The order applies to both employees and consumers who refuse to receive the vaccine.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order banning “any entity” in the state from enforcing a COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
“The COVID-19 vaccine is safe, effective, and our best defense against the virus, but should remain voluntary and never forced,” Abbott said in a press release Monday.
Abbott’s executive order prohibits “any entity” in the state from compelling an individual to receive a COVID-19 vaccine “who objects to such vaccination for any reason of personal conscience.”
The order applies to both employees and consumers who refuse to receive the vaccine due to “religious belief, or for medical reasons, including prior recovery from COVID-19.”
The order will also “supersede any conflicting order” that has already been made by local jurisdictions, authorizing the “maximum fine” allowed under Texas law for any entity that fails to comply with the order.
Abbott also issued a message to the state’s Senate and House of Representatives formally requesting the legislature to consider drafting legislation codifying a similar order into law.
The governor’s move may have come in response to President Biden’s September executive order that will require employers with more than 100 workers to require the vaccine or submit to weekly testing for the virus.
“In yet another instance of federal government overreach, the Biden Administration is now bullying many private entities into imposing COVID-19 vaccine mandates, causing workforce disruptions that threaten Texas’s continued recovery from the COVID-19 disaster,” Abbott said of that order at the time.
Currently, 52% of Texas residents are fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
(Tennessee Star) Two Williamson County commissioners have announced their choice to replace Brad Fiscus on the Williamson County School Board, and that person is Franklin resident Josh Brown, who also does top-level work for Pfizer.
Williamson County District Four Commissioners Chad Story and Gregg Lawrence selected Brown against nine other candidates, according to The Tennessean. The remaining commissioners are scheduled to vote on whether to formally appoint Brown to the position at their October 11 meeting.
Brown’s nomination does not come without controversy.
Brown, according to his biography on the California Life Sciences’ website, is a lobbyist. Brown, the website went on to say, currently serves as a national vice president of Pfizer, where he performs state government-relations work.
Gary Humble of the Williamson County-based Tennessee Stands told his supporters in a new column that Brown’s political ties and his lobbying work concern him. Humble said “the process of vetting Brown and the nine other candidates has not been very forthcoming” and that’s a problem, especially during a time of contentious school board politics.
“The process of vetting candidates for the nomination by the committee members has not been very forthcoming. Firstly, the timeline was rushed as the commissioners were uncertain as to exactly when Brad Fiscus would be stepping down from his post,” Humble wrote.
“While the process was in limbo, names of possible replacements were trickling in, but an ongoing list was never presented to the public as to who these candidates might be. It was clear from the beginning that public input was not a primary motivator in making this decision.”
Tennessee Stands, according to its website, calls on state and local officials “to restore our constitutional republic.”
None of the 24 Williamson County Board of Commissioners returned The Tennessee Star’s requests for comment before Friday’s stated deadline. Brown also did not return a request for comment.
Brown was one of five candidates seeking to replace Fiscus who did not return The Star’s requests for comment this week to share their views on COVID-19 mask mandates in schools. Brown also declined to say whether K-12 public schools should teach Critical Race Theory (CRT).
Executives with BioNTech, the vaccine maker collaborating with Pfizer, announced last month they would seek worldwide approval for its COVID-19 vaccine for children between the ages of 5 and 11.
A report by the Odessa Accountability Project claims that a 17-year-old COVID patient suffering from breathing difficulties entered a hospital in Texas, only for staff to place a plastic bag over her head after she removed her face mask.
Yes, really.
A photo of the teenager posted to the group’s Facebook page shows the young woman with the bag, which features the words “equipment cover,” placed over her head and upper body. She is also wearing a face mask.
You don’t need to be a doctor to know the dangers of putting plastic bags over people’s heads, especially if they are already suffering from breathing difficulties.
The young woman was “humiliated and dehumanized by the staff” for apparently removing her face mask.
“The girl’s mother said she complained of not being able to breath well, taking off the mask, and was asked to put it back on,” states the post.
“The bag was over her head for roughly 30 minutes and she was instructed to save the bag for future use throughout the hospital.”
Respondents to the post reacted with horror.
“If that was my child, or grandchild, I’d walk her out of that hospital after telling them where to put that bag,” remarked one.
“I can’t believe they did this to her,” said another.
“I don’t believe in most medical lawsuits but in this case I would definitely be talking to an attorney,” commented another.
