Tag: supreme-court

Page 7«..6789..»

Employers Should Reconsider Plans to Discharge Employees for Refusing the COVID-19 Vaccine – Justia Verdict

May 31, 2022

We are troubled by widespread reports that employers are firing or denying employment opportunities to unvaccinated workers without regard to potential religious or medical accommodations. See, e.g., Susan Edelman & Dean Balsamini, NYPD Puts 4,650 Vaccine Firings on Hold: Insiders, N.Y. Post, May 21, 2022 (reporting that nearly 5,000 NYPD employees are facing potential termination, including an undisclosed amount whose medical and exemption requests were rejected); Liz Hamel et al., KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor: October 2021, Kaiser Family Foundation (Oct. 28, 2021) (1% of all adults lost their job due to the vaccine requirement; 8% of all adults reported that they would ask for an exemption). Government workers may have recourse under civil service laws and labor agreements, and even at-will employees cannot be easily fired here. While we are not promoting an anti-vaccine message, and indeed believe most should be vaccinated, we are concerned about employers disregarding the legally mandated accommodation process.

To be clear, the termination of workers for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine in many instances contravenes Federal, State and City laws, unless they are provided with an opportunity to seek exemptions for sincerely held religious beliefs and medical reasons. Notwithstanding the headlines which suggest terminations of all vaccine refusers are permissible, relevant law requires employers to carefully consider requests for religious or medical accommodations.

On December 13, 2021, New York Citys Commissioner of Health and Mental Hygiene issued an Order requiring COVID-19 vaccinations in all workplaces throughout New York City. While the Order requires that workers must provide proof of vaccination against COVID19 to a covered entity before entering the workplace, and a covered entity must exclude from the workplace any worker who has not provided such proof, the Order also requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations for medical or religious reasons. Ord. of the Commr of Health & Mental Hygiene to Require COVID-19 Vaccn in the Workplace, 1, 5 (Dec. 13, 2021). The Citys workplace vaccine mandate is modeled after President Bidens Executive Order of September 9, 2021, which ordered federal agencies to implement, to the extent consistent with applicable law, a program to require COVID-19 vaccination for all of its Federal employees, with exceptions only as required by law. Exec. Order No. 14042, 86 FR 50985 (Sept. 9, 2021). The exceptions include accommodations for religious or medical reasons. Neither the Citys workplace vaccination requirement nor President Bidens executive order requires employers to fire unvaccinated employees.

Religious and medical exceptions to workplace vaccine mandates are codified in Federal, State, and City laws. Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, when an employee has a genuine religious practice that conflicts with a requirement of employment, [an] employer, once notified, must offer the aggrieved employee a reasonable accommodation, unless doing so would cause the employer to suffer an undue hardship. Cosme v. Henderson, 287 F.3d 152, 158 (2d Cir. 2002) (citing 42 U.S.C. 2000e(j)). Likewise, the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) provide for employee medical accommodations, so long as those accommodations do not cause the employer undue hardship. 42 U.S.C. 12112(b)(5)(A).

State and City laws are similar, in that they too provide for religious and medical accommodations. State law requires employers to accommodate sincerely held religious beliefs or practices, unless, after engaging in a bona fide effort, the employer demonstrates that it is unable to reasonably accommodate the employees or prospective employees sincerely held religious observance or practice without undue hardship on the conduct of the employers business. N.Y. Exec. Law 296(10)(a). Further, medical accommodations are also subject to the undue-hardship standard. Id. 296(3)(a)-(b).

City law provides for a similar accommodation process. Employers in New York City must make reasonable accommodation to the religious needs of their employees, so long as those needs do not impose an undue hardship on the employer. N.Y.C. Admin. Code 8-107(3)(a)-(b). Like Federal and State law, a similar standard for medical accommodations applies under City law. Id. 8-107(28)(a).

Many employers may doubt whether employees are seeking religious exemptions to the vaccine requirements on account of a sincere religious belief. New York Citys Guidance on Accommodations for Workers feeds into this skepticism by suggesting that employers should actively question those workers seeking religious-based vaccine exemptions by asking them to provide a general vaccine history, explain why those vaccines were not against their religion, and a list/describe other commonly used medicines, food/drink, or other substances they do not allow to enter their bodies. N.Y.C. Law Dept, Guidance on Accommodations for Workers, at 3 (Dec. 20, 2021). Moreover, if the religious-based exemption request is based on an objection to the vaccine because it was developed and/or tested using fetal cells that the worker is concerned may have been the result of an abortion, then employers are advised to ask workers whether they take medications such as ibuprofen (Advil), acetaminophen (Tylenol), or anu other medications similarly developed or tested using fetal cell derivative lines. Id. New York Citys guidance then advises employers that if a worker answers affirmatively, then [s]uch behavior would be inconsistent with the religious belief, and generally means the worker would be denied an accommodation. Id.

This guidance potentially conflicts with that of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and New York Citys own Commission on Human Rights (NYCCHR). See, e.g., EEOC, What You Should Know About COVID-19 and the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act, and Other Laws, Technical Assistance Questions and Answers, K.12 (updated Mar. 14, 2022) (citing 29 C.F.R. 1605.1); NYCCHR, Guidance for Employers on Equitable Implementation of COVID-19 Vaccine Requirements (Dec. 15, 2021) (Equitable Implementation). The EEOC has cautioned employers that the definition of religion is broad and protects beliefs, practices, and observances with which the employer may be unfamiliar. EEOC, What You Should Know K.12; NYCCHR, Equitable Implementation at 3 ([T]he NYCHRL protects not only employees who belong to organized religions, such as Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism, but also employees who have religious, ethical, or moral beliefs that are sincerely held with the strength of religious views.). Under Title VII, protected religious beliefs are not dependent on whether they are acceptable, logical, consistent, or comprehensible to others, Thomas v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Empt Sec. Div., 450 U.S. 707, 714 (1981), but instead, include moral or ethical beliefs as to what is right and wrong which are sincerely held with the strength of traditional religious views. 29 C.F.R. 1605.1.

