Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Friday, September 5, 2025

As Vaccines are Demonized by Imbecile DeSantis, Diseases Spread in Florida

Naaah... don't vaccinate your child with man-made vaccines. God and his Flordia mega-churches for the mentally challenged will protect him. After all, your child's body - which many pastors, reverends, priests, men of God and other charlatans and soothsayers find suitable for abuse, rape and sodomy - is a gift from God. 

Didn't the Bronze Age super-hero messiah Jesus say, "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own." Sure, stop saving in your 401K, stop working hard, stop worrying about the future.... Live like a good herbivore in a state of grace and stupor.

Like Muslims, Christians are told to surrender their fate to God. Do not think too much. And, do not take your child to the doctor when he/she falls ill. That doctor is in cahoots with evil Big Pharma (whose drugs you consume like candy) and the atheist Democrats and they all want your child to have autism.

Such is the message that imbecile MAGA prophets like Ted Cruz and Ron DeSantis are sending to the average dumb American. God's way (which is often described as "mysterious") is the way to go. Good luck with that. And when your child gets measles or chickenpox, don't go to the doctor. You shouldn't trust doctors because they are part of the conspiracy. Keep your child at home, feed it supplements (which are untested packs of horse manure) as RFK Jr recommends, and watch it die as its soul rises to the heavens to site next to superhero Messiah Jesus.
======================================================

Palm Beach Daily News

Florida to end all vaccine mandates. So far, these are still the vaccine requirements
C. A. Bridges and Ana Goñi-Lessan, USA TODAY NETWORK - Florida
Updated Thu, September 4, 2025


Gov. Ron DeSantis and Florida Surgeon General have announced plans to end all vaccine mandates in the state, including immunization requirements for schools, the first state to do so.

“Every last one of them is wrong and drips with disdain and slavery,” said Dr. Joseph Ladapo, Florida's surgeon general, at a Sept. 3 press conference in Valrico, Hillsborough County.

“Who am I to tell you what your child should put in their body? I don’t have that right. Your body is a gift from God,” Ladapo said. [Iznogood: But what kind of poisoned gift is this that falls victim to millions of diseases and bugs?]

DeSantis has fought against COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandates since the early days of the pandemic, punishing schools and businesses with mandates and calling for the state to come back out of lockdown before anyone else. That may have boosted Florida's economy well before the rest of the country, but cases in Florida doubled in 2021 over the numbers from the first year of the pandemic and they were higher still in 2022.

To date, the FDOH reports nearly
8.5 million cases of COVID-19 infection in the state since 2020, a number that is almost certainly undercounted since the state may not have numbers for people who used at-home tests. More than 100,000 people have died of COVID-19 in Florida, which was at one point 10th in the nation for deaths per capita.

Last year,
the number of whooping cough cases in Florida soared as the vaccination rate dropped. A measles outbreak in Miami-Dade resulted in nine infections in 2024, with four cases in the state so far this year.

Some of the vaccinations are required under state law. Lawmakers will “have to choose a side,” Ladapo said.

The move, and the creation of a state version of a “Make America Healthy Again” commission to be led by Florida first lady Casey DeSantis, comes as U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. continues his overhaul of the American health system and a purge of health agency leadership and advisory panels. Kennedy, 71, has promoted misinformation about vaccines and several widely discredited views in the past.

Meanwhile, Democrat-led states California, Oregon and Washington are forming a "health alliance" to coordinate vaccine recommendations, the New York Times reported.

"Getting vaccinated is one of the safest ways for you to protect your health," the CDC website still says, although the White House recently fired former director Susan Monarez after she reportedly refused to fire senior CDC leaders and rubber-stamp recommendations from Kennedy's hand-picked vaccine advisory panel.

"Vaccines help prevent getting and spreading serious diseases that could result in poor health, missed work, medical bills, and not being able to care for family."

Here are the vaccines currently recommended by the CDC and the Florida DOH, as of Sept. 3, 2025. [Iznogood: These are "recommendations", not mandates]

What vaccines are recommended for adults?

The CDC recommends that everyone be up to date on these routine vaccines:

COVID-19 vaccine and boosters
Flu vaccine (influenza)
Tdap vaccine (tetanus, diphtheria, and whooping cough) or Td vaccine (tetanus, diphtheria)

Other vaccines that adults may want to consider include:

Chickenpox vaccine – recommended for all adults born in 1980 or later
Hepatitis B vaccine – recommended for all adults up through 59 years of age, and for some adults 60 years of age and older with known risk factors
HPV vaccine – recommended for all adults up through 26 years of age, and for some adults aged 27 through 45 years
MMR vaccine (measles, mumps, and rubella) – recommended for all adults born in 1957 or later

Along with these, other vaccines are recommended for people in different situations. 

What vaccines are recommended for pregnant people ?
Tdap vaccine — Get between 27 and 36 weeks of pregnancy to help protect your baby against whooping cough.
Hepatitis B vaccine

Especially make sure you get the flu vaccine if you're pregnant during fly season, October through May.
What vaccines are recommended for healthcare workers?

