The COVID vaccine was required for U.S. military service members for 15 months, from August 2021 to January 2023. Eighty-four hundred service members were discharged for not getting the COVID vaccine. In January 2023, former Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin rescinded the mandate. It was the first time in history the military reversed a vaccine mandate, but only dozens of those who were discharged returned to the military. Republicans have argued the mandate hurt the military’s recruiting and retention capability. … The military had acknowledged it had a recruiting problem just the year before, and the mandate was a political headache for the Biden administration.
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3 Responses
Unfortunately the military still requires many other vaccines (including anthrax) for enlistment, so this only solves one very small part of the problem.
Not only are young people from poor homes being recruited into the military, but sophisticated medical mafias have turned these people into testing grounds at taxpayer expense. Stop this criminal activity completely and spare these soldiers the suffering! After all, they have already received enough poisons while they were in kindergartens and schools.
There are lots of contactors, especially in healthcare being denied employment for refusal to submit to the jab(s).
This is only a small part of this issue.