Many other health care workers and doctors also want the masks mandates to return. Polls also show Americans are scared of the Delta variant.

On June 29th, The WinePress reported that the World Health Organization (WHO) endorses the idea that people should still wear masks because of the Delta variant of Covid-19.

Recently Dr. Shad Marvasti, from the University of Arizona College of Medicine, also gave his thoughts on this new recommendation, and says it is a “good idea,” according to a Yahoo Finance report.

We don’t want to wait until after the fact and get caught with this thing already ahead of us when we know that masks work. To put this in context, the Alpha variant, which originated out of the UK, was about 50% more infectious and transmissible. The Delta variant is 60% more infectious than that.

The CDC needs to act quickly, without waiting, to follow the WHO guidelines and ask everyone to put the masks back on so we can stay open, protect folks, and keep the economy going. We’re already seeing preliminary numbers out of Israel where fully vaccinated people are getting sick.

Dr. Shad Marvasti

Citing a report from the Wall Street Journal, roughly half of those vaccinated in Israel have been infected by the Delta variant, and currently, the Health Ministry there attributes to 90% of new infections to this variant.

However, even though Dr. Marvasti and the Israeli Health Ministry reports the vaccinated are contracting Delta, Marvasti recommends that everyone gets a Covid vaccine to avoid the Delta variant.

We have gotten into this false sense of security thinking it’s okay to take off masks. The best thing to do is to start putting the masks back on to prevent another surge from happening, and if you’re unvaccinated, now is the time to get vaccinated before this Delta variant comes for you.

Mask Up, L.A.!

Today the Washington Post reports that in Los Angeles, California, officials are expressly advising residents to mask back up, even if they are vaccinated, to counter the spread of the Delta variant.

Minus limited exceptions for public transportation, schools, and hospitals, L.A. County and the rest of the state dropped their mask mandates on June 15th.

‘County health officials said 123 people were infected with the delta variant from June 4 to 18. Ten were fully vaccinated, and none of those people needed hospital care. Three people infected with delta were partially vaccinated, and 110 were not vaccinated; two people were hospitalized,’ said the Washington Post report.

Fully vaccinated people are well protected against serious illness and disease caused by variants of concern including the Delta variant.

Barbara Ferrer. L.A. County’s public health director

We want to make sure we understand that people who are fully vaccinated aren’t getting infected in large portions or small portions in a way that allows them to unknowingly transmit to others.

Muntu Davis. Los Angeles County Health Officer.

The CDC, however, does not plan to readjust their guidance on mask wearing for the vaccinated.

We are fortunate to have highly effective vaccines in this country that are widely available for those aged 12 and up. People who are fully vaccinated are protected, including from the variants currently circulating in the country such as delta. That is not the case in every country where some of the vaccines they are using are not as effective as the ones we have here in the U.S.

Kristen Nordlund. A CDC spokeswoman

Davis said they are not mandating them as to not cause disruptions and reinstate restrictions on businesses.

This is really, hopefully, a temporary recommendation as we learn more about what this virus is actually doing. This is one of the easier things to do. It doesn’t disrupt your daily routine, it doesn’t disrupt business, and it doesn’t disrupt the economy. It’s just a mask, but it’s very helpful.

It’s just a small inconvenience for those who have been vaccinated to try to be good citizens by wearing masks indoors. Hopefully this can be a wake-up call for those who are still on the fence about getting vaccinated to become vaccinated so that we can all stop wearing masks.

Robert Kim-Farley, an epidemiologist and professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

Some professors and doctors, however, are speaking out against this new urgent recommendation.

You just told the unvaccinated, ‘Yeah, get vaccinated, it’s so scary, but of course, you’ll still have to mask because it’s so scary.’ If I were an unvaccinated person who was debating whether to get vaccinated, I would think, ‘Oh wow, there’s no point, looks like the delta variant would break through the vaccine anyway.’

Monica Gandhi, professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco.

Fenit Nirappil, writer of the Washington Post report argues against Gandhi’s statement, writing, ‘Evidence shows the opposite: Nearly all serious British cases have been among the unvaccinated or partially vaccinated as the delta variant dominates new infections. The CDC says a growing body of evidence shows people who have been fully vaccinated with a Pfizer or Moderna mRNA vaccine are less likely to have asymptomatic cases or transmit them to others.’

Some residents weighed in:

I thought we were moving forward with this, and that’s why I’ve been vaccinated for so long, so it’s upsetting to think we’d have to now move backward. I wonder if there’s any facts behind this or if it’s just another rule. If masks are being used again, then people may not go out as much, and then we’d see our tips decrease.

Ashley Pavone, 25, said after a maskless trip to a Vons supermarket in the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles.

‘Steve Morales, [64], said he still wears a mask while working his shifts as a Vons clerk, even though he’s vaccinated and his workplace doesn’t require it, because he’s uneasy about what customers have been exposed to. Still, he has no interest in tangling with customers about masks.’

