• 'My body, my choice': How vaccine foes co-opted the abortion rallying c

    From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jul 6 21:03:20 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, talk.abortion, soc.culture.israel

    http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/07/04/1109367458/my-body-my-choice-vaccines


    'My body, my choice': How vaccine foes co-opted the abortion rallying cry
    July 4, 20225:01 AM ET
    RACHEL BLUTH

    FROM
    Kaiser Health News


    Steve Bova (center) traveled from Maryland to Los Angeles with the
    "People's Convoy" to protest covid-19 restrictions. Despite using a
    phrase that originated with the abortion rights movement, he opposes
    abortion.
    Rachel Bluth/Kaiser Health News
    In the shadow of L.A.'s art deco City Hall, musicians jammed onstage,
    kids got their faces painted, and families picnicked on lawn chairs.
    Amid the festivity, people waved flags, sported T-shirts and sold
    buttons — all emblazoned with a familiar slogan: "My Body, My Choice."

    This wasn't an abortion rights rally. It wasn't a protest against the
    recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that gutted Roe v. Wade. It was the
    "Defeat the Mandates Rally," a jubilant gathering of anti-vaccine
    activists in April to protest the few remaining COVID-19 guidelines,
    such as mask mandates on mass transit and vaccination requirements for
    health care workers.

    Similar scenes have played out across the country during the pandemic.
    Armed with the language of the abortion rights movement, anti-vaccine
    forces have converged with right-leaning causes to protest COVID
    precautions.

    KHN logo
    This story was produced in partnership with Kaiser Health News.

    And they're succeeding. Vaccine opponents have appropriated "My Body, My Choice," a slogan that has been inextricably linked to reproductive
    rights for nearly half a century, to fight mask and vaccine mandates
    across the country — including in California, where lawmakers had vowed
    to adopt the toughest vaccine requirements in the U.S.

    As the anti-vaccine contingent has notched successes, the abortion
    rights movement has taken hit after hit, culminating in the June 24
    Supreme Court decision that ended the federal constitutional right to
    abortion. The ruling leaves it up to states to decide, and up to 26
    states are expected to ban or severely limit abortion in the coming months.

    Now that anti-vaccination groups have laid claim to "My Body, My
    Choice," abortion rights groups are distancing themselves from it —
    marking a stunning annexation of political messaging.

    "It's a really savvy co-option of reproductive rights and the movement's framing of the issue," said Lisa Ikemoto, a law professor at the
    University of California-Davis Feminist Research Institute. "It
    strengthens the meaning of choice in the anti-vaccine space and detracts
    from the meaning of that word in the reproductive rights space."

    Sponsor Message

    Framing the decision to vaccinate as a singularly personal one also
    obscures its public health consequences, Ikemoto said, because vaccines
    are used to protect not just one person but a community of people by
    stopping the spread of a disease to those who can't protect themselves.

    Celinda Lake, a Democratic strategist and pollster based in Washington,
    D.C., said "My Body, My Choice" is no longer polling well with Democrats because they associate it with anti-vaccination sentiment.


    The phrase "My Body, My Choice" was ubiquitous at an April rally against vaccine mandates in Los Angeles. The slogan started as an abortion
    rights catchphrase, but has become a favorite of vaccine skeptics.
    Rachel Bluth/Kaiser Health News
    "What's really unique about this is that you don't usually see one
    side's base adopting the message of the other side's base — and
    succeeding," she said. "That's what makes this so fascinating."

    Jodi Hicks, president of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, acknowledged that the appropriation of abortion rights terminology has
    worked against the reproductive rights movement. "In this moment, to
    co-opt that messaging and distract from the work that we're doing, and
    using it to spread misinformation, is frustrating and it's
    disappointing," Hicks said.

    She said the movement was already gravitating away from the phrase. Even
    where abortion is legal, she said, some women can't "choose" to get one
    because of financial or other barriers. The movement is now focusing
    more heavily on access to health care, using catchphrases such as "Bans
    Off Our Bodies" and "Say Abortion," Hicks said.

    Sponsor Message

    The growth of the anti-vaccination movement
    Vaccination hasn't always been this political, said Jennifer Reich, a
    sociology professor at the University of Colorado-Denver, who has
    written a book about why parents refuse vaccines for their kids.
    Opposition to vaccines grew in the 1980s among parents concerned about
    school vaccine requirements. Those parents said they didn't have enough information about vaccines' potential harmful effects, but it wasn't
    partisan at the time, Reich said.

