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'Everyone who can be vaccinated, should be vaccinated': Macron warns pandemic will remain as Delta makes situation 'delicate'

pass sanitaire covid france
© REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
The French president has called on all people to get jabbed as he spoke of his concern about the trajectory of the Covid-19 pandemic in France as the increasing prevalence of the Delta variant drives up hospitalizations.

Speaking on Wednesday at the opening of the Health Defense Council, French President Emmanuel Macron reiterated his aim that all French people who can get the vaccine, elect to do so.

The president's call came amid what he described as a "more than delicate health situation" in France, largely due to the increasing prevalence of the Delta variant.

Comment: See also:


Red Flag

Virginia teacher resigns at school board meeting, denounces 'highly politicized agendas'

critical race theory
© REUTERS / Evelyn Hockstein
A Loudoun County Public Schools (LCPS) teacher in Virginia resigned in front of the school board Tuesday, stating in a defiant and emotional speech that she refused to continue pushing their "highly politicized agendas."

"Within the last year, I was in one of my so-called equity trainings that White, Christian, able-bodied females currently have the power in our schools and 'this has to change,'" teacher Laura Morris said during the public comment period of the board meeting.

"Clearly, you've made your point. You no longer value me or many other teachers you've employed in this county. So since my contract outlines the power that you have over my employment in Loudoun County Public Schools, I thought it necessary to resign in front of you."

"School board, I quit," she said. Choking up, she added: "I quit your policies, I quit your training, and I quit being a cog in a machine that tells me to push highly politicized agendas to our most vulnerable constituents - children."

Briefcase

Federal judge blocks Biden mandate requiring hospitals to provide gender transition surgeries

gavel
© Kuzma/iStock/Getty Images Plus
A federal judge has blocked the Biden administration from enforcing a mandate on several religious organizations that would have required them to perform gender transition surgeries or abortions.

Judge Reed O'Connor of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas permanently blocked the Biden administration from applying the mandate to all plaintiffs in the case. Those plaintiffs include the Franciscan Alliance, a Catholic hospital system that operates twelve hospitals in Indiana and Illinois, in addition to numerous other health facilities in those states.

The administration may not enforce the mandate on plaintiffs "in a manner that would require them to perform or provide insurance coverage for gender-transition procedures or abortions," O'Connor wrote in his ruling.

Chess

Wisconsin governor vetoes GOP voting bills and tells counties to ignore subpoenas from GOP audits

tony evers
© AP Photo/Morry Gash, File
Wisconsin's Democratic Gov. Tony Evers vetoed a series of six election security bills Tuesday sent to his desk by the state's GOP-controlled legislature.

Republicans do not have the votes to override Evers' veto, as no Democrats supported the legislation in June.

The governor also said that two Wisconsin counties should not comply with subpoenas to turn over ballots and voting equipment as part of an investigation being led by the Republican head of the Assembly elections committee.

'Hell no,' Evers said when asked if the local election clerks should comply. 'You´ve seen what´s going on in Arizona. It´s a clown show.'

Arizona's partisan election audit has been full of embarrassing revelations, the suspension of the audit's account and one of its early supporters describing the process as botched.

Question

Stephen Colbert grills Brian Stelter on CNN's Chris Cuomo scandal, calls out network's 'odd conflict of rules'

brian stelter Stephen Colbert
© CBS
CNN's Brian Stelter appeared on Stephen Colbert's 'The Late Show'
The Late Show host pressed Stelter about the 'boundaries' CNN set for the Cuomo brothers

The Late Show
host Stephen Colbert held CNN's left-wing media guru Brian Stelter's feet to the fire on Tuesday night over his network's "odd conflict of rules" regarding its star anchor Chris Cuomo following the stunning resignation of Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

"In a small way, your network is involved in this story because, of course, the governor's brother Chris Cuomo has his show," Colbert began the exchange before pointing to the New York Times' recent reporting about the CNN star advising the governor to resign. "How does that create any conflict over at CNN behind closed doors? Are people mad at him? Or is he in trouble?"

Comment: Why the pile-on now, when all of Cuomo's atrocious behavior has been on display for years? Is the spectacle of an impeachment over sexual harassment meant to distract from his murderous Covid nursing home policies? Is the choice of resignation a lesser evil for Cuomo personally than some unspecified consequence?

