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PortaJohn

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@theLBC I read the report and the expose.uk summary. Thank you.

However the expose.uk summary is not normalizing the data for change in vac vs unvac in the UK population (i.e., as the proportion of vaced increases the proportion of vaced infected, hospitalized, and deaths increases) which is necessary to derive prevalence and incidence rates.

I make no inference, just an observation.
 
WTF is this? Quarantine Strike Force?

1631987042624.png


 
WTF is this? Quarantine Strike Force?

View attachment 7705652

Hmmm.....
Looks like the " guests " will be getting free food and laundry !

Duties Include
  • Maintaining the readiness of the isolation and quarantine strike team, facilities, and equipment.
  • Providing direct services to the public at the I & Q facility to include: check-in, providing technical assistance, purchasing groceries and supplies for the site and guests, distributing food and resources, assisting with inventory of resources, and ensuring all guests receive excellent customer service.
  • Assisting nurses on performing rounds,
  • Maintaining facility cleanliness and processing guest laundry.
  • Providing guest transport to and from the I & Q facility.
  • Prepping the I & Q facility to receive guests, ensuring rooms are stocked and have been properly cleaned.
  • Providing outreach, education, and technical assistance to internal and external stakeholders.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: 10ring'r
WTF is this? Quarantine Strike Force?

View attachment 7705652

A new gestapo force for Washington!
 
Hmmm.....
Duties Include
  • Maintaining the readiness of the isolation and quarantine strike team, facilities, and equipment.
  • Providing direct services to the public at the I & Q facility to include: check-in, providing technical assistance, purchasing groceries and supplies for the site and guests, distributing food and resources, assisting with inventory of resources, and ensuring all guests receive excellent customer service.
  • Assisting nurses on performing rounds,
  • Maintaining facility cleanliness and processing guest laundry.
  • Providing guest transport to and from the I & Q facility.
  • Prepping the I & Q facility to receive guests, ensuring rooms are stocked and have been properly cleaned.
  • Providing outreach, education, and technical assistance to internal and external stakeholders.

It's a organizational thing for a while now to label teams that are assembled to solve temporary problems as a "strike team", "tiger team", or other tough sounding descriptors.

This covid tyranny will end when enough people say enough is enough.
Note in the replies all the aussie bots perfectly happy with their prison.
 
Well a couple of observations:
1) General populous masking up like it was actually going to work. PEOPLE....you are stupid...0.1micron vs 100-1000 micron gap(at best) in cloth. Even doctor faggieFraudi admitted in 2019 MASKS WILL NOT WORK!!!!!!!!! Sad the people STILL BELIEVE THE PRESS. But, control the media, control the dialog, control the vote....straight out of Commie-Marxist operating manual.

2) Today, whilst running errands, I thanked people I saw not wearing a mask, for...not wearing a mask.

3) If you guys want to dissuade GringGO Juan from posting, just don't get sucked into anything he posts. Not that hard. I'm supporting the person behind the handle, nor am I out to bash him. Granted, the picture was a bit over the top!!!! Fed or No Fed, quit taking the bait and the fisherman will give up and leave.
 
Is this supposed to be offensive??? It's not. You might want to seek a help.
Offensive? Idk. Reckon that depends on you. Certainly ain’t as offensive as posting your faggy nude on here. Maybe @gayguns would like to see that stuff I guess..? But I got a feeling he’d rather see a shot of you from the back. We all know who’s pitching and who’s catching in that situation, Agent Strzok.

it’s a sad state of affairs when a native son takes up with his oppressor. We gotta word for that down where I’m from... penalty’s death..
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: 10ring'r and Mwalex
The fact that people think this way just blows my mind. The dimwits in this country have a way of blaming anything that happens to them on someone else. There is zero accountability with anyone on the left. Did they even consider the fact that she could have contracted the China flu from someone that was vaccinated?
 
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Reactions: Mwalex
This was in the WAPO yesterday as a commentary for Constitution Day. I highlighted the salient point. What they lament as "a sad commentary on the public’s civic literacy" is actually encouraging.

If someone could please copy their ideas of "civic education" that are mentioned in the links below. My free propaganda access is tapped out.

By Valerie Strauss Reporter
Yesterday at 5:00 a.m. EDT

For years, a respected annual survey of civics knowledge among American adults has provided mocking headlines about the low percentage who can’t correctly name basic constitutional rights or the three branches of government.

