Today Zhou revealed to the world yet again that he totally doesn’t have a clue:
The sitting president of the United States, advised by the nation's top infectious diseases specialists, doesn't know what is now common knowledge; that vaccinated individuals can still spread Covid-19.
…
"If you seek care at a healthcare facility, you should have a certainty that the people providing that care are protected from Covid and cannot spread it to you," [Zhou] said, explaining the rationale behind forcing healthcare workers and other professionals to get vaccinated or lose their job."
A certainty—really?
The fact is that any person capable of rational reflection realizes that the situation is exactly the reverse: You’re far better off being treated by staff who are unvaxxed, because they’ll know if they have symptoms—unlike the vaxxed, who are now the most likely superspreaders.
This remarkable display came just a week after CDC director Rochelle admitted that the “vaccines'“ cannot prevent transmission.
Let’s Go Brandon!
I injured my leg during the 2020 peak and I called the ER and they said "you don't want to come in here unless you're dying." So I didn't, I dug some old crutches out of the garage and over the following weeks I was able to walk again. Still feels like there is a bone chip or something in my knee, but I still haven't complained about it. So count me as one less ER patient in 2020.
Bad cattitude blog has an excellent piece that ties into this issue. Essentially, one aspect of the jab mandates for hospital employees may be a desire for hospitals to cut staff while preventing them from claiming unemployment benefits. As the piece shows, hospitals-- far from being overwhelmed as the propagandists claim-- are UNDERutilized. 2020 was a *disaster* for hospital finances as many were at 50% capacity or less, the makings of bankruptcy. While utilization came up somewhat in 2021 as people dared to emerge from their hidey holes and have medical procedures done again, the utilization is nowhere near normal levels. As a result, hospitals have been *cutting* staff to maintain profitability and these mass firings coincidentally happen to benefit that bottom line further. (Remember this btw next time you hear hospital staff cry and moan about being overwhelmed-- yeah, go b* to your admin who demand you work at 25-50% less staff).
Highly recommend Bad Cattitude for all things Scamdemic related:
https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/have-hospitals-really-been-overloaded