Although an employer may question the sincerity of an employees religious objection, the EEOC has reiterated its longstanding guidance that employer[s] should ordinarily assume that an employees request for religious accommodation is based on a sincerely held religious belief, practice, or observance. EEOC, Compliance Manual on Religious Discrimination 12-IV(A)(2)-(3) (Jan. 15, 2021); EEOC, What You Should Know K.12, L.2; see also NYCCHR, Equitable Implementation at 3 (Employees . . . should not be required to submit supporting documentation unless their employer has an objective basis to question the sincerity of the religious basis for the employees inability to show proof of vaccination.). The EEOCs guidance regarding the presumed sincerity of an employees religious beliefs is premised on a reluctance of the courts to opine on what is religion, and what is not. EEOC, Compliance Manual 12-I(A)(2) (citing, inter alia, Adeyeye v. Heartland Sweeteners, LLC, 721 F.3d 444, 452 (7th Cir. 2013)). The Supreme Court has long held, in First Amendment religion-clause cases, that its inappropriate for a jury to determine the truth or falsity of . . . religious beliefs or doctrines, United States v. Ballard, 322 U.S. 78, 88 (1944), and that a persons contention that a belief is an essential part of [their] religious faith must be given great weight. United States v. Seeger, 380 U.S. 163, 184 (1965).

Courts that have considered the issue of sincerity of religious beliefs in the context of labor and employment litigation have held that while employers may inquire into a workers religious beliefs when they are seeking an accommodation, they must do so in a limited fashion solely to ascertain the sincerity of the religious belief. For example, in Bushouse v. Local Union 2209, a federal district court ruled that an employees Title VII rights were not violated when his union required independent corroboration of alleged sincerely held religious beliefs that prohibited him from paying union dues. 164 F. Supp. 2d 1066, 1078 (N.D. Ind. 2001). The Bushouse court cautioned that its decision was limited to the facts of the case before it, and reasoned that the union was entitled to a limited inquiry into the sincerity of [the plaintiffs] claimed religious beliefs allows the union to ascertain whether an individual is motivated by sincere religious convictions as opposed to political or other convictions. Id. at n. 18. Other courts have similarly endorsed narrow inquiries into religious sincerity because the employees burden is not a heavy one and courts must avoid any test that might turn on the factfinders own idea of what a religion should resemble. Philbrook v. Ansonia Bd. of Educ., 757 F.2d 476, 482 (2d Cir. 1985) (internal quotations and citation omitted). Moreover, courts confronted with Title VII religious discrimination issues often assume that plaintiffs have established [sincerity] because courts are generally mindful that Title VIIs capacious definition of religion leaves little room for a party to challenge the religious nature of an employees professed beliefs. Together Employees v. Mass Gen. Brigham Inc., 2021 WL 5234394, at *17 (D. Mass. 2021) (internal quotations and citations omitted). Thus, employers should be cautious in questioning the sincerity of a workers religious-based vaccine exemption request.

When considering vaccine exemptions for medical accommodations under the ADA, the employee must have a disability. 42 U.S.C. 12112(b)(5)(A). But not all medical conditions qualify as disabilities. Rather, the condition must substantially limit[] a major life activity. 42 U.S.C. 12102(1)(A), 12102(2). Thus, an employer may inquire into the employees medical condition with somewhat more precision than it may with religious beliefs, as the employer may ask the individual for reasonable documentation about his/her disability and functional limitations. The employer is entitled to know that the individual has a covered disability for which s/he needs a reasonable accommodation. EEOC, Enforcement Guidance on Reasonable Accommodation and Undue Hardship under the ADA, EEOC-CVG-2003-1 (Oct. 17, 2002).

Under City law, the NYCCHR has advised employers that they must consider requests for reasonable accommodations from employees who need them because of disability, pregnancy, childbirth, lactation, and has advised employees that they may be required to provide a doctors note as proof of the medical condition. See NYCCHR, Equitable Implementation. Similar to the guidance related to religious exemptions, New York Citys accommodation guidance also appears skeptical of medical exemptions by seeming to limit the categories of individuals entitled to medical exemptions. For example, the guidance does not mention the consideration of exemption requests based upon disabilities, pregnancy, childbirth, or lactation; it instead only mentions permanent medical exemptions because of severe allergic reactions, and temporary exemptions due to of monoclonal antibody or convalescent plasma treatment of COVID, recent stem cell transplant, CAR Tcell therapy, or other therapy or treatment that would temporarily interfere with the workers ability to respond adequately to vaccination, or mount an immune response due to treatment, or [p]ericarditis or myocarditis. N.Y.C. Law Dept, Guidance on Accommodations at 2. Here, too, employers should be cautious in evaluating medical exemption requests.

Contrary to widespread belief, courts have not determined that terminations of COVID-19 vaccine refusers seeking religious or medical exemption are lawful. Courts thus far have merely denied requests for injunctive relief, which is a remedy requiring special justification. See, e.g., Dr. A v. Hochul, 142 S.Ct. 552 (2021); Kane v. DeBlasio, 19 F.4th 152 (2d. Cir. 2021). And, courts have determined that healthcare employers may well face an undue hardship if accommodations were granted. See, e.g., Together Employees, 2021 WL 5234394; Bare v. Cardinal Health, Inc., 2022 WL 702593 (E.D. Tenn. Mar. 8, 2022). Thus, it would be a mistake for employers to rely on the headlines and ignore the legally required reasonable-accommodation process.

Moreover, employers must show good faith when confronted with an employee requesting a reasonable accommodation in the form of a vaccine exemption for religious or medical reasons. EEOC, Compliance Manual 12-IV(A)(3) (collecting cases). [T]he first step in providing a reasonable accommodation is to engage in a good-faith interactive process that assesses the needs of the [employee] and the reasonableness of the accommodation requested. Hosking v. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr., 186 A.D.3d 58, 62-63 (1st Dept 2020) (citations omitted). In other words, employers must engage[ ] in interactions with the employee revealing at least some deliberation upon the viability of the employees [accommodation] request. Jacobsen v. New York City Health & Hosps. Corp., 22 N.Y.3d 824, 837 (2014). This inquiry also must be individualized for each employee seeking an accommodation. See, e.g., Wright v. New York State Dept of Corr., 831 F.3d 64, 77 (2d Cir. 2016). For their part, employees must cooperate with their employers in this processemployees who cause the interactive process to break down will forfeit their failure-to-accommodate claims. See Moxley v. New York, 2019 WL 5788440, at *12 (W.D.N.Y. Nov. 6, 2019). While an employers failure to engage in a good-faith interactive process is not an independent claim under Federal or State law, it may be used as evidence of discrimination, Sheng v. M&T Bank Corp., 848 F.3d 78, 87 (2d Cir. 2017) (citations omitted), and is an independent claim under City law (which requires a good faith cooperative dialogue). N.Y.C. Admin. Code 8-107(28)(a); see also Hosking, 186 A.D.3d 58, 64.

