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Prominent cutting edge doctors come to Anchorage for early-treatment summit

Dr. Robert Malone, one of the primary inventors of the mRNA vaccine technology used in the Pfizer and Modern Covid vaccines, is one of the speakers at event on Saturday that is sure to rattle the mainstream medical establishment in Alaska, and has already led to “anti-vax” insinuations by the mainstream media.

The Alaska Early Treatment Summit takes place from 8 am to 5 pm at ChangePoint Church, 6689 ChangePoint Drive in Anchorage. Although the church is not sponsoring the summit, it has rented out the facility to a group of doctors and other medical professionals who are remaining anonymous to prevent backlash from medical colleagues who are pushing the Covid-19 vaccine widely as the only defense against the virus.

“Our main goal of this event is to discuss early treatment of Covid-19. We know that if we can treat early (within the first week), we can affect the outcome of Covid with the goal of decreasing hospitalizations and deaths, regardless of vaccine status. That is our main message,” said an Anchorage doctor, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Unfortunately, the vaccine does not prevent infection or transmission of this disease and that’s why it’s not the answer to this problem.”

Dr. Malone will be joined by Dr. Richard Urso, Dr. Ryan Cole and an unannounced guest speaker with expertise on the origins of the coronavirus. That speaker’s name is kept from the media for security reasons, according to one of the organizers who spoke to Must Read Alaska on background.

Malone invented mRNA vaccine technology when he was at the Salk Institute. His research continued at Vical, a biopharmaceutical company, in 1989, where he designed the first in-vivo mammalian experiments. His work on the mRNA technology has led to over 10 patents. Malone was also an inventor of DNA vaccines in 1988 and 1989.

Dr. Urso is a Texas ophthalmologist who studied medicine at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston and went on to complete his residency in ophthalmology at the University of Texas Southwestern in Dallas. He concluded with a fellowship in oculoplastics and reconstructive surgery at the University of Texas branch at Galveston. He has served as an ophthalmologist and clinical assistant professor in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science at the University of Texas Medical School at Houston as well as Assistant professor in the Department of Head and Neck Surgery at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Urso has been involved in drug repurposing in addition to drug development and has received FDA approval for his novel wound-healing drug .

He is a member of America’s Frontline Doctors, a group that is treating patients across the country for Covid, using a combination of Ivermectin, at times hydroxychloroquine, plus other treatments involving Vitamin D, Zinc, Quercetin, and anti-inflammatories. The group of doctors has been featured on OAN, in Epoch Times, and other non-mainstream media, and the mainstream medical community and media casts the group in a poor light.

Cole, another member of America’s Frontline Doctors, is a board-certified dermatophathologist (AP & CP) and the CEO/Medical Director of Cole Diagnostics in Idaho. He has worked as an independent pathologist since 2004. He attended Ackerman Academy of Dermatopathology for his dermatopathology fellowship (chief fellow) after completing a residency in anatomic and clinical pathology with a surgical pathology fellowship at the Mayo Clinic. He has done extensive research/training in immunology.

Alaska Covid Alliance, the group sponsoring the event, is keeping local supporters’ and sponsors’ names private — these professionals have too much to lose if their colleagues decide to stop referring patients to them or if they are reported to the state medical board.

Alaska Public Media threw shade on the conference, writing, “The conference claims to have a mission of spreading information about COVID-19 treatments and patient rights, but most of the speakers are not infectious disease experts and are advocating for treatments that are not supported by research.”

“Malone now claims that the vaccines actually make the disease worse, something the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says is false. A profile in The Atlantic magazine says that Malone is careful to distance himself from the “anti-vax” label, but he has appeared alongside people who have spread vaccine misinformation,” Alaska Public Media wrote.

The public broadcasting station also noted that America’s Frontline Doctors have seen their videos “removed from some major social media sites for spreading false information about the vaccine.” And the news station writes that Urso “was investigated and cleared for prescribing hydroxychloroquine to patients to treat COVID-19,” a treatment the news station claimed is “disproven.”

