• (Rajat) Greeting MichaelE on 06/05/22 ...

    From HeartDoc Andrew@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Sun Jun 5 13:16:32 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    http://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2022/05/covid-19-pandemic-restrictions-magnified-discrimination-against-most-marginalized-groups/


    May 31, 2022
    Covid-19: Pandemic restrictions magnified discrimination against most >marginalized groups
    Marginalized groups, including LGBTI+ people, sex workers, people who
    use drugs, and those experiencing homelessness, were disproportionately >impacted by Covid-19 regulations that exposed them to further
    discrimination and human rights abuses, Amnesty International said in a
    new report today assessing the impact of pandemic restrictions across
    the globe.

    Based on an online survey of 54 civil society organizations in 28
    countries, the report documents how an overly punitive approach to the >enforcement of Covid-19 regulations—that saw people fined, arrested and >jailed for non-compliance with public health measures— resulted in
    already marginalized groups facing increased harassment and violence
    from security forces. The approach also left them with reduced access to >essential services including food, healthcare and housing.

    More than two thirds of survey respondents (69%) said that state
    responses to Covid-19 had exacerbated the negative impact of
    pre-existing laws and regulations that criminalized and marginalized the >people they work with. Of these, 90% reported that the communities they
    work with were specifically targeted and/or disproportionately impacted
    when Covid-19 measures were enforced. Among other punitive measures, >organizations reported the widespread use of fines, arrests, cautions, >written warnings and police orders to “move on” or stay away from a
    public place.

    “Though Covid-19 measures may have varied from country to country, >governments’ approaches to tackling the pandemic have had a common
    failing. An overemphasis on using punitive sanctions against people for >non-compliance with regulations, rather than supporting them to better >comply, had a grossly disproportionate effect on those who already faced >systematic discrimination,” said Rajat Khosla, Amnesty International’s
    Senior Director of Policy.

    People who lost their livelihoods overnight and people experiencing >homelessness were criminalized for not adhering to Covid-19 measures,
    rather than being supported to access housing or other essentials

    Rajat Khosla, Amnesty International’s Senior Director of Policy
    “When governments use punitive approaches to enforce public health
    measures, it simply makes it harder to comply. People who lost their >livelihoods overnight and people experiencing homelessness were
    criminalized for not adhering to Covid-19 measures, rather than being >supported to access housing or other essentials.

    “This short-sightedness left these groups at the mercy of violent and >discriminatory policing and drove people to take riskier decisions to
    meet their basic needs, resulting in preventable illness, deaths and a
    wide array of human rights abuses.”

    Punitive policing

    Groups who were already over-policed before the pandemic have
    experienced discrimination, unlawful use of force and arbitrary
    detentions by security forces.

    The overarching majority (71%) of the 54 organizations who responded to >Amnesty International’s survey stated that people from the communities
    they work with, including sex workers, people who use drugs, LGBTI
    people and people in need of abortion, were punished for breaching
    Covid-19 measures.

    According to the Mexican human rights organization Elementa, the
    country’s punitive “war on drugs” has enabled police forces to target
    people who use or possess drugs through the enforcement of Covid-19
    related measures. In an alarming case that sparked widespread protests,
    a construction worker, who at the time was under the influence of drugs,
    was arrested in the western state of Jalisco, allegedly for not wearing
    a face mask. He died in police custody days later. His body was covered
    in bruises and he had a bullet wound in his leg.

    In Belize, Indonesia, Mexico Nigeria, Uganda, the Philippines, Tanzania,
    and UK, civil society organizations working on issues including LGBTI
    rights, drug policy reform, the rights of sex workers and ending >homelessness, have reported that marginalized communities have seen an >increase in surveillance and harassment from law enforcement and have
    been disproportionately affected by arrests, fines and detentions during
    the pandemic.

    In Argentina, a sex worker-led organization reported police violence
    against transgender sex workers, including “beatings, searches and
    arbitrary detentions” and that sex workers were harassed by police “for >quarantine violations when they went to the supermarket or the
    neighbourhood pharmacy.”

