Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Home Blog Page 540

Linda Boyle: Latest Covid ‘vaccine’ is here, but is Emergency Use Authorization still valid?

By LINDA BOYLE

The Centers for Disease Control has recommended another jab for anyone over the age of 6 months. CDC no longer wants to call it a “booster,” as it thinks that has a negative connotation. So instead, CDC describes it as your yearly Covid “vaccine.” It’s a matter of semantics.  

The Food and Drug Administration authorized and approved the new mRNA vaccine for use in adults and children aged 6 months and older. 

This new shot targets the XBB.1.5 Omicron subvariant, which currently makes up only 3% of cases in the United States. In fact, by the time this jab is put into arms, that variant will most likely no longer be active. 

Why would anyone take a vaccine that is only effective on 3% of the current virus variant? 

Why would one risk the side-effects of the vaccine?

And sadly, there are little data available on how “safe” this shot is. 

Moderna stated it tested the new shot out on 100 people, none of whom were pregnant women or children.  

Nor does the FDA and CDC know what effect this new shot would have on those who had horrible life-altering side-effects from previous shots. 

The U.S. government’s Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System, which only captures about 10% of adverse events, showed that over 1.5 million adverse events have occurred since Covid-19 “vaccinations” became available to the public.

According to the FDA’s own advisory, the latest booster underwent the minimal review and testing that is allowed under the current Emergency Use Authorization, which still exists even though President Joe Biden declared in May that the pandemic was over.  

Linda Wastila, Ph.D., professor of geriatric pharmacotherapy at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy and director of research for the Peter Lamy Center for Drug Therapy and Aging, accused the FDA of acting unethically:  

“It is unethical to continue to approve and authorize mRNA vaccines for COVID-19 when the pandemic has disappeared. It is unethical to promote these boosters as safe and effective when it is clear they are not, and the government is ignoring evidence that the vaccines can provide considerable harm. The fact that these vaccines were authorized for children when a public health emergency no longer exists is unconscionable.”

In a separate statement, the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance (FLCCC) said, “By leveraging the unnecessary Emergency Use Authorization … the FDA is pushing forward with an experimental vaccine booster based on limited safety and efficacy data.”

None of this has stopped the government from pushing the “jab” that is no longer free.  The decision to say everyone should get the jab was made to “ease” roll out and provide for “equity”. 

“Let’s keep America strong, healthy,” said Dr. Camille Kotton, a panel member who voted in favor of the recommendation and who is an infectious disease specialist at Harvard Medical School. “Let’s do away with COVID-19 as best we can by prevention of disease through vaccines. Let’s make things clear.”

These “vaccines” have not done away with Covid-19, nor does it seem the best way to rid us of this illness. 

There are other modalities of treatment that the mainstream media and medical community will not discuss. They seem to think everything should be hit with a hammer whether it is a nail or not.

Already schools are requiring children to return to masks even though research has shown children are relatively resilient if they contract Covid. 

And now the Providence Medical System has told all employees they must get the latest “booster,” regardless of their current vaccination status. Once again the threat is laid out—get the shot or it may result in unpaid leave or even job loss.

It seems this will never end. More mandates are coming.  

Alaskans, sign up for our Alaska Covid Alliance Conference entitled “Covid and Beyond: The Establishment and You”.  Go to https://www.alaskacovidalliance.com/conference-october-2023 to register.

We will have nationally recognized speakers who will discuss alternative therapies, side-effects of vaccinations, how to treat long Covid and what to do in the future. 

We also have Michael Ashley, coauthor of “Neuromined: Triumphing over Technological Tyranny,” discussing technofascism and how we can change that story as well as James Taylor of Heartland Institute discussing Covid policies as a trial run for future government control. 

Pay attention—your life may be at risk.  Visit our web page at www.alaskacovidalliance.com to register for this exciting event.

Linda Boyle, RN, MSN, DM, was formerly the chief nurse for the 3rd Medical Group, JBER, and was the interim director of the Alaska VA. Most recently, she served as Director for Central Alabama VA Healthcare System. She is the director of the Alaska Covid Alliance.

Too much of a good thing? Rising water in Kenai has mayor declaring a flood emergency

12

Mayor Peter Micciche of the Kenai Borough declared a local state of emergency due to rising water infrastructure on the Western Kenai Peninsula.

