared to play in Memphis last week, he admitted he had not been vaccinated and said he didn't intend to change that anytime soon.
It was his excuse that left people shaking their heads. He claimed he wasn't getting vaccinated because he was afraid he might take a dose away from someone who needed it more. As everyone knows, there is more than enough vaccine to go around, and with the surge of the delta variant, health officials are begging the unvaccinated to get one of the three vaccines currently available.
DeChambeau also claimed the vaccine wasn't a guarantee against getting the virus, which it's not. But the chances of getting it – and getting very sick – go way down if you are vaccinated. And, according to the Center for Disease Control, more than 90 per cent of those hospitalised with Covid-19 in recent months were unvaccinated.
Those are facts – health-related facts. They have nothing to do with politics. DeChambeau claimed that because he's young and strong he can “handle” having the virus. That's fine. But what about the people he comes in contact with as a public figure. What about kids too young to be vaccinated?
And, what about his Ryder Cup team-mates? Ryder Cup captains always talk about the importance of the team room, the bonding that is so important to a team's chances for victory.
But the problem now goes beyond the perennial issue of personalities. Now, who is vaccinated and who is not might become a serious problem.
So what do Stricker and the PGA of America do? Simple. If you want to play in the Ryder Cup; caddie in the Ryder Cup; work at the Ryder Cup or watch the Ryder Cup, you show up with a vaccination card. This will be a minor inconvenience – if an inconvenience at all. Everyone has to go through a security check; you just hand over your vaccination card with your phone.
Bryson DeChambeau has become a pariah among his fellow professionals and even with the relatively benign golf media.
If people – players included – want to scream that their rights are being violated, let them. The PGA of America is not the government; it is a private business, which has the right to mandate who can and cannot come into a venue they control. It is no different than a restaurant requiring shoes and a shirt or, nowadays, a mask indoors. It is less a violation of freedom than what we all go through to get on an airplane. Almost no one complains about that, because we understand it is a public safety issue.
DeChambeau and any other potential Ryder Cuppers who are unvaccinated should get their first shots today – the matches begin on September 24, a little more than six weeks from now. Of course, that's not happening. The PGA has said nothing on the subject other than a gobbledygook statement about continuing to monitor the situation. Not helpful.