Re: Getting vaccinated
Posted: Thu Oct 14, 2021 8:25 pm
I DON'T KNOW HOW TO MAKE IT
ANY SIMPLER AND PLAINER THAN THIS
-"BB"-
ANY SIMPLER AND PLAINER THAN THIS
-"BB"-
have fun, relax, but above all ARGUE!
http://www.theplanbforum.com/forum/
http://www.theplanbforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=21325
ESPN has fired Allison Williams for refusing to abide by the company's COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
Williams had announced last month that she would not be getting the vaccine because she and her husband are trying to have their second child, she said in an Instagram video where she addressed her termination.
She was initially barred from working on the sidelines of college football games this season because she refused to comply with the network's vaccine mandate while she and her husband try for their second child.
Williams, who began working at the network in 2011, typically works college football and basketball games, but missed Week 1 of the ongoing football campaign before making an announcement on Thursday.
In an Instagram video on Saturday, Williams said that her 'request for accommodation' had been denied on Friday night, about a month after announcing she would be sitting the season out because she hadn't yet received the vaccination as she and her husband tried for a second child.
Instead, Williams said she will be 'separated from the company' effective next week.
'Belief is a word I’ve been thinking about a lot lately, because in addition to the medical apprehensions regarding my desire to have another child in regards to receiving this injection, I am also so morally and ethically not aligned with this,' Williams said
'And I've had to really dig deep and analyze my values and my morals, and ultimately I need to put them first.'
'And the irony in all this is that a lot of those same values and principals I hold so dear are what made me a really good employee and probably helped with the success that I’ve been able to have in my career.'
The 37-year-old, who has been with the network since 2011, said she was having trouble coming to terms with the fact that the national championship game she covered in January may now be the last college football game she will work.
Colin Powell, has died from complications from Covid-19
Colin Powell, the former US secretary of state who played a pivotal role in attempting to justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq, has died from complications from Covid-19 aged 84, it was announced on Monday.
Powell, a retired four-star general who served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the early 1990s, had been treated for Covid at Walter Reed national medical center in Bethesda, Maryland. He was fully vaccinated against coronavirus.
Announcing his death, his family said they had lost a “remarkable and loving husband, father, grandfather and a great American”.
Powell was America’s first Black secretary of state, serving in that role under George W Bush from 2001 to 2005. Born in New York City, he was raised in the Bronx and educated through public schools before he entered the army.
He rose to occupy the top military position in the US government as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff between 1989 and 1993. In that role he presided over military crises including the invasion of Panama in 1989 and the first Gulf war in 1990-91.
But it was in the build up to the contentious invasion of Iraq in 2003 that Powell became a household name. He was the face of the Bush administration’s aggressive attempt to get the world community to back the invasion, based on false claims of Iraq’s possession of weapons of mass destruction.
In February 2003, as secretary of state, Powell appeared before the UN security council and made categoric claims that the then Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had biological weapons and was developing nuclear weapons. He said his intelligence was based in part on accounts of unidentified Iraqi defectors.
The invasion went ahead without UN authorisation. The following year the CIA’s own Iraq Study Group released a report that concluded that Hussein had destroyed the last of the country’s weapons of mass destruction a decade previously.
Powell stepped down as secretary of state in November 2004, following Bush’s re-election. He later insisted to reporters that he had tried to warn Bush of the consequences of invading Iraq, but had supported the president when the decision to proceed was taken.
In a statement on Monday, Bush called Powell “a great public servant, He was such a favorite of presidents that he earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom – twice. He was highly respected at home and abroad.”
Tony Blair, who as the then British prime minister also backed the Iraq invasion, called Powell a “towering figure in American military and political leadership over many years. He inspired loyalty and respect … his life stands as a testament not only to dedicated public service but also a strong belief in willingness to work across partisan division in the interests of his country.”
After his time in government Powell remained a hugely influential commentator on US politics and public life. Over the years he grew increasingly distanced from his own Republican party, disillusioned by its rightward drift.
In 2008, despite party rivalries, he endorsed Barack Obama for president. When Donald Trump launched his bid for the White House, Powell became one of his leading critics.