Malone, Urso, and Cole have been traveling the country to speak to Americans, and are on a mission to reach people in every state. At a conference in another state, they met similarly minded medical professionals from Alaska who agreed to coordinate the upcoming Saturday summit.

Some medical professionals is concerned that the Covid-19 vaccines are “leaky,” which means that the virus can easily defeat the one mechanism the vaccine is using to protect people. Leaky vaccines can lead to breakthrough cases of an illness.

Although the doctors are not necessarily anti-vaccine, many of these dissident doctors believe that treatments for the inflammation and blood clots that are brought on by Covid are best done early, and that too little focus is given to this area of healing, while emergency rooms fill up and patients are being put on ventilators after the virus has made a stronghold in their bodies, rendering their immune systems too weak to fight.

Blowout in Midtown: Voters keep Zaletel

Early returns in the recall election in Midtown Anchorage show voters are choosing to retain Assemblywoman Meg Zaletel by a margin of 61.2% to 38.8%.

Ballots will continue to come in for several days in this mail-in only election; the deadline was 8 pm on Tuesday, but it’s unlikely the results will be reversed with such a large margin.

9,320 votes were counted Tuesday night out of the approximately 36,000 ballots that were mailed to voters in the Midtown district — and across the country. 5,702 votes were counted to retain Zaletel, while 3,618 voters want her gone. Sources say that at least another 4,000 ballots may come in.

Zaletel is the second Assembly member from midtown to survive a recall election in seven months. Felix Rivera faced a recall election in April during the regular municipal election, and survived it 56.5% to 43.5%.

Zaletel’s defense received enormous financial support from a New York union fund called UNITE HERE, which provided $70,000 to a local independent expenditure group called Stand Up for Meg Zaletel. That group was led by AFL-CIO President Joelle Hall. Another group led by Zaletel herself had raised about $60,000 to defend the assemblywoman, for a total of more than $130,000.

That historic spending to retain a member of the Assembly worked for her. The group that launched the recall had local donations, including a $75,000 contribution from Mark McKenna, of McKenna Brothers Paving in Anchorage and $15,000 from James Protzman, of Pacific Properties of Anchorage.

The challenge for those mounting recall elections in Anchorage is clear — getting signatures on a petition is one thing, but getting a win is of an entirely different order. Even an assemblywoman who rarely shows up to in-person meetings, who authored a punishing mask ordinance with draconian penalties (amended out by others in the final version), and who consistently votes to shut down the public process was able to survive being recalled.

The District 4 area of Anchorage stretches from the Rogers Park neighborhood south to Abbott Road, west to C Street, with parts of Spenard. That portion of Anchorage also majority voted for President Joe Biden in last year’s presidential election.

The group trying to boot Zaletel from the Assembly was comprised of those who were angry with the Assembly for using CARES Act funds to build out a homeless network of housing and drug abuse services. It was a plan that Zaletel had her fingerprints on with former Mayor Ethan Berkowitz, who left office early one year ago on Oct. 23, after scandalous allegations.

The homeless plan never came to fruition, although the Assembly approved purchasing the Golden Lion hotel using proceeds from the sale of Municipal Light and Power to Chugach Electric, with some members of the public saw as a misuse of the funds from the sale.

Railroad board rescinds its vaccine mandate, for now at least

Must Read Alaska has learned that the board of the Alaska Railroad Corporation has met and has rescinded its decision to mandate Covid-19 vaccines for all its employees.

The railroad’s CEO Bill O’Leary sent a letter to employees last Friday, giving everyone a deadline of Dec. 8 to be vaccinated. About half of the employees are already fully vaccinated, and some employees began to talk about striking as a result of the mandate.

The board said the mandate was the result of President Joe Biden’s September executive orders requiring all federal workers, federal contractors and businesses with more than 100 employees to be fully vaccinated for Covid-19. The Alaska Railroad has numerous federal contracts, but the question remains whether the federal government will take a draconian action against the railroad and the Alaskans and military community it serves.

An official announcement is expected.

