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sci / sci.med.cardiology / Re: (Elinore) Praying w/ Michael Ejercito for "much more" (Luke 11:13) Holy Spirit on 06/04/24 ...

Subject: Re: (Elinore) Praying w/ Michael Ejercito for "much more" (Luke 11:13) Holy Spirit on 06/04/24 ...
From: Michael Ejercito
Newsgroups: sci.med.cardiology, alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel, alt.christnet.christianlife
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2024 10:48 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: MEjercit@HotMail.com (Michael Ejercito)
Newsgroups: sci.med.cardiology,alt.bible.prophecy,soc.culture.usa,soc.culture.israel,alt.christnet.christianlife
Subject: Re: (Elinore) Praying w/ Michael Ejercito for "much more" (Luke
11:13) Holy Spirit on 06/04/24 ...
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2024 03:48:43 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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HeartDoc Andrew wrote:
> Michael Ejercito wrote:
>> HeartDoc Andrew, in the Holy Spirit, boldly wrote:
>>> Michael Ejercito wrote:
>>>
>>>> https://www.reddit.com/r/LockdownSkepticism/comments/1d6qawr/in_the_pandemic_we_were_told_to_keep_6_feet_apart/
>>>>
>>>> In the pandemic, we were told to keep 6 feet apart. There’s no science
>>>> to support that.
>>>> In a congressional appearance, infectious-disease expert Anthony S.
>>>> Fauci characterized the recommendation as “an empiric decision that
>>>> wasn’t based on data.”
>>>>
>>>> By Dan Diamond
>>>> June 2, 2024 at 1:00 p.m. EDT
>>>>
>>>> Add to your saved stories
>>>> Save
>>>> The nation’s top mental health official had spent months asking for
>>>> evidence behind the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s social
>>>> distancing guidelines, warning that keeping Americans physically apart
>>>> during the coronavirus pandemic would harm patients, businesses, and
>>>> overall health and wellness.
>>>> Now, Elinore McCance-Katz, the Trump administration’s assistant
>>>> secretary for mental health and substance use, was urging the CDC to
>>>> justify its recommendation that Americans stay six feet apart to avoid
>>>> contracting covid-19 — or get rid of it.
>>>> “I very much hope that CDC will revisit this decision or at least tell
>>>> us that there is more and stronger data to support this rule than what I
>>>> have been able to find online,” McCance-Katz wrote in a June 2020 memo
>>>> submitted to the CDC and other health agency leaders and obtained by The
>>>> Washington Post. “If not, they should pull it back.”
>>>> The CDC would keep its six-foot social distance recommendation in place
>>>> until August 2022, with some modifications as Americans got vaccinated
>>>> against the virus and officials pushed to reopen schools. Now,
>>>> congressional investigators are set Monday to press Anthony S. Fauci,
>>>> the infectious-disease doctor who served as a key coronavirus adviser
>>>> during the Trump and Biden administrations, on why the CDC’s
>>>> recommendation was allowed to shape so much of American life for so
>>>> long, particularly given Fauci and other officials’ recent
>>>> acknowledgments that there was little science behind the six-foot rule
>>>> after all.
>>>>
>>>> Follow Health & wellness
>>>> Follow
>>>> “It sort of just appeared, that six feet is going to be the distance,”
>>>> Fauci testified to Congress in a January closed-door hearing, according
>>>> to a transcribed interview released Friday. Fauci characterized the
>>>> recommendation as “an empiric decision that wasn’t based on data.”
>>>> Francis S. Collins, former director of the National Institutes of
>>>> Health, also privately testified to Congress in January that he was not
>>>> aware of evidence behind the social distancing recommendation, according
>>>> to a transcript released in May.
>>>> Four years later, visible reminders of the six-foot rule remain with us,
>>>> particularly in cities that rushed to adopt the CDC’s guidelines hoping
>>>> to protect residents and keep businesses open. D.C. is dotted with signs
>>>> in stores and schools — even on sidewalks or in government buildings —
>>>> urging people to stand six feet apart.
>>>> Experts agree that social distancing saved lives, particularly early in
>>>> the pandemic when Americans had no protections against a novel virus
>>>> sickening millions of people. One recent paper published by the
>>>> Brookings Institution, a nonpartisan think tank, concludes that behavior
>>>> changes to avoid developing covid-19, followed later by vaccinations,
>>>> prevented about 800,000 deaths. But that achievement came at enormous
>>>> cost, the authors added, with inflexible strategies that weren’t driven
>>>> by evidence.
>>>> “We never did the study about what works,” said Andrew Atkeson, a UCLA
>>>> economist and co-author of the paper, lamenting the lack of evidence
