fox s brian kilmeade asked senator ron johnson. could you ever get behind a vaccine mandate for everybody? no, not unless there s some incredibly deadly disease. i mean, much higher infection fatality rates than we had with covid. what? sorry, what? some incredibly deadly disease with higher infection fatality rates. are these people out of their minds? covid has killed more than 616,000 people in the united states, and brought life expectancy down in 2020 by more than a year and a half. there have been more deaths from covid in the u.s. in 18 months than american deaths in world war i, world war ii and vietnam combined. and the coronavirus pandemic is the third deadliest event in american history behind only the civil war and the spanish flu. that s not enough death for ron johnson, it seems, and the rest of the covid deniers on the right. there s no point pretending otherwise.
behind mandatory vaccinations? which a lot of experts are now calling for. fox s brian kilmeade asked senator ron johnson. could you ever get behind a vaccine mandate for everybody? no, not unless there s some incredibly deadly disease. i mean, much higher infection fatality rates than we had with covid. what? sorry, what? some incredibly deadly disease with higher infection fatality rates. are these people out of their minds? covid has killed more than 616,000 people in the united states, and brought life expectancy down in 2020 by more than a year and a half. there have been more deaths from covid in the u.s. in 18 months than american deaths in world war i, world war ii and vietnam combined. and the coronavirus pandemic is the third deadliest event in american history behind only the civil war and the spanish flu. that s not enough death for ron johnson, it seems, and the rest
will republicans, especially the anti-vaxxer variety, ever get behind mandatory vaccinations, which a lot of experts are now calling for? fox s brian kilmeade asked senator ron johnson. could you ever get behind a vaccine mandate for everybody? no, not unless there s some incredibly deadly disease. i mean, much higher infection fatality rates than we had with covid. what? sorry, what? some incredibly deadly disease with higher infection fatality rates. are these people out of their minds? covid has killed more than 616,000 people in the united states and brought life expectancy down in 2020 by more than a year and a half. there have been more deaths from covid in the u.s. in 18 months than american deaths in world war i, world war ii and vietnam combined. and the coronavirus pandemic is the third deadliest event in american history behind only the
official guidelines for prescribing drugs too. high cholesterol, eight out of nine doctors who wrote the recent national cholesterol guidelines received money from manufacturers. the psychiatrist responsible for over diagnosing children with adhd received $1.6 million for the manufacturers of the drugs used to treat it. the whole thing stinks. perhaps none of the swampy behavior is a disgraceful as the pharmaceutical industry s role in the opioid epidemic which killed 52000 americans last year. the health crisis is so bad it starting trying to drive life expectancy down in the us. for most of the last century the terrible addiction that opioids cause meant that they were shunned as a treatment for pain but that all changed in the 1990s when a large-scale lobbying and public relations effort to make opioids acceptable. part of it was run by a nonprofit, the american pain
prescribing drugs too. high cholesterol, eight out of nine doctors who wrote the recent national cholesterol guidelines received money from manufacturers. the psychiatrist responsible for over diagnosing children with adhd received $1.6 million for the manufacturers of the drugs used to treat it. the whole thing stinks. perhaps none of the swampy behavior is a disgraceful as the pharmaceutical industry s role in the opioid epidemic which killed 52000 americans last year. the health crisis is so bad it starting trying to drive life expectancy down in the us. for most of the last century the terrible addiction that opioids cause meant that they were shunned as a treatment for pain but that all changed in the 1990s when a large-scale lobbying and public relations effort to make opioids acceptable. part of it was run by a nonprofit, the american pain foundation.