Reports of areawide flooding along the Kenai River, neighborhoods in Kenai Keys, Kalifornsky Beach Road, and the Eastern Kenai Peninsula have detailed damage to residential structures and some public infrastructure on the Western Kenai Peninsula.

“My utmost priority as the mayor of the KPB is the life, health, and safety of our residents. I will take any steps necessary within my authority and through our Emergency Management Team to respond and help mitigate damage to private and public property and the infrastructure we all count on daily,” Mayor Micciche said. “A disaster declaration also approved by the governor would help us in our efforts to continue to provide the resources needed to effectively respond and to return life to normalcy as soon as possible in affected areas.”

The disaster declaration allows access to emergency borough funds and the expansion of
authority to respond to the high water conditions being experienced.

In the event that the governor also declares a disaster as requested, the borough would have the assistance of State of Alaska subject matter experts and potential resources and state funds to address the impacts of flooding, the mayor said in a statement.

The request has been formally submitted to Gov. Mike Dunleavy. With the governor’s approval, the State of Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management would also provide assistance to the Borough and to affected areas as directed.

Whopper Joe: Biden lies about teaching political theory at UPenn

President Joe Biden told students in Maryland on Thursday that he used to “teach political theory: at the University of Pennsylvania.

In fact, he has never taught a single semester-long class there.

“Our democracy is under attack, and we got to fight for it,” Biden told an audience at Maryland’s Prince George’s Community College. 

“I taught at the University of Pennsylvania for four years and I used to teach political theory. And folks, you always hear, every generation has to fight for democracy.”

Biden, who is 80, was awarded an honorary professorship at UPenn, when he was named the Benjamin Franklin Presidential Professor of the Practice from 2017 to 2019, years he was not vice president or senator, and as he launched his campaign for president. He was the first person to ever hold that honorific title.

The role involved no research, teaching or publishing. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Biden made about a dozen appearances on campus, for which he was paid $900,000. It was always about prestige for the university.

“The former vice president collected $371,159 in 2017 plus $540,484 in 2018 and early 2019 for a vaguely defined role that involved no regular classes and around a dozen public appearances on campus, mostly in big, ticketed events,” the newspaper wrote in 2019.

“Penn’s payments to Biden raised eyebrows and questions among some in the community when they were revealed this week as part of the financial disclosures for his presidential campaign. The average salary for a Penn professor was $217,411 in the 2017-18 academic year, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education,” the paper reported.

Read the Philadelphia Inquirer report from 2019 here.

Oregon Attorney General sues Fox Corp. over election news coverage

By TOM JOYCE | THE CENTER SQUARE

Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum filed a stockholder derivative lawsuit against the board of directors of Fox Corporation this week.

Rosenblum filed the suit against the corporate parent of Fox News for breach of fiduciary duty because the Oregon Public Employee Retirement Fund is a Fox investor.

The Attorney General is representing the fund and Oregon Treasurer Tobias Read, whose office partnered in the investigation into Fox.

“The board of Fox Corporation took a massive risk in pursuing profits by perpetuating and peddling known falsehoods,” Rosenblum said in a release. “The directors’ choices exposed themselves and the company to liability and exposed their shareholders to significant risks. That is the crux of our lawsuit, and we look forward to making our case in court.”

A joint investigation conducted by the Oregon Department of Justice and Oregon Treasurer’s Office earlier this year concluded that Fox’s management hurt investors, including Oregon’s public employees, with its actions.

As of the end of August, the state held 150,146 shares of Fox Class A stock and 76,169 shares of Fox Class B stock worth about $5.2 million.

Filed in Delaware Chancery Court this week, the lawsuit alleges that Fox’s Board knew that Fox News promoted lies without regard for whether they would result in defamation charges.

The Board at Fox should have been more sensitive to the defamation risks the company faced, the release said. It cites examples of false news reported on Fox News, including that murdered Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich provided hacked emails to WikiLeaks and claims that election technology companies U.S. Dominion, Inc. and Smartmatic USA Corp. rigged the 2020 presidential election in favor of President Joe Biden.

The lawsuit said Fox did not make a good-faith effort to monitor or mitigate defamation risk, unlike other major media organizations in America.