    The issue exploded onto the political scene after a measles outbreak
    tied to Disneyland sickened at least 140 people in 2014 and 2015. When California lawmakers moved to prohibit parents from claiming personal
    belief exemptions for required childhood vaccines, opponents organized
    around the idea of "medical choice" and "medical freedom." Those
    opponents spanned the political spectrum, Reich said.

    The movement against abortion rights is nearing its apex. But it began
    way before Roe
    REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS IN AMERICA
    The history of the anti-abortion movement in the U.S.
    Then came COVID. The Trump administration politicized the pandemic from
    the outset, starting with masks and stay-at-home orders. Republican
    leaders and white evangelicals implemented that strategy on the ground,
    Reich said, arguing against vaccine mandates when COVID vaccines were
    still only theoretical — scaring people with rhetoric about the loss of personal choice and images of vaccine passports.

    They gained traction despite an obvious inconsistency, she said: Often,
    the same people who oppose vaccine requirements — arguing that it's a
    matter of choice — are against abortion rights.

    "What's really changed is that in the last two or so years, it's become
    highly partisan," Reich said.

    Joshua Coleman leads V is for Vaccine, a group that opposes vaccine
    mandates. He said he deploys the phrase strategically depending on what
    state he's working in.

    "In a state or a city that is more pro-life, they're not going to
    connect with that messaging, they don't believe in full bodily
    autonomy," Coleman said.

    But in places like California, he takes his "My Body, My Choice"
    rhetoric where he thinks it will be effective, like the annual Women's
    March, where he says he can sometimes get feminists to consider his perspective.

    Co-opting the slogan
    Perception of the word "choice" has changed over time, said Alyssa Wulf,
    a cognitive linguist based in Oakland, Calif. The word now evokes an
    image of an isolated decision that doesn't affect the broader community,
    she said. It can frame an abortion seeker as self-centered, and a
    vaccine rejector as an individual making a personal health choice, Wulf
    said.

    Beyond linguistics, anti-vaccination activists are playing politics, intentionally trolling the abortion rights groups by using their words
    against them, Wulf said. "I really believe there's a little bit of an
    'eff you' in that," Wulf said. "We're going to take your phrase."

    Tom Blodget, a retired Spanish-language instructor from Chico, Calif.,
    sported a "My Body, My Choice" shirt — complete with an image of a
    cartoon syringe — at the Defeat the Mandates Rally in Los Angeles. It
    was "an ironic thing," he said, meant to expose what he sees as the
    hypocrisy of Democrats who support both abortion and vaccine mandates.
    Blodget said he is "pro-life" and believes that COVID vaccines are not immunizations but a form of gene therapy, which is not true.

    For Blodget, and many other anti-vaccination activists, there is no inconsistency in this position. Abortion is not a personal health
    decision akin to getting a shot, they say: It is simply murder.

    "Women say they can have an abortion because it's their body," Blodget
    said. "If that's a valid thing for a lot of people, why should I have to
    take an injection of some concoction?"

    This 16-year-old wanted to get the COVID vaccine. He had to hide it from
    his parents
    SHOTS - HEALTH NEWS
    This 16-year-old wanted to get the COVID vaccine. He had to hide it from
    his parents
    About a week later and nearly 400 miles to the north in Sacramento,
    state lawmakers heard testimony on bills about abortion and COVID
    vaccines. Two protests, one against abortion and one against vaccine
    mandates, converged. Truckers from the "People's Convoy," a group that
    opposes COVID mandates that had been touring the country with its
    message of "medical freedom," testified against a bill that would stop
    police from investigating miscarriages or stillbirths as murders.
    Anti-abortion activists lined up to oppose a bill that would update
    reporting requirements to the state's vaccine registry.

    "My Body, My Choice" was ubiquitous: Kids petting police horses in front
    of the Capitol wore T-shirts with the slogan, and truckers watching a
    sword dance toted signs above their heads.

    At the time, two tough legislative proposals to mandate COVID vaccines
    for schoolchildren and most workers had already been shelved without a
    vote. One controversial vaccination proposal remained: a bill to allow
    children 12 and older to get COVID vaccines without parental consent.

    Lawmakers have since watered down the measure, raising the minimum age
    to 15, and it awaits crucial votes. They have shifted their attention to
    the latest political earthquake: abortion.

    KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. It is an editorially independent
    operating program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation).

    --
    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 Thu Jul 7 01:21:43 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, talk.abortion, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/07/04/1109367458/my-body-my-choice-vaccines


    'My body, my choice': How vaccine foes co-opted the abortion rallying cry >July 4, 20225:01 AM ET
    RACHEL BLUTH

    FROM
    Kaiser Health News


    Steve Bova (center) traveled from Maryland to Los Angeles with the
    "People's Convoy" to protest covid-19 restrictions. Despite using a
    phrase that originated with the abortion rights movement, he opposes >abortion.
    Rachel Bluth/Kaiser Health News
    In the shadow of L.A.'s art deco City Hall, musicians jammed onstage,
    kids got their faces painted, and families picnicked on lawn chairs.
    Amid the festivity, people waved flags, sported T-shirts and sold
    buttons — all emblazoned with a familiar slogan: "My Body, My Choice."

    This wasn't an abortion rights rally. It wasn't a protest against the
    recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that gutted Roe v. Wade. It was the
    "Defeat the Mandates Rally," a jubilant gathering of anti-vaccine
    activists in April to protest the few remaining COVID-19 guidelines,
    such as mask mandates on mass transit and vaccination requirements for
    health care workers.

    Similar scenes have played out across the country during the pandemic.
    Armed with the language of the abortion rights movement, anti-vaccine
    forces have converged with right-leaning causes to protest COVID
    precautions.

    KHN logo
    This story was produced in partnership with Kaiser Health News.

    And they're succeeding. Vaccine opponents have appropriated "My Body, My >Choice," a slogan that has been inextricably linked to reproductive
    rights for nearly half a century, to fight mask and vaccine mandates
    across the country — including in California, where lawmakers had vowed
    to adopt the toughest vaccine requirements in the U.S.

    As the anti-vaccine contingent has notched successes, the abortion
    rights movement has taken hit after hit, culminating in the June 24
    Supreme Court decision that ended the federal constitutional right to >abortion. The ruling leaves it up to states to decide, and up to 26
    states are expected to ban or severely limit abortion in the coming months.

    Now that anti-vaccination groups have laid claim to "My Body, My
    Choice," abortion rights groups are distancing themselves from it —
    marking a stunning annexation of political messaging.

    "It's a really savvy co-option of reproductive rights and the movement's >framing of the issue," said Lisa Ikemoto, a law professor at the
    University of California-Davis Feminist Research Institute. "It
    strengthens the meaning of choice in the anti-vaccine space and detracts
    from the meaning of that word in the reproductive rights space."

    Sponsor Message

    Framing the decision to vaccinate as a singularly personal one also
    obscures its public health consequences, Ikemoto said, because vaccines
    are used to protect not just one person but a community of people by
    stopping the spread of a disease to those who can't protect themselves.

    Celinda Lake, a Democratic strategist and pollster based in Washington,
    D.C., said "My Body, My Choice" is no longer polling well with Democrats >because they associate it with anti-vaccination sentiment.


    The phrase "My Body, My Choice" was ubiquitous at an April rally against >vaccine mandates in Los Angeles. The slogan started as an abortion
    rights catchphrase, but has become a favorite of vaccine skeptics.
    Rachel Bluth/Kaiser Health News
    "What's really unique about this is that you don't usually see one
    side's base adopting the message of the other side's base — and
    succeeding," she said. "That's what makes this so fascinating."

    Jodi Hicks, president of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, >acknowledged that the appropriation of abortion rights terminology has
    worked against the reproductive rights movement. "In this moment, to
    co-opt that messaging and distract from the work that we're doing, and
    using it to spread misinformation, is frustrating and it's
    disappointing," Hicks said.

    She said the movement was already gravitating away from the phrase. Even >where abortion is legal, she said, some women can't "choose" to get one >because of financial or other barriers. The movement is now focusing
    more heavily on access to health care, using catchphrases such as "Bans
    Off Our Bodies" and "Say Abortion," Hicks said.

    Sponsor Message

    The growth of the anti-vaccination movement
    Vaccination hasn't always been this political, said Jennifer Reich, a >sociology professor at the University of Colorado-Denver, who has
    written a book about why parents refuse vaccines for their kids.
    Opposition to vaccines grew in the 1980s among parents concerned about
    school vaccine requirements. Those parents said they didn't have enough >information about vaccines' potential harmful effects, but it wasn't
    partisan at the time, Reich said.