    Stigma and barriers to social protection, health and adequate housing

    States’ reliance on punitive Covid-19 measures have also created
    additional obstacles to accessing essential services and support,
    especially for people experiencing poverty and systemic discrimination. >Marginalized groups were often blamed, including by public officials,
    for breaching Covid-19 regulations and for spreading the virus. This
    has, in turn, fuelled violence against marginalized groups and
    discouraged them from seeking medical care because they fear being
    arrested, detained or judged.

    Although many governments adopted some form of social protection
    measures, countries failed to consider the social and economic realities
    in which they were implemented, and rarely provided comprehensive
    support for the most marginalized communities.

    Among those disproportionately impacted were people working in the
    informal sector or in insecure employment. In Nepal, many Dalits who
    live below the poverty line and rely on daily wages, faced extreme debt
    and hunger due to the increased challenges of the pandemic.

    Organizations also reported that stigma towards LGBTI people, for
    example, resulted in their exclusion from state and municipal food
    donations and crisis centres in countries including Indonesia and Zambia.

    Rather than relying on punitive measures that places all the
    responsibility and blame on individuals who already faced systematic >discrimination, governments should have focused on protecting human
    rights for all

    Rajat Khosla
    Covid-19 measures further had a negative impact on the provision of
    essential health services. In particular, access to community-run
    services and outreach projects aimed at marginalized individuals became >severely restricted or completely unavailable as health systems pivoted
    their attention to respond to Covid-19. In Canada, medical clinics run
    in partnership with health authorities at sex worker outreach projects
    were cancelled. Similar concerns were reported regarding widespread
    closures of community-run health clinics in East African countries.

    In some countries, the Covid-19 pandemic was exploited to further
    restrict access to essential health services, such as harm reduction
    services and abortion. In India, the organization Hidden Pockets
    Collective, which advocates for sexual and reproductive rights, reported
    that the government initially failed to recognize abortion as an
    essential health service; as a result, service providers told women that >abortions were “not essential” and should not happen in a pandemic. The >stigma related to abortion also meant women felt unable to tell police
    why they were leaving their homes for healthcare during lockdown.

    “Rather than relying on punitive measures that places all the
    responsibility and blame on individuals who already faced systematic >discrimination, governments should have focused on protecting human
    rights for all and ensuring that marginalized communities have access to >universal healthcare and essential services for their protection,” said
    Rajat Khosla.

    “This is a crucial lesson that governments must take into account while >negotiating a treaty to improve pandemic prevention, preparedness and >response under the auspices of the WHO. Putting human rights at the
    heart of government efforts to address public health emergency responses
    is not an optional consideration, it is an obligation.”


    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    the U.S. & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19 )
    finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage
    mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?









    ...because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,

    HeartDoc Andrew <><
    --
    Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
    Cardiologist with an http://bit.ly/EternalMedicalLicense
    2024 & upwards non-partisan candidate for U.S. President: http://WonderfullyHungry.org
    and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrewCare
    which is the only **healthy** cure for the U.S. healthcare crisis

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to HeartDoc Andrew on Sun Jun 5 10:36:27 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    HeartDoc Andrew wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    http://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2022/05/covid-19-pandemic-restrictions-magnified-discrimination-against-most-marginalized-groups/


    May 31, 2022
    Covid-19: Pandemic restrictions magnified discrimination against most
    marginalized groups
    Marginalized groups, including LGBTI+ people, sex workers, people who
    use drugs, and those experiencing homelessness, were disproportionately
    impacted by Covid-19 regulations that exposed them to further
    discrimination and human rights abuses, Amnesty International said in a
    new report today assessing the impact of pandemic restrictions across
    the globe.