Because employers must seriously consider their employees religious and medical accommodation requests on a case-by-case basis, more attention should be given to vaccine alternatives that will permit employees to do their jobs effectively without risking the safety of their coworkers or overburdening their employers. Employers must work together with their employees to consider what options are available to them, whether masking, regular testing, a schedule change, remote work, or other arrangement, given the nature of their employees work and their specific religious or medical needs. It is imperative that the legally mandated accommodation process not be cast aside for the sake of expediency or personal feelings regarding the necessity of vaccinations in the face of the pandemic.

Reprinted with permission from the May 26, 2022, issue date of the New York Law Journal 2022 ALM Media Properties, LLC. All rights reserved. Further duplication without permission is prohibited, contact 877-257-3382 or reprints@alm.com

Garrett Kaske, an associate at Kessler Matura P.C., assisted in the preparation of this article.

Go here to read the rest:

Employers Should Reconsider Plans to Discharge Employees for Refusing the COVID-19 Vaccine - Justia Verdict

Court: Hospital can’t be compelled by family to treat COVID-19 patient with ivermectin – Wisconsin Public Radio

May 28, 2022

A state appeals court ruled that a Wisconsin hospital was not required to treat a COVID-19 patient with ivermectin after a family member obtained a prescription for it from an outside doctor.

The antiparasitic drug is used to treat malaria and other diseases, and early in the pandemic some doctors saw it as a promising COVID treatment. It became a cause celebre among conservative politicians and commentators, including U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Oshkosh, who promoted its use while attacking COVID-19 vaccines.

But recent studies, including a large clinical trial with results published this month in the New England Journal of Medicine, have shown that the drug does not work to reduce COVID-19 patients' risk of hospitalization. The federal Food and Drug Administration advises against using it as a COVID-19 treatment, and when it was widely used last year as a home remedy for COVID-19 it resulted in aspike in reported poisonings in Wisconsin.

In the meantime, clinically effective treatments against the pandemic disease have emerged. The FDA has authorized two antiviral pills, Paxlovid and Remdesivir, that have been shown to help patients fight off the disease.

The case before the appeals court emerged before the approval of those effective drugs but after data had cast doubt on the effectiveness of ivermectin. The nephew of John Zingsheim, who in September was being treated for COVID-19 at Waukesha's Aurora Health Center, demanded Zingsheim be given the drug and found a doctor to write a prescription for it while Zingsheim was in the hospital on a ventilator.

The nephew, Allen Gahl, said he searched online for an alternative treatment for Zingsheim because he was "losing hope for (Zingsheim's) survival," according to court documents.

Stay informed with WPR's email newsletter.

But the hospital declined to administer the drug, citing medical evidence and the fact that the prescription came from a doctor who never saw or examined the patient and was "not credentialed ... to treat patients at Aurora." Aurora's position was that ivermectin "would be neither safe nor effective medical care" for Zingsheim.

The family sued the hospital, and in October won a judgment at the circuit court level. Aurora appealed, and this week won an appeals court ruling finding "there is no legal authority for the court's order compelling a private health care provider to administer a treatment that the provider, in its professional judgment, has determined to be below the standard of care."

A three-judge panel issued the ruling, with one judge dissenting. The family may choose to appeal the case to the state Supreme Court.

Zingsheim's current condition is not publicly available. In October, Aurora officials told a judge the patient's condition was improving under the hospital's treatment regimen.

The case is part of a broader movement of at least two dozen lawsuits in many states demanding patients' rights to use ivermectin over doctors' judgment. And the Wisconsin case, too, has a clear political valence. Johnson was among those who blasted a decision by the Supreme Court's decision to deny a request in October by the family to bypass the appeals court. And Karen Mueller, the attorney representing Zingsheim's nephew, is a Republican running for state attorney general. Two key issues she's running on are reversing the outcome of the 2020 presidential election and "investigating" Wisconsin hospitals that fail to treat COVID-19 patients with ivermectin.

Here is the original post:

Court: Hospital can't be compelled by family to treat COVID-19 patient with ivermectin - Wisconsin Public Radio

SCOTUS Declines to Block Air Force from Taking Actions Against Reservist Who Claims ‘Sincere Religious Objections’ to COVID-19 Vaccine – Law &…

April 19, 2022

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin

The Supreme Court refused on Monday to block the Air Force from taking action against a lieutenant colonel and reservist who refuses to get a COVID-19 vaccine.Conservative Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch, said that they would have granted the application.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Dunn, an Air Force Reserve, filed his bid to block the COVID-19 mandate one week ago, citing his sincere religious objections to vaccination and his supposed natural immunity from having contracted the disease last summer.

Dunn said that the Air Forces mandate followed his infection, noting that 98 percent of airmen have now been vaccinated. More than 2,000 others are subject to medical and administrative exemptions, Dunns counsel claimed in their application.

After his request for a religious exemption was denied, Dunn sued and lost in federal court.

While the motion for a preliminary injunction was pending, respondents removed applicant from his command; he does not seek reinstatement to that post, but seeks only protection against further punishment, including a discharge, because of his religious beliefs, his lawyers wrote in their application for an injunction.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit denied Dunns request for an injunction.

On Monday, so did the Supreme Court in a brief order silent on its reasoning and with three noted dissents.

Dunns attorney Donald Falk told Law&Crime that his clients litigation continues.

We are disappointed that the Court did not enter relief pending appeal, but look forward to completing expedited appellate proceedings in the Ninth Circuit, he wrote in an email.

Dunns case is hardly the only one challenging COVID-19 vaccine mandates in the military, nor is it the sole one filed for the Supreme Courts consideration.