He voted against Trump in both 2016 and 2020 and was scathing about leading Republicans who remained silent or actively embraced Trump’s lies. His excoriating criticism of Trump continued until months before he died – in January he said he was so disgusted by the insurrection of Trump supporters at the US Capitol that he no longer considered himself to be a Republican.
"To my great surprise—the Thirteen rules caught on," he wrote, noting their impact. Here are the rules Powell lived by.
1. It ain't as bad as you think. It will look better in the morning.
2. Get mad, then get over it.
3. Avoid having your ego so close to your position that when your position falls, your ego goes with it.
4. It can be done.
5. Be careful what you choose. You may get it.
6. Don't let adverse facts stand in the way of a good decision.
7. You can't make someone else's choices. You shouldn't let someone else make yours.
8. Check small things.
9. Share credit.
10. Remain calm. Be kind.
11. Have a vision. Be demanding.
12. Don't take counsel of your fears or naysayers.
13. Perpetual optimism is a force multiplier.
I am so ingrained about using turn signals at all times that I use them even when I’m on the road alone and have nobody to signal to. Sadly the weird dash electrical issue I’ve been dealing with lately is sometimes triggered by hitting the turn signal, so I’ve been trying to break this 35 year habit of late. Easier said than done.Crackpot wrote: ↑Fri Oct 15, 2021 12:05 pmLightly edited respond I made on Facebook
People treat the concept of using turn signals the same way they treat vaccines: either something that may save yourself or others from a very bad outcome, or a major inconvenience that exposes you to an inappropriate amount of oversight by possible bad actors in an attempt to control your life.
Is your turn signal switch a 'multi function' switch also turning on wipers, high and low beams et al? If so, it is likely to be the cause of a myriad of electrical gremlins. Find the switch on rockauto.com, for cheap $. It beats sticking your arm out the window to signal turns to keep from using the switch on the column. Some people do not interpret hand signals correctly, except for the one where you use a single middle finger. .BoSoxGal wrote: ↑Sat Oct 23, 2021 6:08 pm
I am so ingrained about using turn signals at all times that I use them even when I’m on the road alone and have nobody to signal to. Sadly the weird dash electrical issue I’ve been dealing with lately is sometimes triggered by hitting the turn signal, so I’ve been trying to break this 35 year habit of late. Easier said than done.
No I’ve got blinkers on one stem and wipers/spray on another stem and another stem altogether for the cruise control.MGMcAnick wrote: ↑Sat Oct 23, 2021 6:24 pmIs your turn signal switch a 'multi function' switch also turning on wipers, high and low beams et al? If so, it is likely to be the cause of a myriad of electrical gremlins. Find the switch on rockauto.com, for cheap $. It beats sticking your arm out the window to signal turns to keep from using the switch on the column. Some people do not interpret hand signals correctly, except for the one where you use a single middle finger. .BoSoxGal wrote: ↑Sat Oct 23, 2021 6:08 pm
I am so ingrained about using turn signals at all times that I use them even when I’m on the road alone and have nobody to signal to. Sadly the weird dash electrical issue I’ve been dealing with lately is sometimes triggered by hitting the turn signal, so I’ve been trying to break this 35 year habit of late. Easier said than done.
"Poetry" like that merits a deaths sentence.An anti-vaxxer Oklahoma nurse who wrote poetry about the 'plandemic' and 'healthcare genocide' died of complications from COVID-19, after claiming the vaccine killed people.
Steve Shurden, 58, from Tulsa, battled the virus for three weeks and eventually passed away on October 19.
Steve and his wife, Teresa, a vocational nurse, were very vocal on Facebook about their anti-vaccine stances, constantly sharing misinformation about COVID.
Steve also shared his right-wing, pro-Trump, politically charged poetry on a daily basis until his hospitalization on September 28.
After Steve's death, his wife did not seem regretful that her husband chose to refuse the vaccine, which could have increased his chances at survival while battling the illness.
Teresa shared that Steve had 'made it' to heaven and that she wished they had gone together.
Sometimes the jokes just write themselves.After Steve's death, his wife did not seem regretful