A South Florida dad wanted to know how many COVID-19 cases were in his child's school. But the state health department, which has tap-danced, downplayed and obfuscated its way through this pandemic, wouldn't tell him. John Silver, a registered nurse in Broward County, was persistent. He asked his son's school, the county health department, even the state health department's inspector general. .
It becomes apparent the press affliction has mutated to a Desantis Derangement Syndrome.
A South Florida newspaper, and clear opponent of Governor Ron DeSantis, The Miami Herald has continued in its efforts to damage the image of the governor in its latest hit piece. This time the paper took a look at a recent assessment made on the Florida Health Department. The media darling and fully discredited whistleblower, Rebekah Jones, gave a response to Politico’s Gary Fineout detailing some of DeSantis’ schedule, asking rhetorically if the governor was going to be challenged about the state’s supposed problems in its Covid database.
PUBLIC HEALTH ACCREDITATION BOARD: FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH “DOING A REALLY EXCELLENT JOB” WITH COVID-19 DATA COLLECTION & ANALYSIS
Tallahassee, Fla. – Last night,
Miami Herald published a report by Sarah Blaskey and Ben Conarck with a misleading headline that misrepresented the Public Health Accreditation Board (PHAB) evaluation of the Florida Department of Health (DOH) collection, analysis, and reporting of the state’s COVID-19 data. Several reporters and commentators shared the article on social media. In doing so, they spread disinformation by twisting the facts to discredit the hard work of thousands of public servants keeping Floridians safe, healthy, and informed throughout the pandemic.
Slap on the wrist over how Florida shares coronavirus data tampabay.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tampabay.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Sat, 08 May 2021 02:00 UTC
A new Vaccination Demand Observatory is using surveillance, bots, and behavior change mass marketing schemes to press reluctant people into getting the shots
The U.S. is awash in a surplus of coronavirus vaccines as there has been a sudden in drop in demand for them; most Americans who want the shots have had them. Now an army of Big Biotech s agencies set up to address vaccine hesitancy are turning up their mass marketing to create demand using surveillance, rapid data analysis, media control, and host of behavior control strategies they ve outlined in their playbooks.
Demand plummets