    Based on an online survey of 54 civil society organizations in 28
    countries, the report documents how an overly punitive approach to the
    enforcement of Covid-19 regulations—that saw people fined, arrested and
    jailed for non-compliance with public health measures— resulted in
    already marginalized groups facing increased harassment and violence
    from security forces. The approach also left them with reduced access to
    essential services including food, healthcare and housing.

    More than two thirds of survey respondents (69%) said that state
    responses to Covid-19 had exacerbated the negative impact of
    pre-existing laws and regulations that criminalized and marginalized the
    people they work with. Of these, 90% reported that the communities they
    work with were specifically targeted and/or disproportionately impacted
    when Covid-19 measures were enforced. Among other punitive measures,
    organizations reported the widespread use of fines, arrests, cautions,
    written warnings and police orders to “move on” or stay away from a
    public place.

    “Though Covid-19 measures may have varied from country to country,
    governments’ approaches to tackling the pandemic have had a common
    failing. An overemphasis on using punitive sanctions against people for
    non-compliance with regulations, rather than supporting them to better
    comply, had a grossly disproportionate effect on those who already faced
    systematic discrimination,” said Rajat Khosla, Amnesty International’s >> Senior Director of Policy.

    People who lost their livelihoods overnight and people experiencing
    homelessness were criminalized for not adhering to Covid-19 measures,
    rather than being supported to access housing or other essentials

    Rajat Khosla, Amnesty International’s Senior Director of Policy
    “When governments use punitive approaches to enforce public health
    measures, it simply makes it harder to comply. People who lost their
    livelihoods overnight and people experiencing homelessness were
    criminalized for not adhering to Covid-19 measures, rather than being
    supported to access housing or other essentials.

    “This short-sightedness left these groups at the mercy of violent and
    discriminatory policing and drove people to take riskier decisions to
    meet their basic needs, resulting in preventable illness, deaths and a
    wide array of human rights abuses.”

    Punitive policing

    Groups who were already over-policed before the pandemic have
    experienced discrimination, unlawful use of force and arbitrary
    detentions by security forces.

    The overarching majority (71%) of the 54 organizations who responded to
    Amnesty International’s survey stated that people from the communities
    they work with, including sex workers, people who use drugs, LGBTI
    people and people in need of abortion, were punished for breaching
    Covid-19 measures.

    According to the Mexican human rights organization Elementa, the
    country’s punitive “war on drugs” has enabled police forces to target >> people who use or possess drugs through the enforcement of Covid-19
    related measures. In an alarming case that sparked widespread protests,
    a construction worker, who at the time was under the influence of drugs,
    was arrested in the western state of Jalisco, allegedly for not wearing
    a face mask. He died in police custody days later. His body was covered
    in bruises and he had a bullet wound in his leg.

    In Belize, Indonesia, Mexico Nigeria, Uganda, the Philippines, Tanzania,
    and UK, civil society organizations working on issues including LGBTI
    rights, drug policy reform, the rights of sex workers and ending
    homelessness, have reported that marginalized communities have seen an
    increase in surveillance and harassment from law enforcement and have
    been disproportionately affected by arrests, fines and detentions during
    the pandemic.

    In Argentina, a sex worker-led organization reported police violence
    against transgender sex workers, including “beatings, searches and
    arbitrary detentions” and that sex workers were harassed by police “for >> quarantine violations when they went to the supermarket or the
    neighbourhood pharmacy.”

    Stigma and barriers to social protection, health and adequate housing

    States’ reliance on punitive Covid-19 measures have also created
    additional obstacles to accessing essential services and support,
    especially for people experiencing poverty and systemic discrimination.
    Marginalized groups were often blamed, including by public officials,
    for breaching Covid-19 regulations and for spreading the virus. This
    has, in turn, fuelled violence against marginalized groups and
    discouraged them from seeking medical care because they fear being
    arrested, detained or judged.

    Although many governments adopted some form of social protection
    measures, countries failed to consider the social and economic realities
    in which they were implemented, and rarely provided comprehensive
    support for the most marginalized communities.