    The issue exploded onto the political scene after a measles outbreak
    tied to Disneyland sickened at least 140 people in 2014 and 2015. When >California lawmakers moved to prohibit parents from claiming personal
    belief exemptions for required childhood vaccines, opponents organized
    around the idea of "medical choice" and "medical freedom." Those
    opponents spanned the political spectrum, Reich said.

    The movement against abortion rights is nearing its apex. But it began
    way before Roe
    REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS IN AMERICA
    The history of the anti-abortion movement in the U.S.
    Then came COVID. The Trump administration politicized the pandemic from
    the outset, starting with masks and stay-at-home orders. Republican
    leaders and white evangelicals implemented that strategy on the ground,
    Reich said, arguing against vaccine mandates when COVID vaccines were
    still only theoretical — scaring people with rhetoric about the loss of >personal choice and images of vaccine passports.

    They gained traction despite an obvious inconsistency, she said: Often,
    the same people who oppose vaccine requirements — arguing that it's a
    matter of choice — are against abortion rights.

    "What's really changed is that in the last two or so years, it's become >highly partisan," Reich said.

    Joshua Coleman leads V is for Vaccine, a group that opposes vaccine
    mandates. He said he deploys the phrase strategically depending on what
    state he's working in.

    "In a state or a city that is more pro-life, they're not going to
    connect with that messaging, they don't believe in full bodily
    autonomy," Coleman said.

    But in places like California, he takes his "My Body, My Choice"
    rhetoric where he thinks it will be effective, like the annual Women's
    March, where he says he can sometimes get feminists to consider his >perspective.

    Co-opting the slogan
    Perception of the word "choice" has changed over time, said Alyssa Wulf,
    a cognitive linguist based in Oakland, Calif. The word now evokes an
    image of an isolated decision that doesn't affect the broader community,
    she said. It can frame an abortion seeker as self-centered, and a
    vaccine rejector as an individual making a personal health choice, Wulf
    said.

    Beyond linguistics, anti-vaccination activists are playing politics, >intentionally trolling the abortion rights groups by using their words >against them, Wulf said. "I really believe there's a little bit of an
    'eff you' in that," Wulf said. "We're going to take your phrase."

    Tom Blodget, a retired Spanish-language instructor from Chico, Calif., >sported a "My Body, My Choice" shirt — complete with an image of a
    cartoon syringe — at the Defeat the Mandates Rally in Los Angeles. It
    was "an ironic thing," he said, meant to expose what he sees as the
    hypocrisy of Democrats who support both abortion and vaccine mandates. >Blodget said he is "pro-life" and believes that COVID vaccines are not >immunizations but a form of gene therapy, which is not true.

    For Blodget, and many other anti-vaccination activists, there is no >inconsistency in this position. Abortion is not a personal health
    decision akin to getting a shot, they say: It is simply murder.

    "Women say they can have an abortion because it's their body," Blodget
    said. "If that's a valid thing for a lot of people, why should I have to
    take an injection of some concoction?"

    This 16-year-old wanted to get the COVID vaccine. He had to hide it from
    his parents
    SHOTS - HEALTH NEWS
    This 16-year-old wanted to get the COVID vaccine. He had to hide it from
    his parents
    About a week later and nearly 400 miles to the north in Sacramento,
    state lawmakers heard testimony on bills about abortion and COVID
    vaccines. Two protests, one against abortion and one against vaccine >mandates, converged. Truckers from the "People's Convoy," a group that >opposes COVID mandates that had been touring the country with its
    message of "medical freedom," testified against a bill that would stop
    police from investigating miscarriages or stillbirths as murders. >Anti-abortion activists lined up to oppose a bill that would update
    reporting requirements to the state's vaccine registry.

    "My Body, My Choice" was ubiquitous: Kids petting police horses in front
    of the Capitol wore T-shirts with the slogan, and truckers watching a
    sword dance toted signs above their heads.

    At the time, two tough legislative proposals to mandate COVID vaccines
    for schoolchildren and most workers had already been shelved without a
    vote. One controversial vaccination proposal remained: a bill to allow >children 12 and older to get COVID vaccines without parental consent.

