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School Starts

For many kids around the country, summer break is over. School starts back up this week.

I remember several of my high school teachers vividly – and for very different reasons. Mr. Lewis was an educator who helped inspire countless students during his tenure at Azusa High School. When he spoke at our graduation ceremony, he said “Whatever you set your mind to, let me just tell you this – do it.”

Mr. Lewis was an educator who helped inspire countless students during his tenure at Azusa High School.

I also remember some teachers who used their platform not to inspire but to propagandize. One of my biology teachers liked to yell at the top of his lungs while teaching. Once, he started yelling about evolution and went on a rant on how “stupid” some parents were for believing in God while praising his atheist-raised children every time he had a chance. He often injected politics and his personal beliefs into the classroom instead of teaching by the book.

According to the research we’ve done, most Americans agree that teachers should educate, not indoctrinate. More than 77 percent of parents aged 40 or younger believe school districts should take politics out of the classroom and instead focus on teaching the fundamentals of reading, writing, arithmetic, and a non-partisan approach to civics and history.

Teachers should remember that, as the saying goes, “With great power comes great responsibility.” Don’t get me wrong – I think educators should inspire their students. But common sense tells us that public education should teach students how to think, not what to think.

Thank you,

Gabriel Nadales

Our America’s National Director – Western Region

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Newest Threat tp Medical Emergency–Monkeypox “Emergency”

The World Health Organization declaration of Monkeypox as a “Public Health Emergency of International Concern” (PHEIC), was made by one man, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who has no medical training, over the objection of the majority of his own expert committee of medical and scientific advisors. Nine of the committee members thought a PHEIC should not be declared and six supported a declaration. “Nine and six is very, very close. Since the role of the committee is to advise, I decided to act as a tie-breaker,” Tedros said in a news conference called to announce the decision.” WHO confirms 98 percent of (Monkeypox) cases are among men who have sex with men—and primarily those who have multiple recent anonymous or new partners.

Monkey pox has been known in Africa since 1958, primarily as a disease of ground squirrels. It can spread to monkeys and humans with close contact and poor hygiene, but very few cases have been reported outside Africa before now.

Monkey pox is far less contagious than smallpox, influenza, or COVID, and is much milder than smallpox and unlikely to be lethal. You catch monkeypox from contact with bodily fluids such as saliva or semen, as well as skin lesion, either directly or from soiled linens or clothing.

Symptoms include fever, headaches, and lymph node swelling followed by an eruption of pus-filled blisters. The skin lesions can resemble those of shingles, chickenpox, or syphilis. The rash tends to start on the face and has the unusual feature that blisters can form on the palms of the hands.

The first cases were associated with two large European “raves.” The Canary Island event occurred—just coincidentally—on the same date as a hypothetical bioterror attack modeled in an Event 201-style wargame exercise about release of an engineered monkeypox virus, “a pathogen engineered in a laboratory with inadequate biosafety and biosecurity provisions and weak oversight.”

A whole series of pandemic simulations have been run by globalists since 2000. Is the purpose to protect public health? Or to increase the globalists’ power, and destroy individual medical freedom and national sovereignty?

Hint: consider the response to monkeypox. A public health response would shut down venues for anonymous sex for three weeks, and blast out warnings to abstain from promiscuous sex. And try traditional contact tracing. But a physician writing about his painful 14 days in isolation said nothing about contact tracing—unlike with COVID, no cellphone apps for monkeypox, lest it be stigmatizing! Just wait for a vaccine!

Americans must learn from the COVID debacle: take sensible precautions, but don’t fall for the fear porn and do not surrender your rights, especially not to WHO.

Elizabeth Lee Viliet, M.D.

President and CEO of Truth for Health Foundation

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