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View Full Version : Flu Shots coming to churches



lapis
6th December 2011, 02:16 PM
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/12/06/flu-shots-come-to-church.aspx?np=true

Story at-a-glance


The CDC and HHS held an “off-the-record, not-for-press-purposes” phone conference with church and community leaders.
They want to administer flu vaccines in churches, synagogues and mosques.
They are encouraging church leaders to “influence” people to get the shots through clinics run by Walgreens, which would send pharmacists out to places of worship to mass-vaccinate people in the church/synagogue/mosque.


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Recently the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, held an invitation-only call.

The call was co-sponsored by the U.S. Health and Human Services, the Office of Minority Health, and CDC.

Conspicuously, the end of the invitation read:

“This call is off the record and is not for press purposes” -- but it became public when it showed up on the HHS website (http://www.hhs.gov/partnerships/resources/newsletter/111411.html).

Fortunately one of our staff was able to get on the call.

The focus of the call was on getting faith-based organizations to sponsor flu clinics with Walgreens.

Basically, they want to move inside your church, mosque or synagogue, and set up shop, with your pastor, priest, imam and rabbi on hand to convince you to get a flu shot.

As an example, they cited a priest who stopped in the middle of mass to roll up his sleeve and get vaccinated, inspiring the rest of his parish to line up behind him.

Talk to God, Get a Shot

The idea of holding out your arm and getting a shot in the middle of a worship service, with your pastoral leader urging you on, really seems to be pushing it. The reason they’re doing this, health officials said on the phone, is that they’ve found that non-traditional settings such as worship services can be highly effective in influencing people’s decisions.

Speaking directly to church leaders, Joshua DuBois, executive director of the White House Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnership, said:

“As trusted messengers, you’re able to spread messages and help get people vaccinated.”

Zeroing in on minorities, particularly older adults, blacks and Latinos, health officials said churches, mosques and schools are places where barriers to vaccinations can be taken down, and these minorities can be convinced to get vaccinated. Besides hosting flu shot clinics, churches can also help by putting reminders in their bulletins, and by church members personally reminding others to get their shots, officials said.

They even went so far as to encourage the churches to pay people’s insurance co-pays so they’d be more inclined to get the shots. For those who simply can’t pay anything, there’ll be 300,000 free shots given out as part of the flu vaccine crusade.

Who's Funding This?

The original concept of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, developed in 2001, was to help community leaders enhance the 1998 Initiative to Eliminate Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health.

The partnership targets cancer screening, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, infant mortality, HIV/AIDS and vaccinations. It also originally covered complementary and alternative health care options, although that type of care, which would include health measures other than vaccines, was not even listed as an option during this phone conference.

For at least 10 years, this collaboration of community-based volunteers, nonprofit organizations and faith-based groups worked at a grassroots level in their respective neighborhoods, funded by Congress through various health care grants.

However, in 2010 the initiative took a turn with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which moved the initiative’s management to the Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, paving the way for the federal government to fund and run projects like flu clinics right in your church.

Interestingly, flu shots were already covered by most insurance plans, Medicare and the Vaccines for Children (VFC) program.

But for some reason health officials have decided it’s OK to push the government into places of worship, mid-service, to sell and administer vaccines – and this no-press-allowed phone call reiterated that over and over again. I can only wonder which vaccine they’ll move into your church next, all in the name of “community health.”

po boy
6th December 2011, 02:29 PM
Dear brothers and sisters we are gathered here today in our 501c3 house of worship on this beautiful SUN worshiping day to thank baal for these monkey puss injections of life!

Please brother and sisters be generous with your tithe of unjust weights and balances as the plate comes around.

Can I get an Amenhotep. lol

keehah
6th December 2011, 02:33 PM
Scary.

mrnhtbr2232
6th December 2011, 02:35 PM
"People of faith" are a two-camp phenomenon best I can tell - those that are on a personal voyage of discovery and those who are sheep led to slaughter. It would seem the latter is in vogue with the dispensaries of poisons.

Twisted Titan
6th December 2011, 02:42 PM
I want to see this set up shop in a synagouge...



I want to see zionists actually roll up their seleve and take it

Old Herb Lady
6th December 2011, 03:14 PM
What percentage of the people would be willing to get the flu shot, I wonder ?

If a person is a Bible-believing Christian they would know what to do & what not to do in that situation.

But the message gets clouded when it gets filtered through a church imo & most people will just do what everbody else is doing. So sad.

Twisted Titan
6th December 2011, 03:19 PM
It never ceases to amaze me no matter how broke the gubbermint is they can always find the money to keep sick or to keep your mind posioned ( remember those Tv vouchers?)

ximmy
6th December 2011, 03:21 PM
"Sheep thought I"
http://www.davidicke.com/oi/extras/09/swineflu/3.jpg

Old Herb Lady
6th December 2011, 03:23 PM
It's probably those new vax: Made in China