    Among those disproportionately impacted were people working in the
    informal sector or in insecure employment. In Nepal, many Dalits who
    live below the poverty line and rely on daily wages, faced extreme debt
    and hunger due to the increased challenges of the pandemic.

    Organizations also reported that stigma towards LGBTI people, for
    example, resulted in their exclusion from state and municipal food
    donations and crisis centres in countries including Indonesia and Zambia.

    Rather than relying on punitive measures that places all the
    responsibility and blame on individuals who already faced systematic
    discrimination, governments should have focused on protecting human
    rights for all

    Rajat Khosla
    Covid-19 measures further had a negative impact on the provision of
    essential health services. In particular, access to community-run
    services and outreach projects aimed at marginalized individuals became
    severely restricted or completely unavailable as health systems pivoted
    their attention to respond to Covid-19. In Canada, medical clinics run
    in partnership with health authorities at sex worker outreach projects
    were cancelled. Similar concerns were reported regarding widespread
    closures of community-run health clinics in East African countries.

    In some countries, the Covid-19 pandemic was exploited to further
    restrict access to essential health services, such as harm reduction
    services and abortion. In India, the organization Hidden Pockets
    Collective, which advocates for sexual and reproductive rights, reported
    that the government initially failed to recognize abortion as an
    essential health service; as a result, service providers told women that
    abortions were “not essential” and should not happen in a pandemic. The >> stigma related to abortion also meant women felt unable to tell police
    why they were leaving their homes for healthcare during lockdown.

    “Rather than relying on punitive measures that places all the
    responsibility and blame on individuals who already faced systematic
    discrimination, governments should have focused on protecting human
    rights for all and ensuring that marginalized communities have access to
    universal healthcare and essential services for their protection,” said
    Rajat Khosla.

    “This is a crucial lesson that governments must take into account while
    negotiating a treaty to improve pandemic prevention, preparedness and
    response under the auspices of the WHO. Putting human rights at the
    heart of government efforts to address public health emergency responses
    is not an optional consideration, it is an obligation.”


    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    the U.S. & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19 ) finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?
    I am wonderfully hungry!


    Michael

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From HeartDoc Andrew@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Sun Jun 5 17:32:16 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, soc.culture.usa, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Michael Ejercito wrote:
    HeartDoc Andrew, in the Holy Spirit, boldly wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    http://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2022/05/covid-19-pandemic-restrictions-magnified-discrimination-against-most-marginalized-groups/


    May 31, 2022
    Covid-19: Pandemic restrictions magnified discrimination against most
    marginalized groups
    Marginalized groups, including LGBTI+ people, sex workers, people who
    use drugs, and those experiencing homelessness, were disproportionately
    impacted by Covid-19 regulations that exposed them to further
    discrimination and human rights abuses, Amnesty International said in a
    new report today assessing the impact of pandemic restrictions across
    the globe.

    Based on an online survey of 54 civil society organizations in 28
    countries, the report documents how an overly punitive approach to the
    enforcement of Covid-19 regulations—that saw people fined, arrested and
    jailed for non-compliance with public health measures— resulted in
    already marginalized groups facing increased harassment and violence >>>from security forces. The approach also left them with reduced access to
    essential services including food, healthcare and housing.

    More than two thirds of survey respondents (69%) said that state
    responses to Covid-19 had exacerbated the negative impact of
    pre-existing laws and regulations that criminalized and marginalized the >>> people they work with. Of these, 90% reported that the communities they
    work with were specifically targeted and/or disproportionately impacted
    when Covid-19 measures were enforced. Among other punitive measures,
    organizations reported the widespread use of fines, arrests, cautions,
    written warnings and police orders to “move on” or stay away from a
    public place.

    “Though Covid-19 measures may have varied from country to country,
    governments’ approaches to tackling the pandemic have had a common
    failing. An overemphasis on using punitive sanctions against people for
    non-compliance with regulations, rather than supporting them to better
    comply, had a grossly disproportionate effect on those who already faced >>> systematic discrimination,” said Rajat Khosla, Amnesty International’s
    Senior Director of Policy.