I don’t give people my opinion about it; it’s up to them.

Los Angeles County didn’t reinstate a mask mandate, they put out a recommendation. It’s to prepare people to see something is different about the delta variant. It may be hard to hear this because we all want to believe that what was such a traumatic year is all behind us, but the truth is, we are still very much confronting a pandemic.

Rhea Boyd, a pediatrician who has advocated for improved vaccine access for communities of color.

Scared Of The Dreaded Delta

The following report is from Yahoo News:

With the hyper-contagious Delta variant well on its way to becoming dominant in the U.S., nearly three-quarters of Americans believe it “poses a serious risk” to the country’s progress against the pandemic, according to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll.

Yet so far very few of those most vulnerable to sickness, hospitalization or death from Delta — the unvaccinated — say its spread has made them more inclined to shield themselves and others through inoculation.

The survey of 1,592 U.S. adults, which was conducted from June 22 to 24, found that while 72% think Delta poses a serious risk to either “all Americans” (27%) or “unvaccinated Americans” (45%), just 15% of the latter group say the dangers of Delta have increased their likelihood of getting a jab.

In fact, nearly as many unvaccinated Americans (10%) say Delta’s rise has made them less likely to get vaccinated. A full 75% say it has made no difference.

These numbers underscore America’s toughest lingering challenge as mass vaccination allows COVID restrictions to lapse and more and more residents to resume normal, pre-pandemic life: the fact that 34%of the adult population — and 46% of the total population — has not yet received even one vaccine shot, leaving them susceptible to a variant that spreads 40 to 60 percent more easily than any of its predecessors and is already boosting infections and hospitalizations in countries with higher vaccination rates than the U.S.

Making matters worse, the unvaccinated are concentrated in certain communities, which further helps the virus spread. A full 32% of 2020 Donald Trump voters, for instance, say they will never get vaccinated, versus just 3% of Joe Biden voters, 11% of Latino Americans and 15% of Black Americans.

Even local spikes in hospitalization and infection — of the sort now underway in Missouri, Nevada and Utah — are unlikely to make much difference. According to the poll, just 19% of unvaccinated Americans say they’d be inclined to change their minds if “COVID cases start to rise in my area.” A full 60% say the opposite.

As to why so many Americans are refusing free vaccination even in the face of the most dangerous variant yet, the poll is clear. The main reason is not lack of “easy access to vaccination” (5%, or the difficulty of securing “time off from work” (3%), or prior infection with COVID-19 (6%), or even the fact that they’re “not worried about getting” COVID (12%).

It’s because they “don’t trust the COVID-19 vaccines” (51%) — despite abundant safety and efficacy data and statistical proof that a deadly virus is far riskier than the extremely low-risk vaccines.

As a result, the U.S. has effectively run out of people who are willing to get vaccinated — just 2% say they plan to receive a shot “as soon as it is available” to them — at the same time most of the country seems to have embraced reopening and cast aside their masks.

For the first time since Yahoo News and YouGov started asking the question last year, for instance, less than half of Americans (45%) say they wore a mask outside their home “always” or “most of the time” during the past week, down from 56%a month ago and 78% in late March. The share who say they “always” wear a mask has plummeted from 57% in March to just 24% today.

Another first: Self-reported mask wearing is now at the same level among the vaccinated (45%) and the unvaccinated (44%) — a shift from the recent pattern of vaccinated Americans masking up at higher rates than unvaccinated Americans because they were also the ones who tended to worry more about the virus. As recently as March, 90% of vaccinated Americans told Yahoo News and YouGov that they were wearing masks outside their homes.

Likewise, 38 percent of vaccinated Americans now say they “wear a mask indoors less often” (up from 15 percent in mid-May); 42 percent say they “socialize more with family and friends” (up from 30 percent in mid-May). A mere 20 percent say their “life hasn’t changed” since they were vaccinated.

More broadly, 58 percent of all Americans now feel comfortable “hugging vaccinated people without masks” (up from 37 percent in mid-March); 59 percent now feel comfortable “eating indoors at a bar or restaurant” (up from 41 percent); and 66 percent now feel comfortable gathering indoors with vaccinated people (up from 50 percent).

Agreement that mask wearing should be mandatory in public has also fallen from 63% in late April to a new low of 40% today — even as support for “having vaccine passports so that people can prove they are vaccinated” is up 4 points to 50%, with just 36% opposed. Nearly two-thirds of Americans (64%) also say businesses should have “the right to require masks of all customers” if they want, and most (53%) say they support giving customers a choice between showing proof of vaccination and masking up.

