The People’s Medical Freedom Rally on 8/9

In NYC, there will be a rally on Monday, August 9th at 12:00 pm against the new restrictions involving immunization.
The Delta variant is causing rates to rise in some states and overseas.

A 16-year-old in Florida died from the Coronavirus this week. (See video)

While people are in the hospital dying from Covid-19, they are asking for the vaccine. They can’t get it then. (See story) A man in Virgina has been in the hospital for a week, gave his family Covid and wishes he got the vaccine. (See here)
If you remember the start of the coronavirus, NYC didn’t act fast enough and people died. Now at least they are doing something. Many people feel that this move is infringing on their rights.
People are upset that their jobs are requiring them to be receive the jab. Will it get to the point that people will lose their jobs over not getting vaccinated, even though the FDA hasn’t approved these vaccines yet?
Truth: Most positions that are requiring proof of vaccination will alternatively allow people to get a Covid test each week instead.
Some people are upset that that they won’t be able to go to a restaurant without showing the ID that they received a vaccination.
Truth: You will still be able to eat outside without showing an ID.
Glen who is the Brooklyn Tea Party President is upset that vaccinations are becoming mandatory and he feels that people’s rights are being taken away.
Here him speak about it here:
NYC Restaurants, Gyms and other organizations are not happy because they will need to check the Vaccination record against the ID for patrons. This is time consuming, make create some hostile customers and I imagine people will figure out a way to create a fake record.
Will the rally be made up of all anti-vaccine Republicans? I don’t think so – I think there are people who legitimately are scared of this vaccine or who have had problems taking vaccines.
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Hugs,
marlene
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August 9th, 2021 at 7:30 pm
A little history. The Vaccine Revolt
The so-called Vaccine Uprising took place from November 10-16, 1904 in the city of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil .
The beginning of the republican period in Brazil was marked by several popular conflicts and revolts. The reason that triggered this was the mandatory vaccination campaign, imposed by the federal government, against smallpox.The Vaccine Revolt
The so-called Vaccine Uprising took place from November 10-16, 1904 in the city of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil .
The beginning of the republican period in Brazil was marked by several popular conflicts and revolts. The reason that triggered this was the mandatory vaccination campaign, imposed by the federal government, against smallpox.
The popular revolt!
“Shooting, shouting, traffic jams, closed commerce, public transportation robbed and burned, lamps broken with stones, destruction of facades of public and private buildings, downed trees: the people of Rio de Janeiro revolt against the project of mandatory vaccination proposed by the sanitarian Oswaldo Cruz” (Gazeta de NotÃcias, November 14, 1904).
The compulsory vaccination campaign was put into practice in November 1904. Although its objective was positive, it was applied in an authoritarian and violent way. In some cases, health agents invaded houses and vaccinated people by force, provoking revolt in the people. This refusal to be vaccinated happened because most people did not know what a vaccine was and were afraid of its effects.
The popular resistance, almost a military coup, had the support of positivists and the cadets from the Military School. The events, which began on November 10, 1904, with a student demonstration, grew considerably on November 12, when the march of demonstrators headed for the Catete Palace, seat of the Federal Government. The population was alarmed. On Sunday the 13th, downtown Rio de Janeiro became a battlefield: it was the popular rejection of the smallpox vaccine that became known as the Vaccine Uprising, but it went much further than that.
To eradicate smallpox, the sanitarian Oswaldo Cruz convinced Congress to pass the Compulsory Vaccine Law (October 31, 1904), which allowed sanitary brigades, accompanied by police officers, to enter homes to apply the vaccine by force.
The population was confused and discontented. The city seemed in ruins, many lost their homes, and many had their homes invaded by mosquito killers, who were accompanied by policemen. Opposition newspapers criticized the government’s action and spoke of supposed dangers caused by the vaccine. Furthermore, the rumor that the vaccine would have to be applied to the “intimate parts” of the body (women would have to undress in front of the vaccinators) aggravated the anger of the population, who rebelled.
The approval of the Vaccine Law was the spark for the revolt: on November 5, the opposition created the League against the Compulsory Vaccine. Between November 10 and 16, the city became a battlefield. The excited population deprived stores, turned over and set fire to trams, built barricades, tore up rails, broke poles and attacked the police forces with stones, sticks and pieces of iron. On the 14th, the cadets from the Military School of Praia Vermelha also rose up against the measures taken by the Federal Government.
The popular reaction led the government to suspend the vaccine requirement and declare a state of siege (November 16). The rebellion was contained, leaving 30 dead and 110 wounded. Hundreds of people were arrested and many deported to Acre
The popular revolt!
“Shooting, shouting, traffic jams, closed commerce, public transportation robbed and burned, lamps broken with stones, destruction of facades of public and private buildings, downed trees: the people of Rio de Janeiro revolt against the project of mandatory vaccination proposed by the sanitarian Oswaldo Cruz” (Gazeta de NotÃcias, November 14, 1904).
The compulsory vaccination campaign was put into practice in November 1904. Although its objective was positive, it was applied in an authoritarian and violent way. In some cases, health agents invaded houses and vaccinated people by force, provoking revolt in the people. This refusal to be vaccinated happened because most people did not know what a vaccine was and were afraid of its effects.
The popular resistance, almost a military coup, had the support of positivists and the cadets from the Military School. The events, which began on November 10, 1904, with a student demonstration, grew considerably on November 12, when the march of demonstrators headed for the Catete Palace, seat of the Federal Government. The population was alarmed. On Sunday the 13th, downtown Rio de Janeiro became a battlefield: it was the popular rejection of the smallpox vaccine that became known as the Vaccine Uprising, but it went much further than that.
To eradicate smallpox, the sanitarian Oswaldo Cruz convinced Congress to pass the Compulsory Vaccine Law (October 31, 1904), which allowed sanitary brigades, accompanied by police officers, to enter homes to apply the vaccine by force.
The population was confused and discontented. The city seemed in ruins, many lost their homes, and many had their homes invaded by mosquito killers, who were accompanied by policemen. Opposition newspapers criticized the government’s action and spoke of supposed dangers caused by the vaccine. Furthermore, the rumor that the vaccine would have to be applied to the “intimate parts” of the body (women would have to undress in front of the vaccinators) aggravated the anger of the population, who rebelled.
The approval of the Vaccine Law was the spark for the revolt: on November 5, the opposition created the League against the Compulsory Vaccine. Between November 10 and 16, the city became a battlefield. The excited population deprived stores, turned over and set fire to trams, built barricades, tore up rails, broke poles and attacked the police forces with stones, sticks and pieces of iron. On the 14th, the cadets from the Military School of Praia Vermelha also rose up against the measures taken by the Federal Government.
The popular reaction led the government to suspend the vaccine requirement and declare a state of siege (November 16). The rebellion was contained, leaving 30 dead and 110 wounded. Hundreds of people were arrested and many deported to Acre