>>>> around the six-foot rule. He warned that persistent frustrations over
>>>> social distancing and other measures might lead Americans to ignore
>>>> public health advice during the next crisis.
>>>> The U.S. distancing measure was particularly stringent, as other
>>>> countries adopted shorter distances; the World Health Organization set a
>>>> distance of one meter, or slightly more than three feet, which experts
>>>> concluded was roughly as effective as the six-foot mark at deterring
>>>> infections, and would have allowed schools to reopen more rapidly.
>>>> The six-foot rule was “probably the single most costly intervention the
>>>> CDC recommended that was consistently applied throughout the pandemic,”
>>>> Scott Gottlieb, former Food and Drug Administration commissioner, wrote
>>>> in his book about the pandemic, “Uncontrolled Spread.”
>>>> It’s still not clear who at the CDC settled on the six-foot distance;
>>>> the agency has repeatedly declined to specify the authors of the
>>>> guidance, which resembled its recommendations on how to avoid
>>>> contracting the flu. A CDC spokesperson credited a team of experts, who
>>>> drew from research such as a 1955 study on respiratory droplets. In his
>>>> book, Gottlieb wrote that the Trump White House pushed back on the CDC’s
>>>> initial recommendation of 10 feet of social distance, saying it would be
>>>> too difficult to implement.
>>>> Perhaps the rule’s biggest impact was on children, despite ample
>>>> evidence they were at relatively low risk of covid-related
>>>> complications. Many schools were unable to accommodate six feet of space
>>>> between students’ desks and forced to rely on virtual education for more
>>>> than a year, said Joseph Allen, a Harvard University expert in
>>>> environmental health, who called in 2020 for schools to adopt three feet
>>>> of social distance.
>>>> “The six-foot rule was really an error that had been propagated for
>>>> several decades, based on a misunderstanding of how particles traveled
>>>> through indoor spaces,” Allen said, adding that health experts often
>>>> wrongly focused on avoiding droplets from infected people rather than
>>>> improving ventilation and filtration inside buildings.
>>>> Social distancing had champions before the pandemic. Bush administration
>>>> officials, working on plans to fight bioterrorism, concluded that social
>>>> distancing could save lives in a health crisis and renewed their calls
>>>> as the coronavirus approached. The idea also took hold when public
>>>> health experts initially believed that the coronavirus was often
>>>> transmitted by droplets expelled by infected people, which could land
>>>> several feet away; the CDC later acknowledged the virus was airborne and
>>>> people could be exposed just by sharing the same air in a room, even if
>>>> they were farther than six feet apart.
>>>> “There was no magic around six feet,” Robert R. Redfield, who served as
>>>> CDC director during the Trump administration, told a congressional
>>>> committee in March 2022. “It’s just historically that’s what was used
>>>> for other respiratory pathogens. So that really became the first piece”
>>>> of a strategy to protect Americans in the early days of the virus, he said.
>>>> It also became the standard that states and businesses adopted, with
>>>> swift pressure on holdouts. Lawmakers and workers urged meat processing
>>>> plants, delivery companies and other essential businesses to adopt the
>>>> CDC’s social distancing recommendations as their employees continued
>>>> reporting to work during the pandemic.
>>>> Some business leaders weren’t sure the measures made sense. Jeff Bezos,
>>>> founder of online retail giant Amazon, petitioned the White House in
>>>> March 2020 to consider revising the six-foot recommendation, said Adam
>>>> Boehler, then a senior Trump administration official helping with the
>>>> coronavirus response. At the time, Amazon was facing questions about a
>>>> rising number of infections in its warehouses, and Democratic senators
>>>> were urging the company to adopt social distancing.
>>>> “Bezos called me and asked, is there any real science behind this rule?”
>>>> Boehler said, adding that Bezos pushed on whether Amazon could adopt an
>>>> alternative distance if workers were masked, physically separated by
>>>> dividers or other precautions were taken. “He said … it’s the backbone
>>>> of trying to keep America running here, and when you separate somebody
>>>> five feet versus six feet, it’s a big difference,” Boehler recalled.
>>>> Bezos owns The Washington Post.
>>>> Kelly Nantel, an Amazon spokesperson, confirmed that Bezos called
>>>> Boehler and said the Amazon founder’s focus was the discrepancy between
>>>> the U.S. recommendation and the WHO’s shorter distance. The company soon
>>>> said it would follow the CDC’s six-foot social distancing guidelines in
