Sarah Huckabee Body Shots
💣 👉🏻👉🏻👉🏻 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻
© 2021 Forbes Media LLC. All Rights Reserved
Jul 26, 2021,02:28pm EDT|9 406 views
Senior ContributorOpinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
I am a writer, journalist, professor, systems modeler, computational and digital health expert, avocado-eater, and entrepreneur, not always in that order.
Former White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee
[+]
[-]
Sanders wrote an Op-Ed for the Arkansas Democrat Gazette about Covid-19 vaccines entitled, “The reasoning behind getting vaccinated.” (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Getty Images
Well, that’s an interesting way to tell people to get the Covid-19 vaccine.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders just wrote an Op-Ed for the Arkansas Democrat Gazette about Covid-19 vaccines entitled, “The reasoning behind getting vaccinated.” But it didn’t start off with focusing on the scientific, medical, and public health reasons to get vaccinated. It didn’t really address or try to dispel a lot of misinformation and disinformation being spread about the Covid-19 vaccines right now such as claims that the Covid-19 vaccines leapfrogged certain key testing steps, have microchips in them, or turn you into giant magnets. No, it took a rather, shall we say, different approach.
Now if you are wondering, “hmmm, Huckabee Sanders, where have I heard that name before,” she served as White House press secretary under former President and current Mar-A-Lago resident Donald Trump from 2017 to 2019. So you figure she has a way with words.
Speaking of words, Huckabee Sanders promoted her Op-Ed on Twitter with the line “why I decided to get the Trump vaccine”:
Now, the “Trump vaccine” is not a vaccine against Trump or the effects of Trump. Presumable Huckabee Sanders is referring to the Covid-19 vaccines, even though Trump is not a scientist and really had nothing to do with designing the vaccines. It needs to be clear that mRNA vaccines were already being developed well before 2020. As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) states on its website, “Researchers have been studying and working with mRNA vaccines for decades.”
In the Op-Ed, Huckabee Sanders mentioned the word “Trump” 10 times. That’s almost as many times as she used the word “vaccine.” It’s certainly more than the times she used the word “science,” which was once, or “medical,” which was zero, or “health,” which was also zero. Imagine, an Op-Ed about vaccines that used the word “health” as often as it did “hot dog” or “cattywampus.”
Her Op-Ed did start with the line, “A few months ago, I decided to take advantage of President Trump's Operation Warp Speed and get vaccinated.” Of course, if “a few months ago” was after January 20 then it would have been after Trump had left office. She waited all the way until the second line of the Op-Ed to take a dig at the media by saying, “Like many of you, I have had a lot of misinformation thrown at me by politicians and the media during the pandemic.”
Then in the fourth line of her Op-Ed, she brought up Anthony Fauci, MD, the Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). If you recall, Fauci was the one person on Trump’s White House Coronavirus Task Force to publicly question some of Trump’s statements in 2020. Huckabee Sanders didn’t exactly thank Fauci for his service when she wrote: “What I found was simple: Dr. Fauci and the ‘because science says so’ crowd of arrogant, condescending politicians and bureaucrats were wrong about more than their mandates and shutdowns that have inflicted incalculable harm on our people and economy.” Whoa.
Huckabee spent the next four paragraphs criticizing what she deemed the “‘expert’ class” for what she called “baseless fear-mongering” as well as President Joe Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris. OK, what about this getting vaccinated thing mentioned in the headline of the Op-Ed?
Somewhere between a third to halfway through the Op-Ed Huckabee Sanders finally got to the “reasoning behind getting vaccinated” thing by saying, “Based on the advice of my doctor, I determined that the benefits of getting vaccinated outweighed any potential risks.” She added, “I was also reassured after President Trump and his family were vaccinated. If getting vaccinated was safe enough for them, I felt it was safe enough for me.” So rather than “because science says so,” perhaps “because President Trump and his family says so” may be more convincing?
Then the Op-Ed said, “As a candidate for governor, I interact with thousands of Arkansans. Being vaccinated would not only protect me but others as well, particularly those at highest risk.” OK, here’s an important punch line: “not only protect me but others as well.” It is important to remember that your protection against Covid-19 coronavirus depends not only on whether you got vaccinated but whether those around you are vaccinated. The sooner the populations around your can reach herd immunity thresholds, the sooner society can actually “return to normal.”