In March, the Pentagon requested a stay of an order preventing the Navy from considering respondents vaccination status in making deployment, assignment, and other operational decisions.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, in a concurring opinion, granted that request for what he described as a simple overarching reason.

Under Article II of the Constitution, the President of the United States, not any federal judge, is the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces, Kavanaugh wrote on March 25.

That case had involved Navy SEALs who refused to be vaccinated against COVID-19, and the ruling in favor of the government also disappointed Alito and Gorsuch at the time.

By rubberstamping the Governments request for what it calls a partial stay, the Court does a great injustice to the 35 respondentsNavy Seals and others in the Naval Special Warfare communitywho have volunteered to undertake demanding and hazardous duties to defend our country, Alito wrote in a dissent at the time, joined by Gorsuch. These individuals appear to have been treated shabbily by the Navy, and the Court brushes all that aside.

Thomas also would have rejected that stay.

In December, a federal judge rejected a challenge against COVID vaccine mandates by Oklahoma National Guard members with a sobering statistic that the pandemic has in less than two years, killed more Americans than all killed in action in all of the wars the United States has ever fought.

The Department of Justice did not immediately respond to an email requesting comment.

Read the ruling, below:

(Image via YouTube)

Have a tip we should know? [emailprotected]

See more here:

SCOTUS Declines to Block Air Force from Taking Actions Against Reservist Who Claims 'Sincere Religious Objections' to COVID-19 Vaccine - Law &...

Can you win a court case against someone who gives you COVID-19? We asked a Redding attorney – Record Searchlight

April 5, 2022

CDC removes COVID risk warning for passengers going on cruise ships

The CDC dropped its risk assessment of cruise travel after more than two years of warning travelers against the dangers of COVID on a cruise ship.

USA TODAY

The lifting of most external pandemicprotections this wintercould increase the risk of catchingCOVID-19 from someone without a mask who's infected.

For the most part, people need to protect themselves and assume risk, but there are cases when a person with the virus is accountable for spreading it.

In some cases, a person saying they'd intentionallyspreadCOVID-19 resulted in an arrest for making a terrorist threat.

But can you sue in court and win against someone who knowingly has COVID-19 and gave it to you?

Theoretically, yes if you couldprove the person infected you intentionally andyou didn't get it from someone else.

In California, the general rule is that all persons have a duty to use ordinary care to prevent others frombeing injured as the result of their conduct. Redding attorney Catie Barrsaid.

'It feels like its almost a punishment':Millions of people could lose health insurance coverage when the COVID-19 emergency ends

In 2006, the California Supreme Court ruled a person has a duty to avoid knowingly transmitting an infectious disease. It compared being stricken with a disease dueto someones negligence as no different than being hit by a car due to the drivers negligence. Therefore, the intentional spread of an infectious diseasecouldbe prosecutedcivilly, Barr said.

The trouble is proving the person intentionally gave you COVID-19.

Just being exposed to the disease by someone and contracting it isnt enough.

There must be proof that the individual knowingly transmitted the disease and (you were)actually harmed by that specific conduct," Barr said. "This would be incredibly difficult to prove.

Past successful cases dealt withintentional transmission of sexually transmitted diseases, like HIV, Barr said. Establishing proof in those situations is likely easier thanproving transmission of COVID-19.

California Safety Code 120290 says a person is guilty of intentional transmission of an infectious or communicable disease if:

You'd have to prove all five pointstoshow a violation, according to California Safety Code 120290.

To read the complete code go to bit.ly/3qsBc6J.

Intentionally spreading or threatening to spread COVID-19 could be considered a terrorist act, according to the U.S. government.

On March 24, 2020 about a week after the national shutdown the U.S. Department of Justice issued a memorandum regarding COVID-related criminal behavior, including "threats targeting specific individuals or the general public" and "the purposeful exposure and infection of others with COVID-19."

The documentclassified thecoronavirus as a biological agent and said spreading it couldfall under nationalterrorism-related statutes.

COVID-19: New coronavirus omicron variant BA.2 enters Shasta County

The next day, USA Today reporteda Missouri man was arrested and charged with making a second-degree terrorist threat after Warrenton police saidheposted video of himself saying "Who's scared of coronavirus?" and licking stock at a Walmart.

Other cases involve people posting they planned to spread COVID-19on social media ordeliberately coughing on others while claiming they had the virus.

To read the memorandum, go tobit.ly/3K0Aup5.

This story resulted from a reader question. Do you have a question on a North State issue that you want us to investigate? Share with us questions you have about health care, retail, restaurants, housing or anything else that's affecting your wallet.

Jessica Skropanic is a features reporter for the Record Searchlight/USA Today Network. She covers science, arts, social issues and entertainment stories.Followher on Twitter @RS_JSkropanicand on Facebook. Join Jessica in theGet Out! Nor Calrecreation Facebook group. To support and sustain this work, please subscribe today. Thank you.

See original here:

Can you win a court case against someone who gives you COVID-19? We asked a Redding attorney - Record Searchlight

Covid Live News and Updates – The New York Times

April 5, 2022

A health care worker administering Covid vaccines to students in Chitungwiza, Zimbabwe, last week.Credit...Aaron Ufumeli/EPA, via Shutterstock

Senators announced a deal on a $10 billion coronavirus aid package on Monday to provide additional aid for domestic testing, vaccination and treatment efforts, after dropping a push to include billions for the global vaccination effort.

The agreement requires at least $5 billion to be set aside for therapeutics and $750 million for research and clinical trials to prepare for future variants. The remaining funds will be used for vaccines and testing.

It does not include $5 billion in funding for the global vaccination effort that had previously been proposed, after senators spent the weekend haggling over a Republican demand to claw back money Congress previously approved.

The package was announced by Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the majority leader, and Mitt Romney, Republican of Utah. Both have led negotiations in recent days. In a statement, Mr. Schumer said that President Biden supported the agreement, even though it was less than half of the White Houses original $22.5 billion request.

This $10 billion Covid package will give the federal government and our citizens the tools we need to continue our economic recovery, keep schools open and keep American families safe, Mr. Schumer said in a statement. While this emergency injection of additional funding is absolutely necessary, it is well short of what is truly needed to keep us safe from the Covid-19 virus over the long-term.

He added that he planned for additional bipartisan negotiations over another emergency aid package that could include both aid for the global vaccination effort and additional assistance for Ukraine as it battles a Russian invasion.