“Our responsibility to safeguard the retirement investments of Oregon’s public servants is of the utmost importance,” Treasurer Tobias Read, a member of the Oregon Investment Council, said. “We aim to hold Fox’s board of directors, including Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch, accountable for their decisions. We believe that this action is necessary in fulfilling our obligation to our beneficiaries.”

Win Gruening: New City Hall for Juneau comes down to dollars, sense

By WIN GRUENING

Soon, Juneau voters will be receiving ballots in their mailboxes for the 2023 regular municipal election scheduled for October 3, 2023. This election will be watched closely for several reasons.

The ballot features the second attempt by the Juneau Assembly to pass a bond partially financing the construction of a new city hall. In addition, dissatisfaction with past CBJ Assembly actions has generated a record number of candidates competing for two open Assembly seats as well as challenges to two incumbents.

With the idiosyncrasies of vote-by-mail elections unilaterally imposed upon Juneau residents by the Assembly in 2022, we may not know election results until weeks after election day. The lack of transparency and opportunity for fraud inherent in vote-by-mail systems only adds to the distrust many people have with government and will remind voters how this Assembly has ignored community concerns by conducting their business with minimal regard for public process.

Voters need look no further than these recent examples:

  • Unwarranted, contentious, and exorbitant increases in property taxes
  • Non-disclosure of emails constituting public testimony     
  • New city manager selection held almost entirely in secret

But the most glaring example of lack of transparency is the Assembly’s dogged pursuit of a brand-new city hall and their appropriation of $50,000 to advocate for it. The re-introduction by the Assembly of a previously failed city hall proposal without engaging the electorate or considering any modifications is inexplicable. The location and design remain unchanged with a $2 million increase in cost. It’s essentially identical to their 2022 failed effort but with a reduced bond amount and higher cost.

There’s no logical reason to present this to voters again unless, now unconstrained by the requirement to remain neutral (having passed an ordinance allowing an advocacy campaign financed city taxpayer dollars), the Assembly is free to play fast and loose with the facts.

That is exactly what is happening.

Apparently, Juneau city leaders hope no one will dive into the numbers, but instead accept their figures at face value.

During a Chamber of Commerce presentation on August 24th, Juneau City Manager Rorie Watt outlined the purported financial benefits of a new city hall.

  • In three years, CBJ will avoid spending over $1.1 million annually on rent and approximately $14M in repair and replacement costs.
  • In 32 years, cumulative savings will exceed $43.3M when the project would break-even.
  • CBJ will save $200 million+ in 70 years.

There is no independent third-party evaluation supporting these alleged financial savings. We only have the city-sponsored economic analysis, by Rain Coast Data in March of 2022, that had sharply different conclusions. That study assumed a project cost that was $5 million less ($38.2 million) and a bond amount that was $2 million lower ($25 million) than is currently proposed, with minor differences in bond rate and amortization.

Despite that, the city has now lowered the project break-even point to 32 years, 20 years less than 52 year break-even provided to voters just last year. Furthermore, net savings over 70 years of $200 million has been grossly inflated from the $33 million reflected in last year’s analysis.

Juneau voters should ask themselves: how did the city magically concoct a 500% increase in savings and an artificially low break-even point? Apparently by fiddling with their in-house modeling tool, assuming much higher projected rents, and conveniently omitting the hundreds of millions of dollars the $16.3 million downpayment would have earned after 70 years.

Beyond these financial shenanigans, voters should question the underlying assumption that the city needs brand-new office space for every employee. 

The pandemic permanently changed the office landscape. State offices are shrinking, commercial vacancies are increasing, rental rates are falling (not increasing as CBJ would have you believe), and employers are transitioning to a hybrid work environment that increasingly allows work-from-home.

Ignoring these facts by adding another 46,200 sqft of office space to downtown Juneau is not a solution. A better approach would be to explore future possibilities as more vacant office space opens up and/or evaluate re-purposing under-utilized school buildings.

Before filling out your ballot, ask yourself, are Juneau voters really getting the facts on the city hall project?

The dollars don’t add up. 

Will voters be swayed by spin or common sense?

After retiring as the senior vice president in charge of business banking for Key Bank in Alaska, Win Gruening became a regular opinion page columnist for the Juneau Empire. He was born and raised in Juneau and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1970. He is involved in various local and statewide organizations.