    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 Wed Jul 6 23:36:26 2022
    XPost: alt.bible.prophecy, talk.abortion, soc.culture.israel
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    HeartDoc Andrew wrote:
    Michael Ejercito wrote:

    http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/07/04/1109367458/my-body-my-choice-vaccines


    'My body, my choice': How vaccine foes co-opted the abortion rallying cry
    July 4, 20225:01 AM ET
    RACHEL BLUTH

    FROM
    Kaiser Health News


    Steve Bova (center) traveled from Maryland to Los Angeles with the
    "People's Convoy" to protest covid-19 restrictions. Despite using a
    phrase that originated with the abortion rights movement, he opposes
    abortion.
    Rachel Bluth/Kaiser Health News
    In the shadow of L.A.'s art deco City Hall, musicians jammed onstage,
    kids got their faces painted, and families picnicked on lawn chairs.
    Amid the festivity, people waved flags, sported T-shirts and sold
    buttons — all emblazoned with a familiar slogan: "My Body, My Choice."

    This wasn't an abortion rights rally. It wasn't a protest against the
    recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that gutted Roe v. Wade. It was the
    "Defeat the Mandates Rally," a jubilant gathering of anti-vaccine
    activists in April to protest the few remaining COVID-19 guidelines,
    such as mask mandates on mass transit and vaccination requirements for
    health care workers.

    Similar scenes have played out across the country during the pandemic.
    Armed with the language of the abortion rights movement, anti-vaccine
    forces have converged with right-leaning causes to protest COVID
    precautions.

    KHN logo
    This story was produced in partnership with Kaiser Health News.

    And they're succeeding. Vaccine opponents have appropriated "My Body, My
    Choice," a slogan that has been inextricably linked to reproductive
    rights for nearly half a century, to fight mask and vaccine mandates
    across the country — including in California, where lawmakers had vowed
    to adopt the toughest vaccine requirements in the U.S.

    As the anti-vaccine contingent has notched successes, the abortion
    rights movement has taken hit after hit, culminating in the June 24
    Supreme Court decision that ended the federal constitutional right to
    abortion. The ruling leaves it up to states to decide, and up to 26
    states are expected to ban or severely limit abortion in the coming months. >>
    Now that anti-vaccination groups have laid claim to "My Body, My
    Choice," abortion rights groups are distancing themselves from it —
    marking a stunning annexation of political messaging.

    "It's a really savvy co-option of reproductive rights and the movement's
    framing of the issue," said Lisa Ikemoto, a law professor at the
    University of California-Davis Feminist Research Institute. "It
    strengthens the meaning of choice in the anti-vaccine space and detracts >>from the meaning of that word in the reproductive rights space."

    Sponsor Message

    Framing the decision to vaccinate as a singularly personal one also
    obscures its public health consequences, Ikemoto said, because vaccines
    are used to protect not just one person but a community of people by
    stopping the spread of a disease to those who can't protect themselves.

    Celinda Lake, a Democratic strategist and pollster based in Washington,
    D.C., said "My Body, My Choice" is no longer polling well with Democrats
    because they associate it with anti-vaccination sentiment.


    The phrase "My Body, My Choice" was ubiquitous at an April rally against
    vaccine mandates in Los Angeles. The slogan started as an abortion
    rights catchphrase, but has become a favorite of vaccine skeptics.
    Rachel Bluth/Kaiser Health News
    "What's really unique about this is that you don't usually see one
    side's base adopting the message of the other side's base — and
    succeeding," she said. "That's what makes this so fascinating."

    Jodi Hicks, president of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California,
    acknowledged that the appropriation of abortion rights terminology has
    worked against the reproductive rights movement. "In this moment, to
    co-opt that messaging and distract from the work that we're doing, and
    using it to spread misinformation, is frustrating and it's
    disappointing," Hicks said.

    She said the movement was already gravitating away from the phrase. Even
    where abortion is legal, she said, some women can't "choose" to get one
    because of financial or other barriers. The movement is now focusing
    more heavily on access to health care, using catchphrases such as "Bans
    Off Our Bodies" and "Say Abortion," Hicks said.

    Sponsor Message

    The growth of the anti-vaccination movement
    Vaccination hasn't always been this political, said Jennifer Reich, a
    sociology professor at the University of Colorado-Denver, who has
    written a book about why parents refuse vaccines for their kids.
    Opposition to vaccines grew in the 1980s among parents concerned about
    school vaccine requirements. Those parents said they didn't have enough
    information about vaccines' potential harmful effects, but it wasn't
    partisan at the time, Reich said.