Every dollar we requested is essential, and we will continue to work with Congress to get all of the funding we need, but time is of the essence, Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, said in a statement. We urge Congress to move promptly on this $10 billion package because it can begin to fund the most immediate needs, as we currently run the risk of not having some critical tools like treatments and tests starting in May and June.

The domestic spending is paid for largely by repurposing unspent money that was approved in March 2021 in the $1.9 trillion pandemic law that Democrats pushed through without any Republican votes, as well as some funds from the $2.2 trillion law approved under the Trump administration, a key Republican demand.

Among the programs and agencies affected are a grant program for shuttered venues, the Economic Injury Disaster loan program, the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund, as well as agriculture and transportation funding, according to summaries provided by the two offices.

In a separate statement, Mr. Romney called for the legislation to receive broad bipartisan support and added that he was willing to explore a fiscally responsible solution to support global efforts in the weeks ahead.

Lawmakers are pushing to move the aid package through before the end of the week, when both chambers are scheduled to leave for a two-week recess. It is unclear if there will be enough support for such a swift timeline, given that Senate Democrats aim to confirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court this week and all 100 lawmakers would have to agree to waive procedural hurdles to speed up the process.

Multiple House Democrats have also expressed frustration with the omission of the global vaccination aid, which is central to Mr. Bidens strategy of reducing vaccine inequality and limiting the impact of the next coronavirus variant.

Without global vaccination funding, we are simply not tackling the problem of COVID, Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, the chairwoman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said on Twitter.

Several Democrats, however, said the urgent need to provide domestic aid was enough to warrant their support.

I understand that domestic public health spending is also urgently needed, and so I intend to vote for this bill, Senator Chris Coons, a Democrat from Delaware and one of the negotiators, said in a statement. However, this is only a partial step, and I will push my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to pass a robust international funding bill in the coming weeks to address pandemic-related needs and the growing global hunger and food security crisis.

Recent efforts to pass an initial $15.6 billion Covid package collapsed last month when House Democrats balked at clawing back money that had been set aside for state governments in last years law.

Those funds remained untouched in the current plan. But the measure also includes a bipartisan bill, led by Senators John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, and Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, that will give state, local and tribal governments more flexibility in how coronavirus aid is spent.

While access to vaccines has gradually expanded around the world, administering the shots remains a challenge. In many low-income countries, only about 15 percent of the population has received at least one vaccine dose, compared with about 80 percent of the population in many middle- and high-income countries, according to the Our World in Data project at the University of Oxford.

Read the rest here:

Covid Live News and Updates - The New York Times

Covid News: Senators Announce Smaller Aid Proposal Without Global Vaccine Funds – The New York Times

April 5, 2022

A health care worker administering Covid vaccines to students in Chitungwiza, Zimbabwe, last week.Credit...Aaron Ufumeli/EPA, via Shutterstock

Senators announced a deal on a $10 billion coronavirus aid package on Monday to provide additional aid for domestic testing, vaccination and treatment efforts, after dropping a push to include billions for the global vaccination effort.

The agreement requires at least $5 billion to be set aside for therapeutics and $750 million for research and clinical trials to prepare for future variants. The remaining funds will be used for vaccines and testing.

It does not include $5 billion in funding for the global vaccination effort that had previously been proposed, after senators spent the weekend haggling over a Republican demand to claw back money Congress previously approved.

The package was announced by Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the majority leader, and Mitt Romney, Republican of Utah. Both have led negotiations in recent days. In a statement, Mr. Schumer said that President Biden supported the agreement, even though it was less than half of the White Houses original $22.5 billion request.

This $10 billion Covid package will give the federal government and our citizens the tools we need to continue our economic recovery, keep schools open and keep American families safe, Mr. Schumer said in a statement. While this emergency injection of additional funding is absolutely necessary, it is well short of what is truly needed to keep us safe from the Covid-19 virus over the long-term.

He added that he planned for additional bipartisan negotiations over another emergency aid package that could include both aid for the global vaccination effort and additional assistance for Ukraine as it battles a Russian invasion.

Every dollar we requested is essential, and we will continue to work with Congress to get all of the funding we need, but time is of the essence, Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, said in a statement. We urge Congress to move promptly on this $10 billion package because it can begin to fund the most immediate needs, as we currently run the risk of not having some critical tools like treatments and tests starting in May and June.

The domestic spending is paid for largely by repurposing unspent money that was approved in March 2021 in the $1.9 trillion pandemic law that Democrats pushed through without any Republican votes, as well as some funds from the $2.2 trillion law approved under the Trump administration, a key Republican demand.

Among the programs and agencies affected are a grant program for shuttered venues, the Economic Injury Disaster loan program, the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund, as well as agriculture and transportation funding, according to summaries provided by the two offices.

In a separate statement, Mr. Romney called for the legislation to receive broad bipartisan support and added that he was willing to explore a fiscally responsible solution to support global efforts in the weeks ahead.

Lawmakers are pushing to move the aid package through before the end of the week, when both chambers are scheduled to leave for a two-week recess. It is unclear if there will be enough support for such a swift timeline, given that Senate Democrats aim to confirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court this week and all 100 lawmakers would have to agree to waive procedural hurdles to speed up the process.

Multiple House Democrats have also expressed frustration with the omission of the global vaccination aid, which is central to Mr. Bidens strategy of reducing vaccine inequality and limiting the impact of the next coronavirus variant.

Without global vaccination funding, we are simply not tackling the problem of COVID, Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, the chairwoman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said on Twitter.

Several Democrats, however, said the urgent need to provide domestic aid was enough to warrant their support.

I understand that domestic public health spending is also urgently needed, and so I intend to vote for this bill, Senator Chris Coons, a Democrat from Delaware and one of the negotiators, said in a statement. However, this is only a partial step, and I will push my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to pass a robust international funding bill in the coming weeks to address pandemic-related needs and the growing global hunger and food security crisis.

Recent efforts to pass an initial $15.6 billion Covid package collapsed last month when House Democrats balked at clawing back money that had been set aside for state governments in last years law.

Those funds remained untouched in the current plan. But the measure also includes a bipartisan bill, led by Senators John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, and Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, that will give state, local and tribal governments more flexibility in how coronavirus aid is spent.