Such nuanced views reflect the emerging reality of a “post-pandemic” America where the vaccinated and unvaccinated are both returning to normal — yet the latter remain at much higher risk. Even now, unvaccinated Americans are more comfortable than vaccinated Americans with hugging the unvaccinated (by 18 points); shaking hands (by 3 points); gathering indoors with the unvaccinated (by 19 points); attending a sporting event in an enclosed arena (by 12 points); going on a family vacation by airplane (by 2 points); and returning to the office (5 points).

Yet the rise of Delta would seem to argue for more caution or more inoculation. To be sure, America has made remarkable strides against COVID. Cases are down 95% from their horrific winter peak; deaths are down 91%.

But that’s because of vaccination. Among those who’ve heard of Delta, more than two-thirds (67%) say they are either very or somewhat worried about it spreading in the U.S., where it can still cause hospitalizations and deaths that vaccination could otherwise prevent.

With that presumably in mind, a full 62% of Americans say no when asked if “the COVID-19 pandemic [is] over in the U.S.” Just 21% say yes.


AUTHOR COMMENTARY

[13] For the people turneth not unto him that smiteth them, neither do they seek the LORD of hosts. [14]Therefore the LORD will cut off from Israel head and tail, branch and rush, in one day. [15] The ancient and honourable, he is the head; and the prophet that teacheth lies, he is the tail. [16] For the leaders of this people cause them to err; and they that are led of them are destroyed. [17] Therefore the Lord shall have no joy in their young men, neither shall have mercy on their fatherless and widows: for every one is an hypocrite and an evildoer, and every mouth speaketh folly. For all this his anger is not turned away, but his hand is stretched out still.

Isaiah 9:13-17

The absolute and utter hypocrisy from all these reports is just astounding. Just like from the get-go of the media propaganda that got the ball rolling with this pandemonium – not a pandemic – was no one seemed to know what was going on, which helped sell the deception at first.

Once understood how necessary it is for propaganda to be adjusted to the broad masses, the following rule results:

It is a mistake to make propaganda many-sided, like scientific instruction, for instance.

The receptivity of the great masses is very limited, their intelligence is small, but their power of forgetting is enormous. In consequence of these facts, all effective propaganda must be limited to a very few points and must harp on these in slogan until the last member of the public understands what you want him to understand by your slogan.

As soon as you sacrifice this slogan and try to be many-sided, the effect will piddle away, for the crowd can neither digest nor retain the material offered. In this way the result is weakened and in the end entirely cancelled out.

Thus we see that propaganda must follow a simple line and correspondingly the basic tactics must be psychologically sound.

Mein Kampf

Even though Hitler and Goebbels would say what you just read is bad propaganda, I believe this is purposeful. I’ll call it “reverse-propaganda.” What I mean by this, is, I think the media is purposefully trying to create disillusionment. It is evident that those who wanted to get the vaccine got it, and those who have not got it, will not be (at least right now). By creating purposeful hypocrisy, it causes the broad masses on both political and religious sides to not take the media as serious as they once did: not necessarily total rejection, but just not digesting the fear as much as they once did.

However, because of that, when the mass vaccine kill-off goes ballistic, and people are dropping dead everywhere and the state’s systems are overrun, the masses will sprint to the media to be told what to do and how to think, especially when the hard lockdowns inevitably will return.

DEATHSHOT: Postmortem Study Of Vaccinated Man Reveals “Viral RNA Found In Every Organ Of The Body”

U.K. Prepares For Mass Vaxx-Death As Government Signs Contracts To Provide Temporary Body Shortage Systems

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis Passes Law That Allows Forcible Vaccination By ‘Any Means Necessary’

“Songbird:” The Awful Covid Propaganda Film

For God is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the saints.

1 Corinthians 14:33

Leave your thoughts about this in the comments below:

For some actual facts about the Covid SHAM, check out our comprehensive report on it below:

Facts Are Facts: Learn The Data Surrounding Covid-19


[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).

The WinePress needs your support! If God has laid it on your heart to want to contribute, please prayerfully consider donating to this ministry. If you cannot gift a monetary donation, then please donate your fervent prayers to keep this ministry going! Thank you and may God bless you.

CLICK TO DONATE

7 Comments

  • I’m going to continue repenting and I will struggle and with determination, seek Salvation, I pray and I ask you to pray that it is not in vain.
    Jacob, is it possible to send you letters?

  • All of America is evil but California is at the helm of it, or so it seems. Hollywood being the tip of their sin spear: the pedophilia smut blasphemy mind control propaganda movie capital. LGBTQ sodomy, indoctrination education, the church of Satan, that Marxist professor Angels Davis at UC Santa Cruz, feminism, high divorce rates, corrupt politicians and complete rejection of Christ and His word, saddleback Babel building founded by that satanist Rick Warren. Homelessness galore.

  • I think the reason they give so many conflicting reports is to cause so much confusion it frustrates and wears most people out until they just give up and do what ever they are told .

  • Can’t believe my sister listens to all the garbage the mainstream media spews out!
    If she would only listen to me.

Leave a Comment

×