Bert Cottle jumps back into race for Mat-Su Borough mayor

Bert Cottle has made it a three-way again. After dropping out of the election for Mat-Su Borough mayor due to health issues involving chemotherapy, three weeks later Cottle has said he’s back in.

“That’s right, I’m still in the race for Mat Su Borough Mayor. Initially I tried to withdraw from the race after finding out I was going to have to go through chemo therapy. This would make it difficult to campaign, attend community council meetings and candidate debates. But the withdrawal time had already passed, so my name remains on the ballot. Since that time, I have responded well to my chemo treatments, and I have had many calls and messages from residents asking me to stay in the race. So I have made the decision to actively get back in this race and give it 100 percent. Although I’m feeling positive about my ability to be effective as mayor, if for any reason in the future I would have to resign from office, a special election would take place. This would open up the opportunity for a whole new list of candidates and more choices for borough residents. If you still believe in a bright future for the Borough and feel I am the one to help get us there, I ask for your vote on November 2nd,” Cottle wrote on Facebook.

Cottle is the former mayor of Wasilla. Other candidates for borough mayor are Edna DeVries, currently the mayor of Palmer and Matthew Beck, formerly on the borough Assembly.

Juneau voters mailed their ballots in, but 339 of them will not be counted because there is no post office cancellation on them

The voters in Juneau cast their ballots in September and October for the Oct. 5 municipal election.

But for 339 Juneau voters, their votes arrived, but did not get counted. That is because when they were delivered to the counting office in Anchorage — the same one run by the Anchorage Municipal Clerk and used for Anchorage elections — there was no U.S. Post Office cancellation on them. There was no way to determine when those ballots had been mailed.

8,517 Juneau voters — 30 percent of the registered voters of the Capital City — took part in the election process. With 339 ballots not counted, that is nearly 4 percent of the Juneau electorate who missed the opportunity to have their votes counted.

The Juneau City Assembly earlier this year decided that all-mail-in elections are the way of the future, just like they do in Anchorage.

In fact, the Assembly contracted with the Municipal Clerk’s Office in Anchorage to manage the Borough’s election, while plans are underway to spend $700,000 on a warehouse remodel in Juneau to serve as the Election Center, just as Anchorage has done with its Election office at a warehouse at 619 Ship Creek Avenue.

The Juneau election was certified last week. None of the contested races would have been decided by those 339 uncounted votes. But the problem of 4 percent of voters being disenfranchised by the U.S. Post Office is disconcerting to conservatives in Juneau. Assemblyman Wade Bryson raised the issue on the “Problem Corner” radio show on KINY and said that he thinks there is a problem, but no one else on the Assembly seems to agree.

Breaking: FDA panel says it approves giving Covid vaccines to kids ages 5-11

The Food and Drug Administration advisory panel voted unanimously on Tuesday in favor of the FDA fully authorizing Pfizer and BioNTech Covid-19 vaccines for children ages 5-11. One member of the panel abstained.

This is not final approval from the FDA or Centers for Disease Control. That typically comes after the panel gives its advisory opinion. This is the same approval process that the agencies went through to approve a version of the Pfizer experimental vaccine.

Director of the CDC Dr. Rochelle Walensky has the final approval authority, but has indicated she is prepared to issue it immediately, which may be as early as the first week in November.

“The administration is working on the operations and logistics. So, as soon as we have both the FDA authorization and the CDC recommendations, there will be vaccine out there so children can start rolling up their sleeves,” Walensky said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

The CDC released a study showing that 42 percent of young children in one study already have antibodies to the virus. But the CDC appears to believe the children should be vaccinated anyway.

RV is back at Election Central in Anchorage to keep an eye out for election fraud

For most of Alaska, Tuesday is not Election Day. But for Midtown Anchorage, there’s an election going on that ends at 8 pm on Oct. 26.

Voters are deciding whether to recall one of the “notorious nine” on the Anchorage Assembly: Meg Zaletel, who represents an area from Rogers Park to Abbott Road, over to C Street and north to portions of Spenard. The race is said to be razor-close.