While access to vaccines has gradually expanded around the world, administering the shots remains a challenge. In many low-income countries, only about 15 percent of the population has received at least one vaccine dose, compared with about 80 percent of the population in many middle- and high-income countries, according to the Our World in Data project at the University of Oxford.

The rest is here:

Covid News: Senators Announce Smaller Aid Proposal Without Global Vaccine Funds - The New York Times

Ukraine, coronavirus, Grammys recap & more: Whats trending today – cleveland.com

April 5, 2022

A look at some of the top headlines trending online today including the latest updates on the war in Ukraine, the coronavirus and much more.

Scenes of horror reported after Russian troops leave parts of Ukraine (AP)

Hospitals and health care workers in Ukraine under attack, a violation of the 1864 Geneva Convention (CBS)

This is genocide, Zelensky says of Russias attack on Ukraine (NY Post)

Zelensky asks Americans not to stay silent in emotional Grammys cameo (Axios)

Airlines cancel hundreds of weekend flights as thunderstorms sweep through Florida (CNBC)

Downtown Sacramento shooting leaves at least 18 victims (NPR)

Vote by Senate panel begins process to confirm Ketanji Brown Jackson to Supreme Court (AP)

Obama to return to White House to celebrate health care reform (NBC)

Donald Trump endorses Sarah Palin for Alaskas lone congressional seat (Washington Post)

Man allegedly got up to 90 COVID vaccine shots so he could sell the vaccination cards (CBS)

Why do some people seem unable to catch COVID? Scientists are looking for answers (USA Today)

China sends military, doctors to Shanghai to test 26 million residents for Covid (NBC)

COVID-19 temporarily stops Daniel Craigs return to Broadway (AP)

China Box Office Crumbles as Coronavirus Lockdowns Bite (Variety)

Jon Batiste tops Grammy Awards, winning 5 trophies (AP) | Grammys red carpet gallery

Ahead of the Masters, Tiger Woods Hits the Driving Range and the Back Nine (NY Times)

South Carolina dominates Connecticut to secure second national championship (USA Today)

WrestleMania 38 results, Night 2 grades: Roman Reigns unifies titles, Stone Cold stuns Vince McMahon (CBS Sports)

Original post:

Ukraine, coronavirus, Grammys recap & more: Whats trending today - cleveland.com

Black adults were hospitalized at higher rates than whites during the U.S. Omicron wave. – The New York Times

March 21, 2022

HAGERSTOWN, Md. As dusk settled over the racetrack on the edge of town, a truck driver stood on a trailer being used as a makeshift stage and held forth on the sins of the politicians in the nations capital, an hour and a halfs drive southeast.

Lock them up! a man yelled from the crowd of several hundred.

Its all or nothing! called out another, waving a large American flag.

Tracy Graham, a Mary Kay consultant from Suffolk, Va., held her own flag neatly folded in her hands. She had driven five hours to the Hagerstown Speedway to show her support for the Peoples Convoy, a demonstration against Covid-19 vaccine mandates modeled on the one that occupied Canadas capital city of Ottawa for weeks.

But for Mrs. Graham, a Republican who is active in local politics, the American convoy was about far more than Covid restrictions. Mask and vaccine mandates were just one example of how our freedoms have been coming down brick by brick over time, she said. Shed asked the truckers to sign her flag and was thinking about framing it when she returned home. This is a part of history, she said.

Historical and biblical allusions are tossed around loosely at the convoys speedway headquarters. Organizers have compared the convoys weathering of a snowstorm last weekend to the Continental Armys winter encampment at Valley Forge, Pa., and their caravans around the Washington Beltway, which they are circuiting daily, to the Israelites marches around Jericho.

But whether the convoy can match its own aspirations remains uncertain. The 100 or so trucks plus an entourage of pickups, cars and camper vans that head off toward Washington daily have neither matched the scale of the Canadians city-paralyzing demonstration, which drew thousands of trucks at its peak, nor summoned the same media attention.

For the moment, the protest is perhaps most notable as a window onto the evolution of the American right in the wake of Donald J. Trumps presidency, and one that Republican politicians are watching. Although organizers insist that their demonstration is nonpartisan and narrowly focused on Covid restrictions, in practice, it is animated by a broad, familiar array of conservative and right-wing issues and grievances. Complaints about schools mix with far-right conspiracy theories and refusal to accept the 2020 election results.

This worldview is increasingly incorporating ideas from the anti-vaccine movement, some of them preceding the Covid outbreak, even as the virus has receded and Covid restrictions have eased.

This week, one side of the stage was piled with books written by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an anti-vaccine activist; while near the other, a vendor sold stickers saying WHEN I DIE DONT LET ME VOTE DEMOCRAT. On Wednesday evening, Dr. Paul Alexander, a former official in Mr. Trumps Health and Human Services Department who has become a prominent personality in the anti-mandate movement, called for President Biden to pardon the defendants facing charges related to the Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the Capitol.

On Friday, organizers yielded the microphone briefly to a motorcyclist in leather chaps, who exhorted the mostly white crowd to strip the Black Lives Matter slogan from a street near the White House where it has been painted in giant letters. Were going to take it back, he declared.

Banners with symbols of the Three Percenters, an armed extremist movement, have been flown from some trucks in the convoy. Two young men in the attire of the Proud Boys, the far-right organization, were milling around the camp on a recent morning.

Asked in interviews what had drawn them to the protest, demonstrators spoke of ending a national emergency order Mr. Biden had extended in February, as well as a handful of remaining federal restrictions vaccine requirements for military service members, for instance, and mask requirements on airplanes.

But most of the dozen demonstrators interviewed also enumerated other motivations, from concern over gun rights and abortion to the Trump-aligned QAnon conspiracy theory. Not all of them identified as Republicans, but all who disclosed how they voted in 2020 had supported Mr. Trump, and said they believed or at least suspected that the election had been rigged against him.

Well be satisfied when Bidens gone, when Harris is gone and Pelosis gone, Curt Martin, a 73-year-old truck driver from upstate New York, said. When theyre gone, well be happy. Well go home. But not until then.

Besides an end to the emergency order, the convoy is calling for an investigation into Covid-19s origins and the federal response, and is encouraging state-level protests against local restrictions.