Panelists on Fox News' The Five weigh in:




Mr. Potato

Not inclusive enough: Cancel mob goes after Barbie for excluding Asian doll from Tokyo Olympics collection

olympics barbie
© Mattel
Mattel, the manufacturing company behind the iconic toy Barbie, is facing fire from the social media-driven cancel mob purportedly for not including an Asian Barbie doll in its new line of dolls commemorating the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

Mattel collaborated with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and Tokyo 2020 organizers to release the new collection, according to a report by CNN.

"#Barbie is committed to empowering girls to participate in sports by capturing the fun and friendship of the season, and inspiring kids to find the athlete within," Barbie tweeted, showing off its five new "#tokyo2020" dolls, none of which appear to be Asian.


Attention

Governor Kate Brown signs bill ending requirement for reading and math proficiency to graduate high school in Oregon

kate brown oregon governor
© YouTube
Oregon Governor Kate Brown
She doesn't want to talk about it.

For the next five years, an Oregon high school diploma will be no guarantee that the student who earned it can read, write or do math at a high school level.

Gov. Kate Brown had demurred earlier this summer regarding whether she supported the plan passed by the Legislature to drop the requirement that students demonstrate they have achieved those essential skills. But on July 14, the governor signed Senate Bill 744 into law.

Through a spokesperson, the governor declined again Friday to comment on the law and why she supported suspending the proficiency requirements.

Comment: Speechless . . . .


TV

Rand Paul suspended from Youtube for seven days after allegedly violating COVID-19 'misinformation' rules

rand paul
© Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul was suspended from YouTube for seven days after posting a video arguing that "cloth masks" are not effective against the coronavirus, Forbes reported Tuesday.

Paul's suspension began Monday, almost a week after he posted a video in which he claimed that "cloth masks don't work" and most store-bought masks "don't prevent infection," according to Forbes. The video has since been taken down. YouTube stated that it violated the site's COVID-19 misinformation rules, which prohibit users from arguing that masks don't work, Forbes reported.

"I think this kind of censorship is very dangerous, incredibly anti-free speech, and truly anti-progress of science, which involves skepticism and argumentation to arrive at the truth," Paul said Tuesday in a press release, according to Forbes.

Comment: The censorship by Big Tech, at this point, has wandered into the realm of the absurd. Not only is Rand Paul a sitting senator, but he was presenting information from peer-reviewed scientific studies. That he would be censored by a silicon valley company would be flabbergasting, if it weren't par for the course.

See also:


Attention

Fulton County GA caught in another lie - claim only 5,000 absentee ballots were adjudicated in the 2020 election - previously claimed over 100,000

vote by mail ballot
Yesterday John Solomon at Just the News reported that Fulton County claims they only processed 5,000 adjudicated absentee ballots after the 2020 Election. Curiously, this doesn't agree with the numbers reported by the County after the Election.

Just the News reported yesterday that 5,000 absentee ballots were adjudicated after the 2020 Election in Fulton County.
Welcome to the arcane process known as adjudication, where human judgment is substituted for machine scanning in cases where voters incorrectly filled out a paper ballot. Election officials and official observers have dealt with it for years, with everyday citizens mostly oblivious to the process.

But in 2020, adjudication played a much larger role in states like Georgia, which allowed hundreds of thousands of additional citizens to vote absentee for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In all, more than 5,000 of the 148,000 absentee ballots cast — or about 3% — in Georgia's largest county required some form of human intervention, according to logs obtained from Fulton County by Just the News under an open records act request.

Comment: See also:


Briefcase

Class action lawsuit finds Brown University failed to protect women from sexual misconduct

brown university protest
Brown University has systematically and repeatedly failed to protect women from rape and other sexual misconduct, according to a federal class action lawsuit filed recently by four current and former female students.

The suit, which was filed last Friday in Providence federal court, alleges the Ivy League school in Rhode Island actively prevented the reporting of incidents of sexual violence and perpetuated a culture of silence on campus.

One of the women said she was advised against making a formal complaint after being sexually assaulted at a party hosted by rugby team members because it happened off-campus, where officials said it would be more difficult to hold someone accountable.

Another said the university found her alleged assailant responsible for her sexual assault, but then named him a speaker at the school's commencement ceremony while he was appealing the case. The woman said the university overturned his assault finding and sanctioned her after she went public with her concerns about his role in commencement. The male student ultimately didn't speak at graduation.