A new Superman is coming, and even he’s not immune to today’s cultural pressures.
On Monday, DC Comics announced the next iteration of Superman — Jon Kent, the son of Clark Kent — will take a “bold new direction” by coming out as bisexual. Much like his father, who fell in love with reporter Lois Lane, Jon Kent strikes up a romantic relationship with male reporter Jay Nakamura, who “is there to care for the Man of Steel.”
Tom Taylor, the writer of the comic, said “everyone needs heroes and everyone deserves to see themselves in their heroes,” adding he’s “grateful DC and Warner Bros. share this idea.”
I’ve always said everyone needs heroes and everyone deserves to see themselves in their heroes. Today, #Superman, the strongest superhero on the planet, comes out as bisexual. I chatted to @georgegustines at the @nytimes about what's coming for Jon Kent.https://t.co/rcIYLXl7FB
“Superman’s symbol has always stood for hope, for truth, and for justice,” he continued. “Today, that symbol represents something more. Today, more people can see themselves in the most powerful superhero in comics.”
The series’ artist, John Timms, said he is “honored to be working” alongside Taylor by “showing Jon Kent tackling his most complex modern life.”
According to The New York Times, the latest Superman is much more politically progressive. From the newspaper:
That same-sex relationship is just one of the ways that Jonathan Kent, who goes by Jon, is proving to be a different Superman than his famous father. Since his new series, Superman: Son of Kal-El, began in July, Jon has combated wildfires caused by climate change, thwarted a high school shooting and protested the deportation of refugees in Metropolis.
“The idea of replacing Clark Kent with another straight white savior felt like a missed opportunity,” Tom Taylor, who writes the series, said in an interview. He said that a “new Superman had to have new fights — real world problems — that he could stand up to as one of the most powerful people in the world.”
This marks the most famous superhero to come out as something other than heterosexual.
In May, Disney announced it would be revamping its erstwhile animated series “The Proud Family.” The forthcoming version of the show will center on two multiethnic, gay dads as they raise a teenage daughter who is a racial activist.
Set to stream on Disney+ sometime in 2022, the spinoff will be titled “The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder.”
The piece states that Fortune is “thrilled to see so many companies of all sizes and from around the globe” who are answering “calls for the world to reimagine capitalism and for companies to embrace stakeholder capitalism.”
The piece also promotes the far-left position that “the climate crisis, growing inequality and wealth disparity, inequitable access to health care, and long-rooted systemic racism and bias” are the “biggest challenges the world has faced.”
To tackle these alleged problems, Fortune advocates for the end of “traditional capitalism” while encouraging readers to welcome the “emergence of” and “transitioning to” stakeholder capitalism.
Stakeholder capitalism is part of the globalist “Great Reset” agenda to end American sovereignty and supremacy in order to usher in “a new world” order controlled by “stakeholders,” namely, corporations selected and controlled by the World Economic Forum.
NEW: Fortune's 2021 Change the World list is out!
These companies use the creative tools of capitalism—including the profit motive—to address society’s unmet needs. https://t.co/RW4RU8EQY9
Stakeholder capitalism is an idea coined by Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman at The World Economic Forum (WEF).
The WEF advances “The Great Reset” agenda, an initiative aimed at consolidating global power under the control of multinational corporations, or, “stakeholders.”
After this Great Reset takes place, world populations “will own nothing. And you’ll be happy,” according to a video presentation created by the WEF. (See below.)
According to Schwab, stakeholder capitalism is meant to replace current free-market capitalism with a new “form of capitalism in which companies do not only optimize short-term profits for shareholders, but seek long term value creation, by taking into account the needs of all their stakeholders, and society at large.”
“The most important characteristic of the stakeholder model today,” writes Schwab, “is that the stakes of our system are now more clearly global.”
A WEF report states that individual governments, such as the U.S. government, are no longer “the overwhelmingly dominant actors on the world stage” and that “the time has come for a new stakeholder paradigm of international governance.”
The Transnational Institute—a non-profit think tank in Amsterdam—explains Schwab’s vision as “a self-selected group of ‘stakeholders’ make[ing] decisions on behalf of the people.”
The Institute characterizes Schwab and the WEF’s goals as “a silent global coup d’etat” to capture world dominance.
Fortune Magazine is owned by Fortune Media Group Holdings, which in turn is owned by Thai business tycoon Chatchaval Jiaravanon.