    People who lost their livelihoods overnight and people experiencing
    homelessness were criminalized for not adhering to Covid-19 measures,
    rather than being supported to access housing or other essentials

    Rajat Khosla, Amnesty International’s Senior Director of Policy
    “When governments use punitive approaches to enforce public health
    measures, it simply makes it harder to comply. People who lost their
    livelihoods overnight and people experiencing homelessness were
    criminalized for not adhering to Covid-19 measures, rather than being
    supported to access housing or other essentials.

    “This short-sightedness left these groups at the mercy of violent and
    discriminatory policing and drove people to take riskier decisions to
    meet their basic needs, resulting in preventable illness, deaths and a
    wide array of human rights abuses.”

    Punitive policing

    Groups who were already over-policed before the pandemic have
    experienced discrimination, unlawful use of force and arbitrary
    detentions by security forces.

    The overarching majority (71%) of the 54 organizations who responded to
    Amnesty International’s survey stated that people from the communities
    they work with, including sex workers, people who use drugs, LGBTI
    people and people in need of abortion, were punished for breaching
    Covid-19 measures.

    According to the Mexican human rights organization Elementa, the
    country’s punitive “war on drugs” has enabled police forces to target
    people who use or possess drugs through the enforcement of Covid-19
    related measures. In an alarming case that sparked widespread protests,
    a construction worker, who at the time was under the influence of drugs, >>> was arrested in the western state of Jalisco, allegedly for not wearing
    a face mask. He died in police custody days later. His body was covered
    in bruises and he had a bullet wound in his leg.

    In Belize, Indonesia, Mexico Nigeria, Uganda, the Philippines, Tanzania, >>> and UK, civil society organizations working on issues including LGBTI
    rights, drug policy reform, the rights of sex workers and ending
    homelessness, have reported that marginalized communities have seen an
    increase in surveillance and harassment from law enforcement and have
    been disproportionately affected by arrests, fines and detentions during >>> the pandemic.

    In Argentina, a sex worker-led organization reported police violence
    against transgender sex workers, including “beatings, searches and
    arbitrary detentions” and that sex workers were harassed by police “for
    quarantine violations when they went to the supermarket or the
    neighbourhood pharmacy.”

    Stigma and barriers to social protection, health and adequate housing

    States’ reliance on punitive Covid-19 measures have also created
    additional obstacles to accessing essential services and support,
    especially for people experiencing poverty and systemic discrimination.
    Marginalized groups were often blamed, including by public officials,
    for breaching Covid-19 regulations and for spreading the virus. This
    has, in turn, fuelled violence against marginalized groups and
    discouraged them from seeking medical care because they fear being
    arrested, detained or judged.

    Although many governments adopted some form of social protection
    measures, countries failed to consider the social and economic realities >>> in which they were implemented, and rarely provided comprehensive
    support for the most marginalized communities.

    Among those disproportionately impacted were people working in the
    informal sector or in insecure employment. In Nepal, many Dalits who
    live below the poverty line and rely on daily wages, faced extreme debt
    and hunger due to the increased challenges of the pandemic.

    Organizations also reported that stigma towards LGBTI people, for
    example, resulted in their exclusion from state and municipal food
    donations and crisis centres in countries including Indonesia and Zambia. >>>
    Rather than relying on punitive measures that places all the
    responsibility and blame on individuals who already faced systematic
    discrimination, governments should have focused on protecting human
    rights for all

    Rajat Khosla
    Covid-19 measures further had a negative impact on the provision of
    essential health services. In particular, access to community-run
    services and outreach projects aimed at marginalized individuals became
    severely restricted or completely unavailable as health systems pivoted
    their attention to respond to Covid-19. In Canada, medical clinics run
    in partnership with health authorities at sex worker outreach projects
    were cancelled. Similar concerns were reported regarding widespread
    closures of community-run health clinics in East African countries.