Along with the routine ones, healthcare workers also should get:

Chickenpox vaccine (varicella)
Hepatitis B vaccine
Meningococcal vaccine – especially lab workers who work with Neisseria Meningitidis
MMR vaccine

What vaccines are recommended for international travel?

Each country in the world has its own list of required vaccines, check when you make your plans. The CDC currently has a list here and note that measles cases are increasing across the globe. The World Health Organization also has a list of vaccines international travelers may want.

Talk to your healthcare provider and get any needed vaccines at least 4 to 6 weeks before your trip to help build up immunity. You can take the CDC quiz to get a list of vaccines you need based on your lifestyle, travel habits and other factors.

What vaccines are recommended for seniors?

Chickenpox vaccine – recommended for all adults born in 1980 or later

Hepatitis B vaccine – recommended for all adults up through 59 years of age, and for some adults 60 years of age and older with known risk factors

HPV vaccine – recommended for all adults up through 26 years of age, and for some adults aged 27 through 45 years

MMR vaccine – recommended for all adults born in 1957 or later

Shingles vaccine – recommended for all adults 50 years of age and older

What vaccines are recommended for people with health conditions?

Asplenia (without a functioning spleen): Hib vaccine (Haemophilus influenzae type b), Meningococcal vaccines – both MenACWY and MenB, Pneumococcal vaccine

Diabetes, type 1 and type 2: Pneumococcal vaccine

Heart disease, stroke or other cardiovascular diseases: Pneumococcal vaccine

HIV infection: Hepatitis A vaccine, Hepatitis B vaccine, Meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MenACWY). Pneumococcal vaccine, Shingles vaccine. If your CD4 count is 200 or greater, you may also need Chickenpox vaccine and MMR vaccine

Liver disease: Hepatitis A vaccine, Hepatitis B vaccine, Pneumococcal vaccine

Lung disease (Including Asthma or COPD): Pneumococcal vaccine

End-stage renal (kidney) disease: Hepatitis B vaccine, Pneumococcal vaccine

Weakened immune system (excluding HIV infection): Hib vaccine, Pneumococcal vaccines, Meningococcal vaccines (MenACWY and MenB), Shingles vaccine

What vaccines are recommended for children?

Birth: Hepatitis B vaccine (1st of 3), respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine

1-2 months: DTaP vaccine (1st of 5), Hib vaccine (1st of 3 or 4), Hepatitis B vaccine (2nd of 3), IPV (for polio, 1st of 4), PCV (1st of 4), rotavirus vaccine (1st of 2 or 3)

4 months: DTaP vaccine (2nd of 5), Hib vaccine (2nd of 3 or 4), IPV (2nd of 4), PCV (2nd of 4), rotavirus vaccine (2nd of 2 or 3)

6 months: COVID-19 vaccine, DTaP vaccine (3rd of 5), Hepatitis B vaccine (3rd of 3), IPV (3rd of 4), Hib vaccine (3rd of 3 or 4), PCV (3rd of 4), rotavirus vaccine (3rd of 2 or 3)

7-11 months: Flu vaccine 

12 -23 months: Chickenpox vaccine (1st of 2), DTaP vaccine (4th of 5), flu vaccine (every flu season), Hepatitis A vaccine (1st of 2), Hepatitis B vaccine (3rd of 3 between 6 months and 18 months), Hib vaccine (4th of 4), IPV (3rd of 4 between 6 months and 18 months), MMR vaccine (1st of 2), PCV (4th of 4). 

2-3 years: Flu vaccine every flu season. 

4-6 years: Chickenpox vaccine (2nd of 2), DTaP vaccine (5th of 5), Flu vaccine every flu season, IPV (4th of 4), MMR vaccine (2nd of 2). 

7-10 years: Flu vaccine every flu season, good time to catch up on any missing vaccines. 

11-12 years: Flu vaccine every flu season, HPV vaccine (2 doses), MenACWY vaccine (1st dose of 2), Tdap vaccine.

13-18 years: Flu vaccine every flu season, MenACWY vaccine (2nd dose of 2), MenB vaccine (2 doses), MenABCWY vaccine.

What vaccines does Florida require to attend school?

The state of Flordia requires certain vaccines to be administered before children may enroll and attend childcare and school. According to the Florida Department of Health, the following vaccines are required, with age-appropriate doses:

Immunizations required for childcare and/or family daycare
Diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis (DTaP)
Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV)
Measles-mumps-rubella (MMR)
Varicella (chickenpox)
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib)
Pneumococcal conjugate (PCV15/20)
Hepatitis B (Hep B)

Public/non-public preschool entry
DTaP
IPV
MMR
Varicella
Hib
Pneumococcal conjugate (PCV15/20)
Hepatitis B (Hep B)

Public/non-public schools kindergarten through 12th grade
Four or five doses of DTaP
Four or five doses of IPV
Two doses of MMR
Three doses of Hep B
One Tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis (Tdap)

Two doses of Varicella (kindergarten effective with 2008–2009 school year, then an additional grade is added each year thereafter). Varicella vaccine is not required if there is a history of varicella disease documented by the health care provider.

As of 2010, children entering, attending or transferring to the seventh grade in Florida schools must also complete one Tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis (Tdap).

No comments:

Post a Comment