Sunday, June 20, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Bess Levin | Donald Trump, Human Parasite, Is Now Telling People Not to Vaccinate Their Kids Against Coronavirus

 

 

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FOCUS: Bess Levin | Donald Trump, Human Parasite, Is Now Telling People Not to Vaccinate Their Kids Against Coronavirus
Donald Trump. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)
Bess Levin, Vanity Fair
Levin writes: "Given the opportunity to be of service to their country, most former U.S. presidents are happy to help. Then there's Donald Trump."

Helpful as always!


iven the opportunity to be of service to their country, most former U.S. presidents are happy to help. Then there’s Donald Trump. A stunted man-child who’s never done anything without first asking, “What’s in it for me?” the ex-president has actively hurt America since leaving office in January, largely by doing everything he can to undermine democracy, whether it’s his continued attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election or telling people he’s going to be “reinstated” as POTUS in a matter of months. Also unhelpful? His decision to prolong the pandemic by telling people not to have their children vaccinated for COVID-19.

Yes, despite regularly insisting that he doesn’t get enough credit for the coronavirus vaccines, Trump claimed during an interview with Sean Hannity on Wednesday that school-age children should not be inoculated against the deadly virus. “Now we have to get back and the schools have to get open—and frankly, we’re lucky we have the vaccine. But the vaccine on very young people is something that you gotta really stop,” Trump inexplicably said. “You have to get back to running your country—I mean, I don’t see reasons—and I am a big believer in what we did with the vaccine. It’s incredible what we did. You see the results. But to have every school child, where it’s 99.99%, they just don’t—you know, they’re just not affected or affected badly. Having to receive a vaccine I think is something that you should start thinking about, because I think it’s unnecessary.”

As usual, the majority of the words coming out of the 45th president’s mouth were a lie. The coronavirus does, in fact, affect children. As Politico notes, more than 2,000 children have been diagnosed with multisystem inflammatory syndrome since the start of the pandemic; MIS-C damages the heart to such an extent that some kids who develop it will reportedly need “lifelong monitoring and interventions,” while more than 30 have died. According to neonatologist Dr. Alvaro Moreira, MIS-C can hit seemingly healthy kids nearly a month after asymptomatic infections. And while it’s true that children are less likely to become symptomatic than adults, more than 4 million have tested positive for COVID-19, which they can subsequently pass on to more vulnerable people, contributing to the spread of the virus.

Meanwhile, NBC News reports that “virtually all hospitalized COVID patients” are unvaccinated, and it’s not just unvaccinated adults who are at risk for severe illness. “In our local hospitals the kids that are getting sick are the ones that are not vaccinated,” said Dr. Natasha Burgert, a pediatrician in Overland Park, Kansas. Not surprisingly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has urged children 12 and up to get vaccinated, citing the recent increase in coronavirus-related hospitalizations.

Trump, of course, isn’t the only Republican on the anti-science, anti-vax train, according to The Tennessean:

Some lawmakers are taking aim at the Tennessee Department of Health and the state’s top health official for encouraging minors to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Several Republican lawmakers questioned state Health Commissioner Dr. Lisa Piercey during a joint Government Operations Committee meeting Wednesday, lodging complaints and threatening to dissolve or “reconstitute” the department’s responsibilities in response to its efforts to vaccinate Tennesseans against the deadly coronavirus.

Rep. Scott Cepicky, R-Culleoka, accused the department of “peer pressuring” teenagers and young adults to get the COVID-19 vaccine with or without their parents’ permission. “We know how impressionable our young people are. For a department of ours to make it seem like you need a vaccine...to fit in is peer pressure applied by the state of Tennessee,” Cepicky said. “Personally, I think it’s reprehensible that you would do that, that you would do that to our youth.”

Unsurprisingly, teen vaccinations in states that voted for Joe Biden are far outpacing those in states that went for Trump, according to NBC News:

Vaccination rates for children 12 to 17 have surged in the northeast and lagged in the South, one month since the first COVID-19 vaccines were cleared for ages 12 and up, according to an NBC News analysis. In Vermont nearly 59% of adolescents have received their first dose. In Massachusetts the number is more than half. And in Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, more than 40% of 12- to 17-year-olds have received one shot. Meanwhile, young people living in the South are least likely to have had their first dose. Just over 7% of Mississippi 12- to 17-year-olds have received their first dose, and less than 10% of that age group in Louisiana.

A not-insignificant number of Trump’s supporters would presumably listen to him if he encouraged them to get their children vaccinated. But apparently he doesn’t want to do that.

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