Meg Zaletel

District 4 Assemblywoman Zaletel became cross-threaded with conservative voters when she helped manipulate CARES Act funds to purchase the Golden Lion Hotel as a home for drug users. Ostensibly, it was to be used for a drug and alcohol treatment center and was part of former Mayor Ethan Berkowitz’ homeless industrial complex plan, a spendy plan that involved purchasing numerous properties around town for ill-defined purposes. Mayor Bronson has instead used the hotel as a center to dispense monoclonal antibodies to those who catch Covid.

As in May, conservatives are not taking chances with this election. The Anchorage City Clerk has shown that she’ll do what she can to back Zaletel, as she did when she fought the recall petition over a year ago through the courts — unsuccessfully.

The Recall Zaletel campaigners have brought in a recreational vehicle to use as an observation station in the parking lot of the Anchorage Election office at 619 Ship Creek Avenue, in order to keep an eye on the Clerk’s Office during the final receipt and counting of the ballots.

During the mayoral election, there were numerous documented irregularities and activities around the building, including people coming into the unsecured building late at night and an unexplained malfunctioning of the fire alarm that sent everyone scurrying out of the building. That happened shortly after Assemblyman Chris Constant signed out, but no other link to him has ever been established. He was a visitor on behalf of the Forrest Dunbar for Mayor campaign, which failed in the May runoff.

The Bronson for Mayor campaign brought in Dave Bronson’s recreational vehicle to use as the command center for the campaign’s effort to monitor the counting of ballots.

The Recall Zaletel campaigners say they are protecting the integrity of the election and ensuring manipulation doesn’t occur.

But this is sure to irritate Municipal Clerk Barbara Jones, who along with the Assembly, is planning to pass an ordinance this year that blocks the public from being able to see what is going on at Election Central. The Clerk works for the Assembly, not the mayor, and she took issue with the observers from the Bronson campaign during the April-May election.

The Recall campaign has four observers on the inside of the facility as of this writing, and there is nothing out of the ordinary going on, they have reported. Voters in the district have until 8 pm to drop their ballots in area drop boxes, or get their ballots hand-postmarked at the Airport Post Office before 11 pm, to ensure it is counted.

It’s important that your signature on the envelope match closely your signature on your driver’s license, as the Clerk has sent reject notifications to those whose signatures don’t match closely enough.

8,669 ballots have been returned out of 36,000 sent out in the district. During the last cycle for the April election, about 10,000 were turned in from Midtown.

Federal workers file lawsuit over Biden vaccine mandate, citing ‘evolving science,’ worker rights, and existing law

A group of federal workers from several states have sued the Biden Administration over President Joe Biden’s Covid-19 vaccine mandates for federal workers and federal contractors.

The Federal Practice Group, a Washington, D.C. law firm, filed the complaint against President Joe Biden and numerous members of his cabinet on Oct. 19.

Biden issued Executive Orders 14042 and 14043 on Sept. 9, demanding federal employees and contractors provide proof of having been vaccinated with an “unlicensed Covid-19 vaccine,” or they would face consequences in their jobs.

The lawsuit distinguishes between the vaccine that has been approved — Comirnaty — and the vaccine that is actually being used in the United States. The FDA considers them interchangeable, while others, including the plaintiffs, do not.

“On August 23, 2021, the FDA licensed a COVID-19 vaccine originally developed by BioNTech Manufacturing GmbH, a German company, to be jointly manufactured with Pfizer. The companies were authorized to market the vaccine under the name ‘COMIRNATY.’ Although co-manufactured by Pfizer, COMIRNATY is legally distinct from the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine that was, and is, available in the United States; the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19, which is the only Pfizer vaccine available in the United States, remains under emergency use authorization,” the lawsuit says.

“In rushing to force COVID-19 vaccinations on the federal workforce, the President’s edicts violate longstanding statutory prohibitions against inoculations with unlicensed vaccines, as well as the individual rights of government employees and contractors under the Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act,” the lawsuit says. “Accordingly, plaintiffs who are representative of nearly every Federal Agency respectfully request relief from this Court in the form of injunctive relief stopping this illegal and unnecessarily broad and wide-ranging program.”