>>>> its warehouses and later developed technologies to try to enforce those
>>>> guidelines. “We did it globally everywhere because it was the right
>>>> thing to do,” Nantel said.
>>>> Boehler said he spoke with Redfield and Fauci about testing alternatives
>>>> to the six-foot recommendation but that he was not aware of what
>>>> happened to those tests or what they found. Fauci declined to comment.
>>>> Redfield did not respond to requests for comment.
>>>> But challenging the six-foot recommendation, particularly in the
>>>> pandemic’s early days, was seen as politically difficult. Rochelle
>>>> Walensky, then chief of infectious disease at Massachusetts General
>>>> Hospital, argued in a July 2020 email that “if people are masked it is
>>>> quite safe and much more practical to be at 3 feet” in many school settings.
>>>> Five months later, incoming president Joe Biden would tap Walensky as
>>>> his CDC director. Walensky swiftly endorsed the six-foot distance before
>>>> working to loosen it, announcing in March 2021 that elementary school
>>>> students could sit three feet apart if they were masked. Walensky
>>>> declined to comment.
>>>> The most persistent government critic of the social distancing
>>>> guidelines may have been McCance-Katz, who did not respond to requests
>>>> for comment for this article. Trump’s mental health chief had spent
>>>> several years clashing with other Department of Health and Human
>>>> Services officials on various matters and had few internal defenders by
>>>> the time the pandemic arrived, hampering her message. But while her
>>>> pleas failed to move the CDC, her warnings about the risks to mental
>>>> health found an audience with Trump and his allies, who blamed federal
>>>> bureaucrats for the six-foot rule and other measures.
>>>> “What is this nonsense that somehow it’s unsafe to return to school?”
>>>> McCance-Katz said in September 2020 on an HHS podcast, lamenting the
>>>> broader shutdown of American life. “I do think that Americans are smart
>>>> people, and I think that they need to start asking questions about why
>>>> is it this way.”
>>>
>>> In the interim, we are 100% prepared/protected in the "full armor of
>>> GOD" (Ephesians 6:11) which we put on as soon as we use Apostle Paul's
>>> secret (Philippians 4:12). Though masking is less protective, it helps
>>> us avoid the appearance of doing the evil of spreading airborne
>>> pathogens while there are people getting sick because of not being
>>> 100% protected. It is written that we're to "abstain from **all**
>>> appearance of doing evil" (1 Thessalonians 5:22 w/**emphasis**).
>>>
>>> Meanwhile, the only *perfect* (Matt 5:47-8 ) way to eradicate the
>>> COVID-19 virus, thereby saving lives, in the US & elsewhere is by
>>> rapidly (i.e. use the "Rapid COVID-19 Test" ) finding out at any given
>>> moment, including even while on-line, who among us are unwittingly
>>> contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or asymptomatic) in order to
>>> "convince it forward" (John 15:12) for them to call their doctor and
>>> self-quarantine per their doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic.
>>> Thus, we're hoping for the best while preparing for the worse-case
>>> scenario of the Alpha lineage mutations and others like the Omicron,
>>> Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota, Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations
>>> combining via slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like "Deltamicron"
>>> that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no
>>> longer effective.
>>>
>>> Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry (
>>> https://groups.google.com/g/sci.med.cardiology/c/6ZoE95d-VKc/m/14vVZoyOBgAJ
>>> ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.
>>>
>>> So how are you ?
>>
>> I am wonderfully hungry!
>
> While wonderfully hungry in the Holy Spirit, Who causes (Deuteronomy
> 8:3) us to hunger, I note that you, Michael, are rapture ready (Luke
> 17:37 means no COVID just as eagles circling over their food have no
> COVID) and pray (2 Chronicles 7:14) that our Everlasting (Isaiah 9:6)
> Father in Heaven continues to give us "much more" (Luke 11:13) Holy
> Spirit (Galatians 5:22-23) so that we'd have much more of His Help to
> always say/write that we're "wonderfully hungry" in **all** ways
> including especially caring to "convince it forward" (John 15:12) with
> all glory (Psalm112:1) to GOD (aka HaShem, Elohim, Abba, DEO), in
> the name (John 16:23) of LORD Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Amen.
>
> Laus DEO !
>
Thank you for noting that I have no COVID.

Michael

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o In the pandemic, we were told to keep 6 feet apart. There’s no science to suppor

By: Michael Ejercito on Mon, 3 Jun 2024

10Michael Ejercito

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