Purchasing Fortune for $150 million in 2018, Jiaravanon is a member of the billionaire family that controls Charoen Pokphand Group, one of the biggest Thai conglomerates, according to Bloomberg.
Charoen Pokphand is owned in part (here) by BlackRock Inc., a single corporate entity with power over every major world industry: social media, communication, information, technology, manufacturing, weapons manufacturers, retail, wholesale, food, agriculture, energy, oil, transportation, automotive, banking, credit, finance, insurance, travel, grocery, computer, pharmaceutical, health, real estate, and mainstream media (from CNN to Fox News, Disney to Netflix).
As of July 2021, The Wall Street JournalreportsBlackRock is approaching $10 trillion in assets. Excluding the U.S. and China, the value of BlackRock’s total assets is greater than the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) respectively of any country in the world.
BlackRock owns major shares of Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google, YouTube, Alphabet; AT&T, Verizon, Comcast; Apple, Microsoft, IBM, Dell, Intel; Caterpillar, 3M; Volkswagen, Toyota, Ford, Honda; Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon; Amazon, Walmart, Costco, Target; FedEx; Delta, American Airlines, United, Southwest; Ross, Nike, TJX; Pepsi, CocaCola, Nestle, Sysco, Tyson Foods; Del Monte, Seaboard Corp; McDonald’s, Starbucks; Exxon Mobile, Shell, BP, Total Energies, Chevron, General Electric, Tesla; Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Berkshire Hathaway; Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, Citigroup, Capital One, Wells Fargo; Prudential, MetLife; Airbnb, Uber, Lyft; Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Merck; CVS, Anthem, Blue Cross; Zillow; CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, Disney, Netflix, Time Warner, The New York Times, Yahoo, Discovery, iHeartMedia, Vogue, Vanity Fair, GQ, News Corp, Viacom, and hunders more.
Many of the major companies owned by BlackRock are listed as “Partners” on the WEF’s website.
BlackRock’s website insists not only that globalism is a reality, but that globalism is “evolving” and that “Much of [the work of globalism] will fall on the shoulders of multinational corporations,” like those owned by BlackRock and partnered with the WEF. Its website says that “large corporations [need] to play a bigger role” in advancing globalism.
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink—a board member and contributor at the WEF—endorses “activism from the far-left” and says, like the Fortune piece, that we must “focus” on advancing globalism by utilizing specifically stakeholder capitalism.
Two children were given the COVID-19 vaccine instead of the flu shot at and now have “heart issues”
Two young children were “accidentally” given the COVID-19 vaccine instead of flu shots at a Walgreens in Indiana according to local media. Now, both are experiencing “heart issues,” according to their pediatrician.
A family in Evansville, Indiana went to a local Walgreens to have each member, including two young children, receive a flu shot. During the appointment, all members of the party including the two children were “accidentally” given full adult does of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine, according to the family’s lawyer. The children, four and five years old, were born in 2016 and 2017, as revealed by the vaccination cards provided to the family by Walgreens.
After the alleged vaccine mix up, both children are now experiencing signs of “heart issues,” according to their pediatrician. The younger child is sick with a cough and fever, according to the report by KWTX.
Myocarditis, a heart condition involving fluid accumulating near the heart, has been found to be a rare side effect of the Pfizer vaccine but seems to grow more common in younger male individuals. Adverse reactions to the vaccines seem to become far less likely the older the person who receives it becomes, according to current medical research.
“The family said they left the pharmacy thinking they had received their flu shots, but a Walgreens employee later called them and said they had made a mistake. The attorney said the cards were then issued since the coronavirus vaccine had been given.”
The local news agency attempted to get comment from Walgreens regarding the matter, but has not received a response. This comes as the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer is seeking to gain FDA emergency use authorization to vaccinate children ages 5-11, according to multiple reports.
As National File reported, a recently-released CDC data set detailing provisional COVID deaths by age from January 1st, 2020 to September 15th, 2021 appear to show that less child deaths were linked to COVID in that time-frame than would have died from the flu in a typical year.
The Supreme Court may soon overturn Roe v. Wade. The truth that abortion is wrong is increasingly winning out.
The divisive national debate about abortion is in the news as much as ever. Texas’ new ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy was blocked by a judge on Wednesday but allowed to continue on Friday, Democrats’ huge spending bill is in part being held up by an amendment allowing federal funding of abortion, and, in what will be the most-watched case in decades, the Supreme Court may overturn its 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling later this year.