The majority of the 50 federal workers who are plaintiffs work at the Department of Homeland Security. Others work at the Departments of Defense, State, Energy, Commerce, Agriculture, U.S.A.I.D., and other federal agencies.

Their lawsuit points out that vaccine mandate violates federal workers’ rights because it’s a blanket termination penalty for those who don’t comply, rather than allowing for an individual review of each employee’s case and required legal accommodations. It also is unlawful for a federal employer to demand the details of employees’ medical history.

The lawsuit says the firing of those who have a disease, like Covid-19, is prohibited by federal law because it is in the category of a disability. The lawsuit says that many employees have indeed been infected with Covid-19, have recovered, and have some level of natural immunity, citing a study from the Cleveland Clinic, which found that individuals previously infected with Covid-19 did not suffer reinfection, and that “ultimately, Individuals who have had SARS-CoV-2 infection are unlikely to benefit from COVID-19 vaccination.”

“Both the Rehabilitation Act and the ADA preclude employers from discriminating against federal employees and federal government contractors on the basis of an actual or perceived disability. The Acts further preclude employers from conducting disability-related inquiries of employees that are not shown to be job-related and consistent with business necessity. 29 C.F.R. § 1630.14(c). An inquiry is determined to be job related and consistent with  business necessity when the employer has a reasonable belief, based on objective evidence that employee will pose a direct threat due to a medical condition,” the complaint says.

“The determination that an employee poses a direct threat must be based on an individualized assessment of the employee’s present ability to safely perform the essential functions of the  job,” it continues.

The lawsuit says that Biden’s order violates the” informed consent” regulations of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.

Plaintiffs further explain that the federal Safer Federal Workforce Task Force has set a deadline of Nov. 22, for all to comply with the vaccine mandate. Employees who are on maximum telework or working remotely are not excused from this requirement. All federal employees, regardless if they have previously contracted Covid-19, are required to receive the vaccination or they will be considered “in violation of a lawful order,” and subject to discipline or termination.

But the task force permits agencies to initiate the enforcement process as soon as Nov. 9, 2021, for employees who fail to submit documentation to show that they have completed receiving required vaccination dose(s) by Nov. 8.

While the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force said that employees are permitted to request exceptions, it provides nothing further outside of an admonishment that, “All agency personnel designated to receive requests for accommodations should know how to handle requests consistent with the Federal employment nondiscrimination laws that may apply. If the employee’s request for an exception is denied, and the employee does not comply with the vaccination requirement, the agency may pursue disciplinary action, up to and including removal from Federal service,” the task force states.

The federal lawsuit also points to the evolving science of Covid.

“At the time the Executive Orders were issued, it was presumed that the unvaccinated, not the vaccinated, were the sole source of COVID-19 spread. Recent studies suggest otherwise. On September 29, 2021, a preliminary report from a study conducted by the Genome Center, University of California, Davis, stated that a review of both vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals resulted in the following:

“A total of 869 samples, 500 from HYT and 369 from UeS, were included in the analysis. All analyzed samples from HYT were asymptomatic at the time of collection and 75% of the positive samples were from unvaccinated individuals (N=375). Positive samples from UeS were from both symptomatic (N=237) and asymptomatic individuals (N=132). The frequency of vaccine breakthroughs among the UeS samples (171 fully vaccinated, 198 unvaccinated) was greater than among the HYT samples reflecting the different types of populations sampled. The Delta variant was the predominant variant detected in both  populations (Supplementary Table 1).

“There were no statistically significant differences in mean [cycle threshold] Ct-values of vaccinated (UeS: 23.1; HYT: 25.5) vs. unvaccinated (UeS: 23.4; HYT: 25.4) samples. In both vaccinated and unvaccinated, there was great variation among individuals, with Ct-values of 30 in both UeS and HYT data (Fig. 1A, 1B). Similarly, no statistically significant differences were found in the mean Ct-values of asymptomatic (UeS: 24.3; HYT: 25.4) vs. symptomatic (UeS: 22.7) samples, overall or stratified by vaccine status (Fig. 1B). Similar Ct-values were also found among different age groups, between genders, and vaccine types (Supplemental Figure 1).

