Special Forces Will Simulate An Insurgency On U.S. Soil In Upcoming Unconventional Warfare Exercise
Robin Sage exercises held in the Carolinas prepare Green Berets for the complex missions they will be called upon to accomplish when deployed.
www.thedrive.com
️ Coffee & Covid ☙ Friday, January 14, 2022 ☙ DOUBLE DECISIONS
"? Update on Dan Pisano’s case. The Hospital filed its brief yesterday by its 10am deadline. That gave us till 3pm today to draft and file our Reply, at which time the case will be fully briefed. I’ve been buried in drafting, which is why I didn’t notice the two Big Decisions come down until my email and texts began blowing up yesterday.Since I’m still working furiously to save Dan’s life, I’m going to keep today’s post focused just on the decisions, since I know everyone wants to hear about my first impressions. I have thoughts."
Then he gives his thoughts about the two SC cases, noting that each decision sort of balanced the other so that nobody would be too happy or too pissed.
Then:
A LITTLE “I TOLD YOU SO”
Regular readers will recall that when I predicted that the Court would uphold the CMS Mandate, it would rely on the fact that hospitals have already been requiring healthcare workers to take influenza vaccines. Well, this is what the Court said in its CMS opinion:
See? This is the slippery slope in action. We should have pushed back against vaccine mandates in hospitals ten years ago.Vaccination requirements are a common feature of the provision of healthcare in America: Healthcare workers around the country are ordinarily required to be vaccinated for diseases such as hepatitis B, influenza, and measles, mumps, and rubella. As the Secretary explained, these pre-existing state requirements are a major reason the agency has not previously adopted vaccine mandates as a condition of participation.
(But he isn't saying these vaccines are really vaccines.)
He still thinks the Biden administration needs a Covid Win.