The Roe ruling highlighted the greatest logical flaw in support for abortion: for abortion to be illegal at some point before birth (and even most pro-choice Americans agree it should be illegal in the very late stages), you have to pick that point in time. But when?
With Roe, the Supreme Court first took a trimester approach to when abortion should be permitted. As the Roe opinion was drafted, the justices disagreed on the stage at which abortion should be regulated, even changing that point from the end of the first trimester to the end of the second.
In its final form, Roe forbade virtually all abortion regulation in the first trimester, allowed regulation only if serving the mother’s health in the second, and banned prohibition in the third trimester when a mother’s “health” was a consideration. The latter was broadly defined in the companion case Doe v. Bolton to include “emotional, psychological,” and family health, thus effectively allowing all abortions.
The justice who wrote the majority opinion in Roe, Harry Blackmun, even wrote in a memo to his colleagues that Roe’s use of trimesters was “arbitrary … but perhaps any other selected point, such as quickening or viability (of the fetus), is equally arbitrary.” In Roe, the court did not resolve the question of when life begins but ruled that a fetus did not qualify as a “person” as used in the Constitution.
Later, the Supreme Court abandoned the arbitrary trimester framework in favor of another “arbitrary” and “selected point” Blackmun had identified in that memo. In its 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey ruling, the court barred “undue burdens” on abortion before fetal viability.
But drawing the line at the point of viability is also problematic — that point will continue to get earlier in the pregnancy as medical advances create better means of keeping the unborn alive outside the womb; indeed, viability is now weeks earlier than it was when Roe was decided. Yet the unborn child did not become a person because it could survive due to modern science. Newborns are not technically viable either, as they cannot survive on their own. By this logic, we should consider it acceptable to kill newborns.
As the issue comes to the forefront of national debate yet again with the court hearing oral arguments on December 1 in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, here are the many reasons the arguments in favor of abortion are wrong.
Pro-Abortion Claim:The government should stay out of people’s private lives. This is a woman’s choice, not anyone else’s, and a women’s rights issue.
Why It’s Wrong: Laws often restrict an individual’s rights, including the right to hurt another person or infringe upon another’s rights. In taking the life of an unborn child, a woman is taking away the most basic of all rights.
An unborn child is not part of a woman’s body, but a separate, individual human being with its own rights. It is not the mother’s property, just as parents are legal guardians of children but not the children’s owners and are not allowed to abuse their children.
Pro-Abortion Claim:When most abortions take place, in early pregnancy, a fertilized egg is just a mass of cells, not a human being. It doesn’t feel pain.
Why It’s Wrong: A new life begins at conception and should not be destroyed by human interference.
The beginning of life could be defined by many different points of development — fertilization (the fusion of the nuclei of the sperm and egg cell), implantation, the first movement, heartbeat, or brain waves, consciousness, or birth. Any point you choose could be just a day’s difference between life and death for an unborn child. Nor does the absence of pain at early stages make it moral to kill the unborn child, just as it would not with an adult.
Pro-Abortion Claim:Abortion can’t be a crime against nature if fertilized eggs are spontaneously miscarried in nature.
Why It’s Wrong: The occurrence of an event in nature does not justify deliberately mimicking that event. The elderly die of natural causes, but that doesn’t make it right to kill them. And many miscarriages are associated with extra or missing chromosomes.
Pro-Abortion Claim: Birth control isn’t 100 percent effective.When it fails, women have been responsible and need abortion as another method to avoid having a child.
Pro-Abortion Claim:In the case of rape or incest, when a woman was an innocent victim of an involuntary act, she should not be forced to carry a child. She would be forced to suffer even more.
Why It’s Wrong:One percent of women say they want an abortion because they were raped, and less than 0.5 percent say they are pregnant as a result of incest. Even in such very rare cases, an unborn child should not be killed for another person’s evil deed. The pregnant woman needs love and support, not more trauma.
An estimated 800,000 abortions take place in the United States each year. Common reasons given for seeking an abortion are that a child would disrupt the mother’s education (38 percent), interfere with job or career (38 percent), or be unaffordable (73 percent). About half of respondents said they didn’t want to be a single mom or were having relationship problems.
About a third said they didn’t want any more kids; 25 percent said they didn’t want people to know they had sex or got pregnant; 32 percent said they weren’t ready for a child; and 22 percent didn’t feel mature enough to raise children. More than half of those seeking abortion have had at least one previous birth.