    In some countries, the Covid-19 pandemic was exploited to further
    restrict access to essential health services, such as harm reduction
    services and abortion. In India, the organization Hidden Pockets
    Collective, which advocates for sexual and reproductive rights, reported >>> that the government initially failed to recognize abortion as an
    essential health service; as a result, service providers told women that >>> abortions were “not essential” and should not happen in a pandemic. The
    stigma related to abortion also meant women felt unable to tell police
    why they were leaving their homes for healthcare during lockdown.

    “Rather than relying on punitive measures that places all the
    responsibility and blame on individuals who already faced systematic
    discrimination, governments should have focused on protecting human
    rights for all and ensuring that marginalized communities have access to >>> universal healthcare and essential services for their protection,” said
    Rajat Khosla.

    “This is a crucial lesson that governments must take into account while
    negotiating a treaty to improve pandemic prevention, preparedness and
    response under the auspices of the WHO. Putting human rights at the
    heart of government efforts to address public health emergency responses >>> is not an optional consideration, it is an obligation.”


    The only *healthy* way to stop the pandemic, thereby saving lives, in
    the U.S. & elsewhere is by rapidly ( http://bit.ly/RapidTestCOVID-19 )
    finding out at any given moment, including even while on-line, who
    among us are unwittingly contagious (i.e pre-symptomatic or
    asymptomatic) in order to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John
    15:12) for them to call their doctor and self-quarantine per their
    doctor in hopes of stopping this pandemic. Thus, we're hoping for the
    best while preparing for the worse-case scenario of the Alpha lineage
    mutations and others like the Omicron, Gamma, Beta, Epsilon, Iota,
    Lambda, Mu & Delta lineage mutations combining via
    slip-RNA-replication to form hybrids like
    http://tinyurl.com/Deltamicron that may render current COVID
    vaccines/monoclonals/medicines/pills no longer effective.

    Indeed, I am wonderfully hungry ( http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest
    ) and hope you, Michael, also have a healthy appetite too.

    So how are you ?

    I am wonderfully hungry!

    While wonderfully hungry in the Holy Spirit, Who causes (Deuteronomy
    8:3) us to hunger, I note that you, Michael, are rapture ready (Luke
    17:37 means no COVID just as circling eagles don't have COVID) and
    pray (2 Chronicles 7:14) that our Everlasting (Isaiah 9:6) Father in
    Heaven continues to give us "much more" (Luke 11:13) Holy Spirit
    (Galatians 5:22-23) so that we'd have much more of His Help to always
    say/write that we're "wonderfully hungry" in **all** ways including
    especially caring to http://tinyurl.com/ConvinceItForward (John 15:12
    as shown by http://tinyurl.com/RapidOmicronTest ) with all glory ( http://bit.ly/Psalm112_1 ) to GOD (aka HaShem, Elohim, Abba, DEO), in
    the name (John 16:23) of LORD Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Amen.

    Laus DEO !

    Suggested further reading: https://groups.google.com/g/sci.med.cardiology/c/5EWtT4CwCOg/m/QjNF57xRBAAJ

    Shorter link:
    http://bit.ly/StatCOVID-19Test

    Be hungrier, which really is wonderfully healthier especially for
    diabetics and other heart disease patients:

    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrew touts hunger (Luke 6:21a) with all glory
    ( http://bit.ly/Psalm112_1 ) to GOD, Who causes us to hunger
    (Deuteronomy 8:3) when He blesses us right now (Luke 6:21a) thereby
    removing the http://tinyurl.com/HeartVAT from around the heart

    ...because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,

    HeartDoc Andrew <><
    --
    Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
    Cardiologist with an http://bit.ly/EternalMedicalLicense
    2024 & upwards non-partisan candidate for U.S. President: http://WonderfullyHungry.org
    and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
    http://bit.ly/HeartDocAndrewCare
    which is the only **healthy** cure for the U.S. healthcare crisis

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)