We are still looking for accountability, Brian Brase, a convoy organizer and its most visible spokesman, said.

These are narrower aims than the Canadian protest, befitting a country where there are relatively few Covid mandates left to protest against. In the United States, unlike Canada, federal vaccine mandates for private employers were never implemented and few state-level Covid restrictions remain.

When the convoy first arrived after a cross-country trip from California on March 4, its organizers avoided trying to shut down Washington as the Canadian demonstrators had Ottawa, opting instead for relatively orderly laps around the Beltway. When these failed to make any great impression, drivers began making forays into the citys heart, with noisy excursions down residential streets, drawing the attention of law enforcement and, increasingly, angering residents.

Meanwhile, some Republican politicians and candidates have come to pay their respects at the speedway camp, including Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and Doug Mastriano, a Pennsylvania state senator and candidate for governor who chartered buses to Mr. Trumps Jan. 6 rally preceding the storming of the Capitol. At least nine other Republican senators and congressmen have met with the organizers during their visits to Capitol Hill.

Some of these meetings were arranged by Axiom Strategies, a Republican consulting firm whose principals have worked for Mr. Cruz and Gov. Glenn Youngkin of Virginia and offered its services pro bono to connect the convoy with Republican politicians.

This is one of the major political movements in America right now, said Matt Wolking, Axioms vice president for communications.

Wolking and other Republican strategists argue that Covid restrictions remain a Democratic vulnerability in 2022, despite the few policies still in place. The Biden administrations vaccine-or-testing mandate for large employers was blocked by the Supreme Court in January, and in early February, Democratic governors rushed to repeal their states indoor mask mandates, leaving only Hawaii with such a mandate in place. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has since eased mask guidelines as the spike in infections from the Omicron variant has largely abated.

I think the voters have moved on, said Brian Stryker, a partner at Impact Research, a Democratic polling firm. The Republicans very much will look like they are looking backward and talking about something voters dont really care about.

Convoy organizers insist they will continue demonstrating until their demands are met, and the Hagerstown encampment has taken on an air of increasing permanence. There have been barbecues, campfires and, on Wednesday morning, a wedding.

Along the gravel entrance road to the racetrack, Sherrie Campbell, a retired truck driver from Dallas, stood alongside her black Chevy Silverado, the exterior of which was painted with slogans related to QAnon, a conspiracy theory about the existence of a global pedophilic cabal that includes Democratic leaders. References to QAnon have appeared on a number of convoy vehicles. One truck pulled a trailer decorated with an immense American-flag-patterned skull topped by Mr. Trumps distinctive hair, alongside the phrase, Q Sent Me.

Since arriving in Hagerstown, Ms. Campbell has been sleeping in the back seat of her trucks extended cab, on a bedroll covered with an American flag-patterned bedspread. She said she would be staying with the convoy until it had achieved the aim of getting our freedom back.

People show up here because this is kind of the last stand of hope, said Tyler Lee, 34, a real estate investor who is running for Congress as a Republican in a heavily Democratic congressional district in North Carolina. Mr. Lee had driven from Charlotte, N.C., to meet the convoy in Adelanto, Calif., in February and traveled with it ever since.

He gave Mr. Cruz credit for his visit to the convoy site. But he thought politicians should spend more time at the camp, perhaps even spend the night as he himself did.

You can get a real pulse of what is going on in America, he said.

As the speedway occupation seemed to stretch ahead indefinitely, however, Mr. Lee was eyeing the calendar. His primary, on May 17, was coming up soon.

Ive committed to these guys, he said. Still, Im taking it day by day, he said. Because I do have a campaign to run.

The rest is here:

Black adults were hospitalized at higher rates than whites during the U.S. Omicron wave. - The New York Times

What’s the status of Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates? – Los Angeles Times

February 26, 2022

More than half the states are pursuing renewed legal challenges against a requirement from the Biden administration for millions of healthcare workers across the U.S. to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

The vaccine requirement for Medicare and Medicaid providers was one of several mandates the administration imposed upon private-sector employers to try to drive up vaccination rates and slow the spread of the coronavirus.

After a Supreme Court ruling allowed it to go forward, the vaccine requirement for health workers was implemented gradually in all states. But opponents are again trying to stop it, arguing among other things that circumstances have changed as cases tied to the Omicron variant have receded.

Two of President Bidens other high-profile orders are on hold. The Supreme Court blocked a separate rule that would have required employers with more than 100 workers to be vaccinated or tested weekly for coronavirus infections. And a lower court has blocked a requirement for employees of federal contractors to be vaccinated.

Newsletter

Get our free Coronavirus Today newsletter

Sign up for the latest news, best stories and what they mean for you, plus answers to your questions.

Enter email address

Sign Me Up

You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.

Bidens various vaccine orders were challenged in court by Republican-led states, conservative groups and some businesses. The lawsuits argued in part that the mandates exceeded federal executive powers and infringed on states rights to regulate public health matters.

About 69% of the U.S. population age 5 and older is fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Heres an overview of the Biden vaccine mandates that affect the private sector and the status of the legal fights over them.

What it would do: Under a rule published Nov. 5 by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), a wide range of healthcare providers that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid funding are to require their workers to be vaccinated. The rule affects doctors, nurses, aides, technicians and even volunteers at hospitals, nursing homes, outpatient surgery centers, home health providers and other medical facilities. It allows exemptions for medical and religious reasons.

The CDC says the requirement covers 10.4 million health care workers at 76,000 facilities.

Who challenged it: The rule was challenged in several lawsuits filed by Republican-led states, mostly in groups. The states argued there were no grounds for an emergency rule, that the CMS had no clear legal authority to issue the mandate and that the rule infringed on states responsibilities.

Where it stands: The Supreme Court on Jan. 13 lifted injunctions that had been issued by lower courts prohibiting enforcement of the healthcare vaccine mandate in about half the states. The CMS subsequently implemented the mandate in several waves.

Health workers were required to have their first dose of the vaccine by Jan. 27 in jurisdictions that had not challenged the mandate in court. The first shot requirement kicked in on Feb. 14 in two dozen other states whose collective lawsuits prompted the Supreme Court decision. The requirement took effect Tuesday in Texas, which had sued separately from the other states.