Pro-Abortion Claim:Minors are too young for the responsibilities of parenthood.
Why It’s Wrong: About 3 percent of females who get abortions are younger than 18, and 8 percent are 18 to 19 years old. Parents of minors should teach their children about the consequences of sex, the benefits of abstinence, and the limitations of contraception, among other things: Sex can lead to pregnancy and if it does the unborn child should not be killed. Accepting truths that you don’t like is part of maturity and sex should be reserved for mature people ready to care for a child.
Pro-Abortion Claim:If abortion were made legal only in cases of rape or incest, women would lie.
Why It’s Wrong: The court system could settle the truth of their claims and more reporting of rape and incest would help bring perpetrators to justice.
Pro-Abortion Claim: Abortion is safer than continuing a pregnancy to term.
Why It’s Wrong: Even if abortion is safer than pregnancy, that doesn’t make it right. But with modern medicine, the death risks for both abortion and pregnancy are low.
Pro-Abortion Claim: It would be better for abnormal fetuses to be aborted than live with poor health or a disability.
Why It’s Wrong: In the case of the small minority of fetuses with a potentially life-threatening abnormality, a natural death may result, but, if not, the child should be given the benefit of the doubt, not be killed. It’s wrong to kill disabled people for their disabilities.
Pro-Abortion Claim: If abortion were outlawed, women would just get riskier, dangerous abortions.
Why It’s Wrong: People break other laws with repercussions too, but we don’t avoid that outcome by not making those laws. Plus, outlawing abortion would save millions of unborn babies’ lives.
It is difficult to know the number of abortions resulting in death before abortion was legalized, because many illegal abortions went unreported. Education is the best alternative, so that women know the risks of trying to get an abortion illegally, how to effectively use birth control, and how they can receive assistance as mothers.
Pro-Abortion Claim:The right to an abortion has led to a more prosperous societyas women have continued in their careers and low-income couples have not been burdened with an additional expense. Abortion has reduced the child abuse and crime that arise from unwanted children.
Why It’s Wrong: Abortion has been bad for our society, as it devalues human life and the fulfillment that only family and children, not a job, can provide. If women want to put careers first or can’t afford children, they should practice abstinence or correctly use birth control and accept the consequences if those fail.
If women are poor and do have children, the government provides assistance. Adoption is also a better option than killing an unborn child. Many loving, screened, financially stable parents are waiting to adopt babies.
As for whether studies prove that abortion has reduced crime or abuse, this is a dangerous line of argument. Should we abort babies of certain groups more likely to be criminals?
Pro-Abortion Claim:A woman has a right to privacy, as recognized by the Supreme Court, and to make her own decisions about her life and happiness.
Why It’s Wrong:Roe v. Wade continues to be so strongly resisted because it was deeply legally flawed.
In the majority opinion in Roe, Justice Blackmun acknowledged that “the Constitution does not explicitly mention any right of privacy,” and thus abortion, but that a number of prior court decisions have found “a guarantee of certain areas or zones of privacy” grounded in the First, Fifth, and particularly the Ninth and 14th Amendments.
The latter reads, “No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” The Ninth Amendment states, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.”
The legal arguments are lengthy, but the short version is that the constitutional right to liberty simply does not grant the right to kill another person, and an unborn child is a person. The Constitution does not explicitly guarantee a right to privacy or, by extension, abortion. The Supreme Court has been gravely wrong before (such as with racist rulings in Dred Scott v. Sandford and Plessy v. Ferguson).
Abortion is a deeply divisive issue, and about half of Americans consider themselves pro-life and half call themselves pro-choice. Overturning Roe would not end abortion rights but return the issue to the states, allowing for a more democratic process.
Hallmark actress and “Fuller House” Candace Cameron Bure clarified that she is not opposed to vaccinations, but believes that everyone should have access to accurate information and the freedom to make an informed decision.
Instead, she stated in an Instagram post on Thursday that she is “pro-informed consent,” “pro-immune system,” “pro-early intervention,” and “pro-sunlight, exercise, real food, & vitamins.”
On Friday, she reportedly posted a meme for her five million followers to see. Her caption is as follows:
“This. This is not about what I am against. This is what I am FOR. Read and understand the distinction. This mama is holding the line and standing up for freedom. This should not separate us. We can have different opinions and still respect and love one another. Be bigger than that!”