    The issue exploded onto the political scene after a measles outbreak
    tied to Disneyland sickened at least 140 people in 2014 and 2015. When
    California lawmakers moved to prohibit parents from claiming personal
    belief exemptions for required childhood vaccines, opponents organized
    around the idea of "medical choice" and "medical freedom." Those
    opponents spanned the political spectrum, Reich said.

    The movement against abortion rights is nearing its apex. But it began
    way before Roe
    REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS IN AMERICA
    The history of the anti-abortion movement in the U.S.
    Then came COVID. The Trump administration politicized the pandemic from
    the outset, starting with masks and stay-at-home orders. Republican
    leaders and white evangelicals implemented that strategy on the ground,
    Reich said, arguing against vaccine mandates when COVID vaccines were
    still only theoretical — scaring people with rhetoric about the loss of
    personal choice and images of vaccine passports.

    They gained traction despite an obvious inconsistency, she said: Often,
    the same people who oppose vaccine requirements — arguing that it's a
    matter of choice — are against abortion rights.

    "What's really changed is that in the last two or so years, it's become
    highly partisan," Reich said.

    Joshua Coleman leads V is for Vaccine, a group that opposes vaccine
    mandates. He said he deploys the phrase strategically depending on what
    state he's working in.

    "In a state or a city that is more pro-life, they're not going to
    connect with that messaging, they don't believe in full bodily
    autonomy," Coleman said.

    But in places like California, he takes his "My Body, My Choice"
    rhetoric where he thinks it will be effective, like the annual Women's
    March, where he says he can sometimes get feminists to consider his
    perspective.

    Co-opting the slogan
    Perception of the word "choice" has changed over time, said Alyssa Wulf,
    a cognitive linguist based in Oakland, Calif. The word now evokes an
    image of an isolated decision that doesn't affect the broader community,
    she said. It can frame an abortion seeker as self-centered, and a
    vaccine rejector as an individual making a personal health choice, Wulf
    said.

    Beyond linguistics, anti-vaccination activists are playing politics,
    intentionally trolling the abortion rights groups by using their words
    against them, Wulf said. "I really believe there's a little bit of an
    'eff you' in that," Wulf said. "We're going to take your phrase."

    Tom Blodget, a retired Spanish-language instructor from Chico, Calif.,
    sported a "My Body, My Choice" shirt — complete with an image of a
    cartoon syringe — at the Defeat the Mandates Rally in Los Angeles. It
    was "an ironic thing," he said, meant to expose what he sees as the
    hypocrisy of Democrats who support both abortion and vaccine mandates.
    Blodget said he is "pro-life" and believes that COVID vaccines are not
    immunizations but a form of gene therapy, which is not true.

    For Blodget, and many other anti-vaccination activists, there is no
    inconsistency in this position. Abortion is not a personal health
    decision akin to getting a shot, they say: It is simply murder.

    "Women say they can have an abortion because it's their body," Blodget
    said. "If that's a valid thing for a lot of people, why should I have to
    take an injection of some concoction?"

    This 16-year-old wanted to get the COVID vaccine. He had to hide it from
    his parents
    SHOTS - HEALTH NEWS
    This 16-year-old wanted to get the COVID vaccine. He had to hide it from
    his parents
    About a week later and nearly 400 miles to the north in Sacramento,
    state lawmakers heard testimony on bills about abortion and COVID
    vaccines. Two protests, one against abortion and one against vaccine
    mandates, converged. Truckers from the "People's Convoy," a group that
    opposes COVID mandates that had been touring the country with its
    message of "medical freedom," testified against a bill that would stop
    police from investigating miscarriages or stillbirths as murders.
    Anti-abortion activists lined up to oppose a bill that would update
    reporting requirements to the state's vaccine registry.

    "My Body, My Choice" was ubiquitous: Kids petting police horses in front
    of the Capitol wore T-shirts with the slogan, and truckers watching a
    sword dance toted signs above their heads.

    At the time, two tough legislative proposals to mandate COVID vaccines
    for schoolchildren and most workers had already been shelved without a
    vote. One controversial vaccination proposal remained: a bill to allow
    children 12 and older to get COVID vaccines without parental consent.

    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

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