She did suggest talking to your doctor about the vaccine, which isn’t a bad idea. Assuming that your doctor is a real medical doctor who follows scientific evidence (which is not always the case), listening to your doctor is better than listening to some non-medical TV personality, some politician, or some anonymous Facebook or other social media post.
It’s not clear how much influence Huckabee Sanders’s Op-Ed will have. Will calling the Covid-19 vaccine the Trump vaccine really convince anyone to get vaccinated? A New York Times analysis of survey and vaccine administration data published in mid-April did reveal that states and counties with a greater percentage of people voting for Trump in the 2020 elections also were the most likely to have adults who are vaccine hesitant. And the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor project did find that as of late May 2021, “the unvaccinated group are younger, more likely to identify as Republicans or be Republican-leaning, and more likely to have lower levels of education and lower incomes than the vaccinated population.” So, the Venn Diagram of the unvaccinated, Trump supporters, and Huckabee Sanders may show quite a lot of overlap. However, at the same time, you’ve got to look at what happened to other products that bore the Trump name in the past, such as Trump Steaks, Trump Airlines, Trump: The Game, and Trump University and wonder how much weight the name may really carry.
Some on the Twittersphere questioned what Sanders Huckabee specifically said but wondered whether this was a case of the ends justifying the means. For example, George Conway, one of the founders of the Lincoln Project, tweeted the following:
Others were OK with Huckabee Sanders calling it the Trump vaccine if that’s what it will take to convince people to get vaccinated. For example, here’s what actor Patton Oswalt tweeted:
And what Julia Davis, a columnist for The Daily Beast offered:
But, of course, calling the Covid-19 vaccines the Trump vaccines could have other consequences:
One of the biggest tragedies of 2020, aside from the deaths caused by the Covid-19 coronavirus, has been the politicization of the pandemic and Covid-19 response measures. Who knows how many lives could have been saved and how much suffering could have been alleviated had political leaders and others just listened to real scientific, medical, and public health experts? Countries like Taiwan, South Korea, and New Zealand fared much better than the U.S. because they let scientists and science guide the response. The continuing devaluing of science and scientists in the U.S. doesn’t bode well for a country that was originally built using science. And it will take much more than what Huckabee Sanders wrote to vaccinate against that spreading plague.
I am a writer, journalist, professor, systems modeler, computational and digital health expert, avocado-eater, and entrepreneur, not always in that order. Currently, I am
I am a writer, journalist, professor, systems modeler, computational and digital health expert, avocado-eater, and entrepreneur, not always in that order. Currently, I am a Professor of Health Policy and Management at the City University of New York (CUNY) School of Public Health, Executive Director of PHICOR (@PHICORteam), Professor By Courtesy at the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, and founder and CEO of Symsilico. My previous positions include serving as Executive Director of the Global Obesity Prevention Center (GOPC) at Johns Hopkins University, Associate Professor of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Associate Professor of Medicine and Biomedical Informatics at the University of Pittsburgh, and Senior Manager at Quintiles Transnational, working in biotechnology equity research at Montgomery Securities, and co-founding a biotechnology/bioinformatics company. My work has included developing computational approaches, models, and tools to help health and healthcare decision makers in all continents (except for Antarctica) and has been supported by a wide variety of sponsors such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the NIH, AHRQ, CDC, UNICEF, USAID and the Global Fund. I have authored over 200 scientific publications and three books. Follow me on Twitter (@bruce_y_lee) but don’t ask me if I know martial arts.
Avy Scott And Lex Steele Porn Video
Bbw Huge Milking Breasts
Gallery Dp Porno Sex Photo
Queen Anal Com
Lesbian Elder Feet
Sarah Huckabee Sanders urges people to get the ‘Trump vaccine’
Sarah Huckabee Sanders Calls Covid-19 Vaccine The ‘Trump ...
Sarah Huckabee Sanders Photos and Premium High Res ...
Sarah Huckabee Sanders Boasts of 'Trump Vaccine,' Claiming ...
Did Sarah Huckabee Sanders have Plastic Surgery? Body ...
Sarah Huckabee Sanders Pens Op-Ed Urging Vaccinations ...
Did Sarah Huckabee Sanders have Plastic Surgery? Body ...
Sarah Huckabee Sanders Plastic Surgery - Body Measurements ...
Sarah Huckabee Sanders urges people to get the ‘Trump vaccine’
Sarah Huckabee Body Shots