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luka

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The life of the soul is deductible, to custom advantage
in reduced exit charge. The sun glistens on water,
leaves shake, these are the rate flotation, unminded
and self-explained. Orthophosphate accessory dis-
charge impulse manifest, the king of heaven on a laid
gold block ‘in the same naskh hand’ utter prostrated.
Rich Tea rich terror primatial for altered sex ratio
impingement, lay your hand now for hybrid one-fit
timid coronal, near reviled hot mass. As they advance
to the screen adjusting brightness ahead and primed up
for secure payment, see germination perplex all along
its imminent disclosure. The inward turn-off select
the hard shoulder like a child in hot ecstatic tedium


 

william_kent

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US Colleges must require vaccination

This week, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted full approval to the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for individuals 16 years and older. This milestone decision, the first full approval of a vaccine for COVID-19, will almost certainly clear a path for businesses, hospitals, and government agencies that have not already done so to adopt vaccine mandates for their employees. For colleges and universities that have been on the fence about requiring the vaccine, the FDA’s decision may be especially welcome news.

As of earlier this week, 753 campuses require the vaccination. According to a map from the Chronicle of Higher Education, most of these schools are in “blue” states. There is no doubt that COVID-19 vaccination has become politicized. Now, with the full FDA approval, there is even less reason for the political hue of a state to deter universities, as citadels of science and reason, from making every attempt to implement vaccine mandates.

It's just an opinion piece, but it does mention that so far "753 campuses require the vaccination"

In late June, eight students filed a lawsuit against Indiana University, alleging that the vaccine mandate violated their constitutional rights by forcing them to receive unwanted medical treatment. The following month, a federal judge decisively rejected this argument on the grounds that students, in fact, do have options—they can get vaccinated, apply for an exemption, or choose to attend another school.
 

wild greens

Well-known member
If you believe his internet he has the rona and that's what the symptoms are, this ivor is his solution?

Strong behaviour for something that's mild flu for 99.9983888% of us but i guess better safe than sorry
 
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mixed_biscuits

_________________________
hmm...miracle cures...how about *any kind of home treatment or preventative therapies at all*...do you really think 'the Science' has come up with zippo of use up to now?

In the spirit of 'let's use vaccines on X demographic because countries A, B and C are doing so':

1630179713374.png
 
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