Americans for Prosperity Foundation takes action over Biden’s illegal ANWR oil and gas lease cancellations

16

Americans for Prosperity Foundation filed three Freedom of Information Act requests seeking information on the Biden Administration’s unlawful cancellation of oil and gas leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

The lease sales had already been lawfully awarded through a process that is required by federal law. 

“The Biden administration’s unlawful decision to cancel all oil and gas leases will have a detrimental impact on Alaskan jobs and American energy security. This is just the latest deliberate attack on domestic energy production by the Biden administration. We can and should do better for Alaska and for our country,” said Bethany Marcum, Alaska state director for Americans of Prosperity Foundation.

A previous AFP Foundation investigation found the Biden Administration misled the public about its reason for canceling a separate lease sale in Alaska’s Cook Inlet.  

Over the past few years, the Biden administration has throttled American energy production while at the same time draining the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve and begging OPEC to delay production cuts.  

Meanwhile, oil prices are at a 10-month high, and Americans face rising prices on everything from gas to groceries to utility bills.  

Read the FOIA requests at these links: 

“Using the National Environmental Policy Act to cancel leases required by law is a clear abuse of executive power. If this decision stands, it effectively gives current and future Interior Secretaries veto power over any energy development on federal lands, regardless of congressional intent or federal law, said Americans for Prosperity Foundation Director of Investigations Kevin Schmidt. After misleading Americans about its cancellation of the lease sale in Alaska’s Cook Inlet, the Interior Department has no credibility on energy development in Alaska. AFP Foundation hopes these FOIAs will help shed light on the administration’s misguided decision.” 

Golden State culture war on families rages as gender bill taking away parents’ rights is at governor’s desk

20

If parents in California don’t support the decision of their children to undergo gender transitioning and sterilization, they could soon lose custody of their kids, a new state policy that could lead to the exodus of many conservative families from the Golden State.

Assembly Bill 957, The TGI (Transgender, Gender-Diverse, and Intersex) Youth Empowerment Act passed the California legislative Assembly on Friday and is now in front of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is expected to sign it.

According to the act, affirming a child’s chosen gender is in the best interest of the child.

The bill passed along exact party lines, with all Republicans voting against it, and Democrats voting in favor of state taking authority away from parents.”

“AB 957 empowers parents who support their TGI children by clarifying once and for all that affirming a child’s gender identity is in the best interest of the child, allowing courts to consider a parent’s affirmation of their child’s gender identity when making decisions about visitation and custody. The bill will also require courts to strongly consider that affirming a child’s gender identity is in the best interest of the child when one parent does not consent to a minor’s legal name change to conform with the minor’s gender identity. AB 957 will provide affirming parents the support they need when encountering civil procedures in court that pertain to affirming and uplifting the lives of their TGI children,” the bill summary reads.

The bill requires judges in custody cases to take into consideration whether parents are supportive of their children’s gender decisions and transitioning/sterilization procedures.

“This bill, for purposes of this provision, would include a parent’s affirmation of the child’s gender identity as part of the health, safety, and welfare of the child,” the legislation says. The legislation also says the parents must accept the child’s new chosen name.

The bill lays out how broad the parameters are for what is considered acceptable for parents when it comes to affirming the gender transition choices of their children: “Affirmation includes a range of actions and will be unique for each child, but in every case must promote the child’s overall health and well-being.”

Newsom last year signed into law a bill designed to make California a sanctuary that shields parents who travel from other states to access sterilization for their children, and also legally shields doctors who provide these profitable services.

Downing: Alaska air crashes and politics collide, once again

By SUZANNE DOWNING

This week, we received the news of the untimely passing of Gene “Buzzy” Peltola Jr., husband to Alaska Rep. Mary Peltola. 

Gene met his tragic end as the plane he was piloting crashed during a moose hunting expedition. Loaded with the spoils of the hunt, the aircraft met its doom shortly after takeoff. Despite valiant efforts of fellow hunters to save him, the remote crash site left Gene as another addition to the list of fearless bush pilots who never saw their twilight years.

Gene was no novice; he was a seasoned pilot navigating the skies in a trusty Piper PA 18-150 Super Cub, a reliable workhorse tailor-made for the demanding conditions of rural Alaska. Often hailed as the “Jeep” of general aviation private aircraft, it’s an icon in the state’s aviation circles.