“In all groups, there were individuals with low Ct-values indicative of high viral loads. A total of 69 fully vaccinated individuals had Ct-values <20. Of these, 24 were asymptomatic at the time of testing.

The study went on to say that “A substantial proportion of asymptomatic, fully vaccinated individuals in our study had low Ct-values, indicative of high viral loads. Given that low Ct-values are indicative of high levels of virus, culture positivity, and increased transmission [11], our detection of low Ct-values in asymptomatic, fully vaccinated individuals is consistent with the potential for transmission from  breakthrough infections prior to any emergence of symptoms.”

The plaintiffs say this is consistent with other studies now coming to light from Massachusetts and Singapore. It also points to credible studies showing the benefit of natural immunity.

Read the lawsuit:

Alex Gimarc: Murkowski-style feminism is a negative lifestyle choice for Alaska

By ALEX GIMARC

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski styles herself as a champion of feminism. 

Since she has been in the U.S. Senate, her default position has been to support women, any woman, when the public relations battle orchestrated by Democrats, the media, and like-minded groups pit women against anything else.

The most obvious example of this was her feigned shock, horror and dismay at the NBC-Billy Bush tape released in October, 2016, which was intended as a kill shot to take Donald Trump out of the presidential race.  

Lisa was shocked — simply shocked — at Trump, and demanded he withdraw as the Republican presidential nominee at the last minute, which would have conveniently elected a woman, Hillary Clinton as president. Happily, he didn’t.

But Lisa has championed feminist goals in other things, most notably judicial nominations. President Barack Obama’s nomination of Sharon Gleason to the federal bench for the U.S. District Court of Alaska is a relevant example.  

Gleason was celebrated as the first Alaskan female on the federal bench.  It’s too bad she decided to use her power as a federal judge to make law from the bench and shut down the Willow project on the North Slope this past summer.

Lisa also supported the nomination of Deb Haaland, as Secretary of the Interior. The rationale?  She was both a Native American and a woman.  

A lot of Alaska Native women supported the nomination because she was both a woman and a Native American.  Apparently, no consideration was given to what she actually believes, which is an anti-oil, anti-natural gas. She’s a “green energy” fanatic.

This leaves us with last week’s festive event, where, with Judge Gleason having agreed with the environmentalist whackos to shutdown down ConocoPhillips’ Willow project pending completion of yet another round of more useless environmentalist paperwork, Haaland’s Department of the Interior “accidentally” missed the window to appeal the opinion.

Great. Two women — Gleason and Haaland — collude to remove a couple hundred thousand barrels a day from the Trans Alaska Pipeline System, while the woman who proudly put them into office simply because they are women is silent. Worse, she is neutered, unable and unwilling to say or do anything.  

Now, I love the ladies as much as any other guy, but I never in my life voted for anyone because of the genitalia they were carrying.  Apparently, that is the critical consideration today, and the first among many considerations for our senior U.S. senator.  

Because of this, Murkowski now owns the Willow cancellation, and the 160,000 lost barrels a day through TAPS.

Murkowski is up for reelection next year. Perhaps she ought to explain how and why in her world genitalia is more important than jobs and an economic future for Alaskans. I don’t think she can or will. And I also don’t think she can or will do anything about Willow.  

Perhaps it is time that Alaska is represented by a U.S. senator governed by something other than the importance of body parts. Perhaps it is time that Alaska is represented by someone, anyone, who chooses to represent all Alaskans, rather than the half of the population of the state with the correct plumbing.  

Alex Gimarc lives in Anchorage since retiring from the military in 1997. His interests include science and technology, environment, energy, economics, military affairs, fishing and disabilities policies. His weekly column “Interesting Items” is a summary of news stories with substantive Alaska-themed topics. He was a small business owner and Information Technology professional.