The repost by Bure, a mother of three grown children, sparked a heated discussion online. Her “Fuller House” father, Bob Saget, and fellow Hallmark actors Lacey Chabert, Danica McKellar, Katharine McPhee, and Alexa PenaVega were among the more than 356,000 people who had liked her message as of Friday afternoon. Several of her supporters complimented her in the post’s comments.
Although she got a lot of support, many of the comments were unfavorable, albeit they weren’t all nasty. Men and women questioned her on many topics, including abortion and the right of women to make their own health-care decisions. They shared anecdotes of loved ones who had died with COVID-19 and bemoaned the fact that none of the solutions outlined in Bure’s post could have spared them.
When asked about her vaccination status by Page Six, Bure reportedly said no. However, she has already expressed her displeasure with vaccine mandates.
A separate Bure post, published in July, also drew a lot of attention. The pious Christian celeb uploaded a TikTok video to the provocative lyrics of Lana Del Rey’s sensuous song “Jealous Girl.”
“When they don’t know the power of the Holy Spirit” Bure captioned the video while holding up a Bible. To further expand her reach, she posted the video to her 5 million-strong Instagram following in addition to TikTok. Her followers, however, seemed to have missed her point. Thus, she subsequently apologized and took the video down.
“I was using a very specific clip from TikTok and applying it to the power of the Holy Spirit, which is incredible,” she explained. “And so many of you thought that I was trying to be seductive, which clearly means I’m not a very good actress because I was trying to be strong, not sexy or seductive.”
She went on to say that the clip was inspired by her daughter Natasha, who had earlier posted her own take on the TikTok craze. In her apology, Bure also acknowledged that maybe she was attempting to be “too cool” or “relevant in a Biblical way,” but it didn’t work.
It’s reportedly still up on TikTok, even though the actress took it down from Instagram.
But while Yahoo notes that the critical comments on Bure’s Instagram post are “playing out across the country,” citing a New York Times report of 700,000 deaths from the coronavirus, nearly two-thirds of which were fully vaccinated, the same mainstream media outlet incorrectly reported that “nearly 900,000 children have been hospitalized with Covid-19 since the pandemic began, and about 520 have died.”
According to The Federalist, the story was bolstered by hundreds of blue checkmarks on Twitter. The NYT subsequently changed the article’s wording one day after publishing to state that “63,000 children were hospitalized with Covid-19 from August 2020 to October 2021, and at least 520 have died.”
In other words, there are now 837,500 fewer critically ill children than was originally stated in the article in question, The Federalist remarked.
The supply chain crunch is starting to threaten holiday shoppers’ wishlists, said financial experts this week.
“There will definitely be weeping children this holiday season,” Joel Bines, the co-head of AlixPartners’ retail consulting practice, told the Financial Times. “Black Friday doesn’t exist; the holiday season doesn’t exist, not as it used to,” he said, adding that the “most in-demand” items will be in short supply due to disruptions.
For months now, supply chains have been slowed down due to shipping bottlenecks and labor shortages in key industries, causing delays. Some analysts expressed concerns that the supply crunch could lead to higher inflation.
As of late Sunday, there were about 60 vessels waiting to offload outside the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Meanwhile, dual energy crises in mainland China and parts of Europe have also triggered shipping slowdowns, analysts have noted.
Per Hong, senior partner at consulting firm Kearney, told CNBC that several Apple Inc. suppliers have suspended operations at their factories in mainland China. And it’s not just Apple products, but the whole electronics industry that will see disruptions.
“While likely to normalize in the longer term, in the immediate near term these power restrictions and production cuts in China we are observing are likely to lead to export price hikes, worsening inflation into the holiday season,” Hong said, noting items such as toys and textiles are also likely to be impacted.
Gareth Leather, senior Asia economist at Capital Economics, added to the news outlet that factory shutdowns and worker shortages in Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries will create “significant short-term disruption.”
Overall, “there will be some shortages on specific products over the holiday season,” Seckin Ozkul, from the University of South Florida’s Supply Chain Innovation Lab, said in a recent interview. “So, if consumers know what they want to buy for their loved ones for the holiday season, now is a good time to act on it.”
Savita Subramanian of Merrill Lynch Japan Equity and Quantitative Strategy Responsibility told Reuters that a potential holiday shortage is connected to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“COVID-related supply chain problems extend beyond consumer goods, and it’s easy to find long-term signs of global friction,” Subramanian said in reference to stocking items on shelves early enough.