Sixteen states filed a renewed challenge to the mandate on Feb. 4 in a Louisiana court. They argued that its unconstitutional to include some state government agencies in the requirement and that the mandate is not needed because vaccines have been less effective at stopping the spread of the Omicron variant. A coalition of 10 other states raised similar arguments in filing a renewed lawsuit Wednesday in federal court in Missouri.

Whats next: Guidance documents from the CMS indicate it will initially grant leniency to healthcare providers who are showing progress in vaccinating their employees. But providers that dont eventually have their full staff vaccinated or exempted ultimately could face penalties, including the loss of federal Medicare and Medicaid funding.

What it would do: Under a rule published by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration on Nov. 5, businesses with 100 or more workers were to require employees to be vaccinated. If they were not, employees were to be tested weekly and wear masks while working, with exceptions for those who work alone or mostly outdoors. The requirement would have applied to businesses with a combined 84 million employees, and OSHA projected it could save 6,500 lives and prevent 250,000 hospitalizations over six months.

Who challenged it: The requirement was challenged by 27 Republican-led state governments, some conservative and business groups, and some individual businesses. The states mostly filed lawsuits in groups. They argued that the rule exceeded the agencys powers and that it was the job of states, not the federal government, to deal with public health measures.

Where it stands: The Supreme Court on Jan. 13 blocked the vaccine rule from being enforced. It said OSHA exceeded its authority granted under federal law. The agency subsequently withdrew the rule.

Whats next: Businesses do not have to require their employees to be vaccinated as a result of federal policy, though businesses are free to impose their own requirements in some states.

What would it do: Under an executive order issued by Biden on Sept. 9, contractors and subcontractors for the federal government are required to comply with workplace safety guidelines developed by a federal task force. That task force subsequently issued guidelines requiring that new, renewed or extended contracts include a clause requiring employees to be fully vaccinated. There are limited exceptions for medical or religions reasons. The requirements could apply to millions of employees.

Who challenged it: The guidelines have been challenged in more than a dozen lawsuits, including seven brought by Republican-led states or coalitions of states. The arguments are similar to those against other vaccine mandates, asserting the Biden administration exceeded the procurement rule making powers granted by Congress, infringed on states responsibilities and didnt properly gather public comment.

Where it stands: The rule is on hold. A federal judge in Georgia issued a ruling Dec. 7 prohibiting enforcement of the requirement for contractors nationally. The nationwide injunction is in addition to rulings by other courts that blocked the requirement only in particular states that sued.

Whats next: The nationwide injunction is on appeal to the Atlanta-based U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. That court has declined a request by the federal government for expedited consideration of the case.

Continued here:

What's the status of Biden's COVID-19 vaccine mandates? - Los Angeles Times

Vaccines are the biggest story of this pandemic |Opinion – Deseret News

February 24, 2022

One by one, the political talking points about the pandemic liberals are prolonging mask mandates to exert control over people, conservatives are acting with willful indifference toward their fellow men, etc. are melting away like a spring snowstorm.

As the restrictions begin to fade, this might mean that Americans are coming to their senses. However, it probably means that the battlefields of disunity are merely shifting.

Regardless, its instructive to begin reviewing the past two years, including what has to be regarded as a genuine miracle.

But first, a clarification. Were not bold enough to declare the pandemic over.

The New York Times reports that deaths remain at an average of about 2,300 per day nationwide. But the seven-day average of new cases has fallen to about 140,000, down from 164,418 in September, and hospital workers are beginning to turn their attention to more conventional ailments again.

Utah, according to Gov. Spencer Cox, will begin treating COVID-19 like any other seasonal disease on March 31. The state will transition from an emergency posture and into a manageable risk model, he said.

Other states, including California, have dropped their mask mandates. Even in liberal San Francisco, masks are no longer required indoors.

The nation may yet see another spike due to some new variant. People will get sick and die, but for years they have gotten sick and died from influenza. With luck, this new endemic stage should feature lower case counts, continued vaccine and booster shots and perhaps the development of more effective treatments.

The worst, we hope, is over.

But if global pandemics happen only once a century, the lessons from COVID-19 may never last. Just as we viewed the influenza epidemic of 1918-20 with quaint wonder, our descendants are likely to view this generation as technologically and medically backward. Then they are likely to scream about their own constitutional rights and fight against the very medicine that could cure them.

Its human nature, apparently. It happened 100 years ago. There is little reason to believe it wont happen again.

Unless, that is, the nation becomes more unified. Unless a century from now people trust their public servants and the folks who have dedicated their lives to medicine.

And yet, we suspect people today would be surprised to read what historians write about the last two years. We believe the centerpiece of that story will have to be the lightning speed in research and production terms in which effective vaccines were produced and approved for use.

The website statnews.com has labeled it a freaking miracle. That is an apt description.

If Covid vaccines had taken as long as the mumps vaccine to develop, the world would have had to face the Delta and Omicron waves with the vast majority of people on the planet armor-less against the virus that causes Covid, said writer Helen Branswell. Instead, it took just 66 days after the SARS-2 sequence was published for scientists at the NIH to begin enrolling people in a Phase 1 clinical trial of Modernas Covid vaccine.

And despite predictable problems distributing the vaccines equitably, at least 55% of the world has now been vaccinated.

Time brings perspective. In the future, the political hyperventilations of the past two years will boil away, and the real lessons will emerge. One is that science does tend to change as new data appears. The Centers for Disease Control initially said not to wear masks, then changed, then suggested heavier masks. This wasnt sinister. It was an example of being adaptive.

Another is that governments should avoid overreacting, and they should remember to hold the free exercise of religion, a constitutionally protected right, as more important than shopping. Too many jurisdictions tried to restrict church gatherings while allowing stores to remain open.

Some court decisions saved the day in that regard, including some memorable ones from the U.S. Supreme Court.

But the greatest of all lessons concerns those vaccines. It is that human beings have the potential to conquer amazing obstacles, even to fight a virus previously unknown to the world.

Whether everyone received it, and whether some people saw it as a sinister plot, will be unimportant. For many people, it kept them from getting sick and dying, and that is a miracle, indeed.

Link:

Vaccines are the biggest story of this pandemic |Opinion - Deseret News

Page 7«..6789..»