San Francisco temporarily closes In-N-Out Burger due to vaccine defiance
The San Francisco Department of Public Health closed In-N-Out on Oct. 14 because employees were not properly checking for customers’ vaccination documentation, the burger chain said in a statement.
In-N-Out said it properly posted signs of local vaccination requirements but refuses to strictly enforce them.
“We refuse to become the vaccination police for any government,” In-N-Out Chief Legal & Business Officer Arnie Wensinger said. “We fiercely disagree with any government dictate that forces a private company to discriminate against customers who choose to patronize their business.” Source
Florida Registers Nation’s Lowest COVID Case Numbers
Florida is now outperforming every state in the contiguous United States in terms of new COVID-19 cases per capita. And they did it all without a Vax Pass system, widespread business closures, mask mandates, and/or draconian lockdowns.
Outside of Hawaii and select outlying U.S. territories, Florida has the lowest COVID case rate in America.
And it all happened under the leadership of a man who the corporate media and ruling class have taken to labeling “DeathSantis” for his refusal to implement draconian COVID policies, such as mandatory masks, pharmaceutical injection mandates, business closures, and the like. Source
WH Press Secretary Claims Build Back Better Plan Will Not Add to Debt
Reporter: “Does the president still believe that Build Back Better will not add a dime to the national debt?”
Psaki: “Correct. It Won’t.”
Reporter: “Why should Americans believe that?”
Psaki: “Because it won’t.”
Covid Provided Cover for Greatest Transfer of Wealth — Top 1% Now Wealthier than ENTIRE middle class!
After years of declines, America’s middle class now holds a smaller share of U.S. wealth than the top 1%.
The middle 60% of U.S. households by income — a measure economists often use as a definition of the middle class — saw their combined assets drop to 26.6% of national wealth as of June, the lowest in Federal Reserve data going back three decades. For the first time, the super-rich had a bigger share, at 27%. — Bloomberg
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