And as a result, some retailers are trying to keep shelves stocked early during the holiday season.
“We already had Halloween early,” said Lowe’s CFO David Denton, according to RetailDive. “If we look at the Christmas holiday, that is coming in earlier than we originally planned last year.”
While the federal government and the Democratic Party are continuing to target Donald Trump’s supporters and allies over the 6 January protests, cracks have started to appear in their “insurrection” narrative. Investigative journalist Jason Goodman believes the prosecution’s case would have collapsed if the incident were investigated properly.
The Democratic-led January 6th Select Committee on 7 October subpoenaed Ali Alexander, the Stop the Steal organiser, and fellow Trumper Nathan Martin in a bid to get to the bottom of what it dubbed the Capitol “insurrection.”
A few weeks earlier, the committee announced subpoenas for 15 people connected to former President Donald Trump, including four allies: former adviser Steve Bannon, former chief of staff Mark Meadows, former communications aide Dan Scavino, and ex-Defence Department official Kashyap Patel.
Ex-Vice President Mike Pence expressed scepticism about the Dems and mainstream media’s zealousness in inquiring about the 6 January incident. “I know the media wants to distract from the Biden administration’s failed agenda by focusing on one day in January,” the former VP told Fox News on Monday.
What exactly gives Congress the legal authority to subpoena private citizens about their political protests???
If they committed crimes, that should be/is being investigated by DOJ/FBI. What gives Congress the power to summon citizens for these political interrogations? https://t.co/Cr2bhtWbtX
The Senate GOP blocked the formation of the commission on the 6 January protests in May 2021 justifying its decision by saying that US government agencies and two Senate committees were already investigating the matter. In contrast, the Democratic Party launched a House Select Committee on the 6 January attack on 1 July bringing just two Republicans aboard, Reps. Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger.
Insurrection Without Insurrectionists?
Meanwhile, acting US Attorney for the District of Columbia Channing Phillips, who replaced Michael Sherwin as the prosecutor in charge of the Capitol breach probe, is continuing the government’s charging spree against 6 January protesters. On 8 October, the Insider published a searchable database of all 671 people charged in the DC incident by that time. None of them have been charged with “insurrection.”
“The FBI, Congress, the corporate controlled mainstream press, and other opponents of former President Donald Trump have repeatedly insisted that the events of 6 January 2021, were an attempted insurrection. Despite these claims, not a single individual has been charged with the crime of insurrection,” says Jason Goodman, an American investigative journalist and founder of Crowdsource the Truth, adding that this is just one of many glaring anomalies in the 6 January case.
Either There Was No Conspiracy or FBI is Completely Dysfunctional
On 29 September, The New York Timesreported that an FBI informant marched into the Capitol on 6 January, which to some extent echoed earlier suspicions by Darren Beattie of Revolver News and Fox’s Tucker Carlson about the agency’s role in the unrest.
“A member of the far-right Proud Boys texted his FBI handler during the assault, but maintained the group had no plan in advance to enter the Capitol and disrupt the election certification”, the New York Times wrote. “[T]he records, and information from two people familiar with the matter, suggest that federal law enforcement had a far greater visibility into the assault on the Capitol, even as it was taking place, than was previously known”.While discussing the NYT piece with Carlson, Beattie suggested that there were more FBI assets involved in the Capitol riot than just two informants mentioned by the mainstream newspaper. According to the journalist, the NYT is covering this because the situation is “far worse and there will be many more informants coming to light in the near future.”
Tucker Carlson & @DarrenJBeattie Discuss The Recent NYT Piece Vindicating Tucker Carlson & Revolver News' Reporting On The Presence Of FBI Informants On January 6th
“This poses a pretty severe strategic dilemma for the feds and their apparatchiks in the regime media”, said Beattie. He explained that previously the US mainstream media assumed that the FBI did not have enough information about the allegedly “pre-planned” breach and therefore could not prevent it.
However, the NYT piece revealed that the agency actually had at least a couple of informants in right-wing groups who claimed that there had been no plan in advance to enter the Capitol. This narrative appears to “absolve” the FBI of not doing anything to nip the riot in the bud, according to the journalist.
Still, “the real beauty part about this is that even as this narrative shift protects the downside for the feds… it completely blows up another foundational pillar of the official narrative of 1/6, which is that it was a conspiracy… a pre-planned attack that was set up in advance,” Beattie said. Yet, if it were a pre-planned attack, one would have to explain as to why the FBI did nothing while having informants among the “conspirators,” per the journalist.