The 2021 results are in and more can name the executive, judiciary and legislative branches than at any other time in the survey’s 15-year history (though plenty still can’t). But the bigger news is on a question about the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, staged by supporters of President Donald Trump trying to stop Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s presidential election victory.
Respondents of the annual Constitution Day Civics Survey by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania were asked whether arresting people who entered the Capitol to disrupt the certification of the presidential election violated the Constitution.

The sobering results: 49 percent said that arresting insurrectionists violated the Constitution because the insurrectionists were only exercising their constitutional right to petition the government for redress of grievances. The breakdown who agreed with this statement: 53 percent of self-identified conservatives, 51 percent of self-identified moderates and 42 percent of self-described liberals.
An equal percentage of survey respondents — 49 percent — said the statement was not accurate and that arresting the insurrectionists did not violate the Constitution.
“It is a sad commentary on the public’s civic literacy that half of the public considers an effort to disrupt the certification of an election an exercise of a First Amendment right,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Center.

Massive investment in social studies and civics education proposed to address eroding trust in democratic institutions

Here are more results from the survey:

  • Fifty-six percent of U.S. adults correctly named all three branches of government (executive, judicial, legislative), up from 26 percent in 2016, and the highest since the survey began in 2006. (That means that in 2021, a not-insignificant 44 percent couldn’t name them. That would apparently include Tommy Tuberville, a former Auburn football coach who, in November, had just been elected to the U.S. Senate in Alabama and talked publicly about the three branches of the federal government but misidentified them, saying “Our government wasn’t set up for one group to have all three branches of government. … You know, the House, the Senate and the executive.” )
Results of the Constitution Day Civics Survey by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania.
  • Seventy-four percent named freedom of speech as one of the basic constitutionally protected rights; last year it was 73 percent. Freedom of religion was named by 56 percent — up from 47 percent in 2020. Half of respondents could name freedom of the press — up from 42 percent a year ago — as a right, but only 20 percent named the right to petition the government, up from 14 percent a year ago. Thirty percent mentioned the right of people to peaceably assemble, compared with 34 percent in 2020.
  • The respondents had more trouble understanding the First Amendment with a question about Facebook. Sixty-one percent incorrectly said Facebook — which blocked Donald Trump from its platform after accusing him of using it to “incite violent insurrection” against the U.S. government — is required to permit all Americans to express themselves freely on Facebook under the First Amendment. The breakdown: 66 percent of self-described conservatives said this, as did 61 percent of moderates and 55 percent of liberals. The First Amendment protects citizens from government censorship; Facebook is a private company. Only 35 percent of respondents knew that a U.S. senator’s term is six years and 36 percent knew a representative serves for two years.
  • Asked what it means when the Supreme Court rules 5-4 in a case, 61 percent correctly chose “the decision is the law and needs to be followed.” But only 51 percent of respondents accurately said that the Supreme Court has final responsibility for determining whether an act by the president is constitutional — and they had three choices: the president, Congress or the court itself.
What civics education should really look like

The nationally representative survey was launched in 2006, two years after Congress created Constitution Day, meant to increase Americans’ understanding of their own government. Sept. 17 is Constitution Day, when all schools receiving federal funding are supposed to offer an “educational program” on the Constitution. Congress doesn’t define what that should be, though, and there is no prescribed penalty for schools that do not do it.
Sept. 17 was chosen because it was the last session of the 1787 Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, during which the final version of the newly written Constitution was signed by 39 delegates.

A surge of interest in the Constitution in the era of Trumpism

The 2021 survey was conducted by SSRS, an independent research company, on Aug. 3 to 8, among 1,007 U.S. adults. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

After years of national lamenting about the state of civics education, there has been a push by legislatures in many states to improve it. A new initiative called Educating for American Democracy released a road map earlier this year for improving the teaching of social studies, and there is legislation in Congress concerning civics education.

And several months ago, the National Academy of Education, a nongovernmental nonprofit organization that aims to improve education with high-quality research, released a report on what civics education should look like, titled “Educating for Civic Reasoning and Discourse."
It says that beefed-up civics and history classes won’t be enough to prepare young people to engage in national conversations about complex social issues — and that civic learning should be distributed across all content areas from kindergarten to high school graduation.

The Annenberg survey found that in 2021, 59 percent of respondents said they had taken a civics course in high school that focused on the Constitution or judicial system, about the same as in previous years that the question has been asked. Forty-eight percent said they had taken a college course that focused on the U.S. system of government and the Constitution — more than the 38 percent who said they had in 2019 and in earlier years.