Located approximately 440 miles west of Anchorage, the crash site is in what can only be described as remote territory, even by Alaska standards. The National Transportation Safety Board faces a formidable task in reaching the crash site and retrieving the aircraft’s remains for an analysis back in Anchorage.

As fate would have it, this tragedy unfolded on a September day precisely one year after Mary Peltola took her oath as Alaska’s congressional representative, following the passing of Congressman Don Young on March 18, 2022. 

On Sept. 13, 2022, Gene, donned in a traditional Alaska Native kuspuk and a necktie, proudly held a Bible for his wife as she recited the oath of office alongside then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Alaska’s narrative is replete with miraculous moments and dramatic conclusions, many of which are tied to aviation. The vastness of the state is evident, with a mere 17,637 miles of road in a state that is one-fifth the size of the rest of the country.

The collision of air crashes and politics in Alaska is a historical thread that dates back to 1972 when Congressman Nicholas Begich vanished, alongside Congressman Hale Boggs, en route to Juneau for a campaign event. The disappearance of these two congressmen, a congressional staffer, and the pilot remains one of Alaska’s enduring mysteries. Congressman Begich was eventually declared deceased, prompting a special election in March the following year to fill the void.

This marked the beginning of the Don Young era, as he secured victory in March 1972. Fast forward 49 years, and it was also a March day in 2022 when Congressman Young, now revered as the Dean of the House, met his fate on a plane, once again prompting a special election to replace the legendary congressman, who had become the longest-serving Republican House member.

In yet another eerie plot twist, Mary Peltola had learned on her 49th birthday, Aug. 31, 2022, that she would succeed Young, who had served the 49th State for 49 years.

The litany of airplane crashes that have shaken Alaska’s political landscape has undeniably left an indelible mark on its history. 

Ann Stevens, wife of Senator Ted Stevens, lost her life in a plane crash in Anchorage on Dec. 8, 1978, while Sen. Stevens survived. 

However, he would not survive his next plane crash. On Aug. 10, 2010, Stevens, who had seen his political career upended two years earlier by an unjust Department of Justice, tragically perished in a plane crash in Western Alaska while on a fishing trip.

While midair collisions are a rarity due to the vast airspace, there are exceptions like the 2020 incident involving state Rep. Gary Knopp, whose plane collided with another near Soldotna, claiming seven lives, including Knopp’s. The NTSB investigation revealed that Knopp’s vision had been impaired by glaucoma, and he lacked a valid medical certificate to fly.

Why does it seem that so many politicos meet their fate on Alaska planes? One obvious explanation is that political leaders in Alaska spend more time in the skies than the average Alaskan, and hunters and fishermen venture into even riskier conditions, where flying is the only option.

Alaska boasts more than 8,700 registered aircraft, 3% of all U.S. registered aircraft in a state that has less than half a percent of the entire U.S. population. That’s 12 airplanes for every 1,000 Alaskans.

Combine adventurous spirits with a land as wild and weather-prone as this, throw in numerous single-engine planes landing on gravel bars along rivers and oceans, and it’s no wonder mishaps are inevitable.

Airplane crashes have, time and again, altered the course of Alaska’s history. The Last Frontier bears a somber statistic, representing 42% of the country’s fatal plane crashes involving commuter, air taxi, and charter flights. 

With more than one out of every 100 Alaskans being an active pilot, the skies will continue to be a thrilling yet perilous domain, where fate and circumstance, wind and weather, and sometimes human error, define the ultimate destiny of those who take flight in this vast and unforgiving land.

Suzanne Downing is publisher of Must Read Alaska.

Hunter Biden indicted on gun charges

66

The Justice Department on Thursday charged Hunter Biden with lying about his drug use when he purchased a handgun in October of 2018, which was during a time when he admittedly was addicted to crack cocaine. The indictment was filed in a federal court in Delaware.

President Joe Biden’s son is also being investigating for corruption involving business dealings, and failure to pay taxes.

A plea deal with the Justice Department fell apart earlier this summer after the judge would not allow Hunter Biden off on the felony gun charge, and after she scolded the Biden team for burying evidence and scamming the court.

That plea deal would have seen the gun charge dropped in exchange for pleading guilty for misdemeanor counts of willfully failing to pay federal income taxes.