Comments Box SVG iconsUsed for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

Facebook Posts

https://open.substack.com/pub/susanwisebauer/p/george-washington-vs-pete-hegseth

Comment on Facebook

The comparison between flu and smallpox is ridiculous… 🙄

Flu vaccine has negative efficiency. We know that to be a fact. So this is moronic. Furthermore, Something is wrong here. They all had their flu shots last year and still got whatever it is that just went around. So, either they didn't catch the flu OR we see that last year's flu shots were absolutely worthless. AND why didn't we see a similar sized outbreak in their spouses, children, civilian colleagues, the stores and services around the base, etc... someone is lying here.

Excellent summary of the main points at play here, and in the anti-vaccine movement as a whole.

"Hegseth, who is supposed to be representing the highest level of military authority, is leaning pretty hard here on personal autonomy—which is an odd choice for a soldier. Anyone who enlists in a branch of the armed services has already, voluntarily, relinquished rights that civilians can still claim." Was about to make a similar point to someone commenting on personal freedoms. As a veteran myself, I can attest to the fact that soldiers don't have those lol. And your point about soldiers not also being given medical autonomy to use prescriptions like Adderall or Ambien is well made also. There's always the inconsistency in ideology it seems. Thank you for speaking up for truth and history, even when you're attacked. I admire and appreciate you.

And yet each person can make the decision now vs being forced.

It would have been much better if religious and philosophical exemptions had been allowed in the modern era. But after COVID, could we trust the military even with that responsibility? Did you know that while the military branches allowed airmen and soldiers to apply for a religious exemption, they effectively approved none of the COVID vaccine requests? A request could be approved by the chaplain, a required step in the process, and still be denied at the final level. It was a clown show. A system that invites people to apply while never granting relief is difficult to view as a meaningful exemption process. It assumes people’s religious convictions never change and creates the appearance of due process without the reality of it. Second, the COVID vaccine mandate was a tragic demonstration of why trust matters. The vaccines were introduced under Emergency Use Authorization, meaning there was necessarily no long-term safety data available at the time they became mandatory. Members who refused were threatened with punitive consequences, including dishonorable discharges that ultimately were not imposed. From the inside, many service members experienced the process as coercive. Enlisted members were separated while officers often remained in lengthy administrative proceedings, in part because of the greater likelihood of litigation. Have an autoimmune disease and know you have vaccine reactions? For many members, that wasn’t enough to receive a medical exemption. Third, having the same institution responsible for maintaining readiness also decide who qualifies for medical exemptions creates an inherent conflict of interest. If your reaction wasn’t immediate and obvious, but instead involved a psoriasis flare, prolonged autoimmune symptoms, or weeks of flu-like illness severe enough to keep you in bed and out of work, obtaining an exemption could still be extraordinarily difficult. Even when such exemptions were granted, they often required annual renewal. Imagine facing the same decision every year while knowing it could trigger another serious reaction. A military member moves to a new base and they might get a new doctor who won’t give the exemption. The flu vaccine itself is a separate question. It provides moderate protection, but its effectiveness varies widely from year to year because influenza changes rapidly. Even in good years, outbreaks still occur among highly vaccinated populations. That doesn’t necessarily mean the vaccine has no value, but it does mean an outbreak by itself isn’t evidence that mandates are necessary. Moderate effectiveness can support voluntary vaccination just as easily as someone else might argue it supports mandates. The study on efficacy: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7188082/ Ultimately, my objection isn’t primarily about the flu vaccine. It’s about trust. A government can only justify overriding individual medical and religious decisions when people have confidence that the system is transparent, fair, and acting in their best interest. The military damaged that trust during the COVID mandate by presenting religious exemptions that were, in practice, unavailable, by handling medical exemptions through a process many viewed as conflicted, and by relying on coercive tactics that alienated thousands of service members. COVID made many Americans less interested in military service. Removing the flu vaccine mandate may have been politically advantageous, but it also acknowledged a deeper problem. Before asking service members to trust another medical mandate, the military first has to earn back the trust it lost.

We visited Valley Forge last year and that time they had a display about Washington and the smallpox vaccine.

Thank you for this piece! We are a homeschooling family - but we believe in vaccination 🙂 it has truly protected us and given all of us confidence to go out and explore the world . God bless you!

Vaccines, Amen is an excellent read and systematically goes through all the vaccines on the childhood schedule. If you are truly interested in the whole truth you should read this book.

George Washington was wrong.

Getting rid of the mandatory flu vaccine is completely ludicrous for the military; it's the perfect storm for the spread of disease, which often kills more folks than combat. However, I do think the press about the outbreak at Lackland being a result is a bit disingenuous, since the annual flu vaccine wouldn't have started until around October.

Interesting. I wonder how many who caught the flu had and how many had not received a flu vaccine.

Localized military surveillance data from Lackland AFB reported a baseline trend of a few hundred cumulative cases over typical seasonal outbreaks each year. The vast majority of flu-related deaths occur in adults aged 65 and older, with this group accounting for 70% to 85% of seasonal flu-related deaths.

View more comments

For some reason, Knicks fans rejoicing and Scots singing for their team are restoring my faith that humanity might still be OK. ... See MoreSee Less

2 weeks ago

Comment on Facebook

Human beings acting human is a beautiful thing.

The South Koreans in Mexico are making me happy right now.

I am soaking it all in!! ❤️

Adding Lawrence Kansas and the Algerian football team to my lists of necessary joy!

We’ve been in short supply of collective joy, and loving, celebratory joy is such an antidote to violence and hate. My favorite image so far out of New York City is the man who brought his sewing machine out into the crowd last night to embroider people’s Knicks jerseys with the date of their win. I feel like it speaks volumes about what we could be if we turn toward creativity and community. It is buoying to see such hopeful acts in these times.

Watching Scots singing, dancing, and piping is definitely one way to increase joy. It’s contagious.

Communal joy is the best of us.

Joy!!!

View more comments

Load more
Contact Us

We're not around right now. But you can send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Not readable? Change text. captcha txt