“Unresolvable anomalies are to be expected when one engages in deception,” says Goodman. “True statements fit together organically. Lies inevitably lead to these irreconcilable conflicts of logic.”
Apparent Infiltrators in 6 January Crowd
The founder of Crowdsource the Truth, who was in DC during the protests together with Wall Street analyst Charles Ortel, says that there appeared to be a large number of infiltrators in the crowd on 6 January, adding that he has no evidence whether these people worked for the FBI.
Goodman notes that he and Ortel interacted with several individuals wearing Trump hats, carrying Trump flags, and publicly presenting as “Trump supporters”. However, some of them did not appear to be who they claimed, displaying multiple signs of deception in the way they were dressed and in how they acted, according to the journalist. They spoke as if they memorised a script and “seemed disingenuous in our estimation. They may not in fact have been there in support of President Trump as claimed”, Goodman recalls.
The journalist explains that his suspicions are based on instances when individuals non-sympathetic to President Trump deliberately dressed like Trump supporters for unknown purposes. One example is Walter Masterson Jr. who published a video in which he is seen convincing a colleague to disguise himself with a Trump hat and American flag while Masterson does the same.
“Masterston also displayed several news agency logos while stating his intention to deceive legitimate Trump supporters into believing he was a correspondent for a national news agency including Fox and CNN,” the journalist says.
Another supposed imposter is John Earl Sullivan, who appeared on national news, including CNN, and even sold illegally obtained video footage of the shooting of USAF veteran Ashli Babbitt.
“Sullivan was later arrested and charged, but unlike many misdemeanour trespass suspects, Sullivan was not incarcerated in solitary confinement, but rather released from prison while he awaits trial,” Goodman highlights.
According to the journalist, “if the FBI is unable to detect and investigate the numerous anomalies pointed out by Beattie, Carlson, Ortel, [himself], and others, they are either dysfunctionally incompetent or deliberately hiding facts.” “Either possibility is fatal to their viability as a law enforcement agency,” Goodman emphasises.
“If justice prevails, the prosecution’s case will collapse”, the journalist believes.
At present, it is far too soon to determine if that will happen, given that truth, facts, and the law seem to take a back seat to the political motivations of those in charge, Goodman concludes.
Pfizer Lobbyist Appointed to School Board That Sets COVID Policy For Kids
(Tennessee Star) Two Williamson County commissioners have announced their choice to replace Brad Fiscus on the Williamson County School Board, and that person is Franklin resident Josh Brown, who also does top-level work for Pfizer.
Williamson County District Four Commissioners Chad Story and Gregg Lawrence selected Brown against nine other candidates, according to The Tennessean. The remaining commissioners are scheduled to vote on whether to formally appoint Brown to the position at their October 11 meeting.
Brown’s nomination does not come without controversy.
Brown, according to his biography on the California Life Sciences’ website, is a lobbyist. Brown, the website went on to say, currently serves as a national vice president of Pfizer, where he performs state government-relations work.
Gary Humble of the Williamson County-based Tennessee Stands told his supporters in a new column that Brown’s political ties and his lobbying work concern him. Humble said “the process of vetting Brown and the nine other candidates has not been very forthcoming” and that’s a problem, especially during a time of contentious school board politics.
“The process of vetting candidates for the nomination by the committee members has not been very forthcoming. Firstly, the timeline was rushed as the commissioners were uncertain as to exactly when Brad Fiscus would be stepping down from his post,” Humble wrote.
“While the process was in limbo, names of possible replacements were trickling in, but an ongoing list was never presented to the public as to who these candidates might be. It was clear from the beginning that public input was not a primary motivator in making this decision.”
Tennessee Stands, according to its website, calls on state and local officials “to restore our constitutional republic.”
None of the 24 Williamson County Board of Commissioners returned The Tennessee Star’s requests for comment before Friday’s stated deadline. Brown also did not return a request for comment.
Brown was one of five candidates seeking to replace Fiscus who did not return The Star’s requests for comment this week to share their views on COVID-19 mask mandates in schools. Brown also declined to say whether K-12 public schools should teach Critical Race Theory (CRT).
Executives with BioNTech, the vaccine maker collaborating with Pfizer, announced last month they would seek worldwide approval for its COVID-19 vaccine for children between the ages of 5 and 11.