
well, not my arm, thank you. I guess I am a coward who won't be joining this fight. or how about we send them a shipment of prosthetic arms. Maybe that will shut them up. :mdrmdr: I read the email again, it's from a hospital, HR is forwarding it. It says: "we implore people to get their boosters". (Implore! I hope this means they are getting desperate because not too many people are interested in going in for more shots) They are the ones saying: a call to arms. that is the same hospital whom my workplace consulted and they disagreed with everything I had against the vax (no fetal tissue, not change your DNA) Ok, so it is these clowns, sorry, I mean hospital who are making "a call to arms" Evil doesn't care which mouth it uses! TR Hospital Says to Earn Religious Exemption from Vaccine, Devout Employees Can't Take Tylenol: Since Christians and people of many other religions tend to be against abortion, one could see why they would be against taking a vaccine that they feel makes them complicit in (or at least profiting from) the act of abortion. Matt Troup, Conway Regional’s CEO and president, did not take too kindly to that line of thinking. “We require the flu vaccine to work here,” Troup said. “With the COVID vaccine, we saw a dramatic increase in the number of exemption requests related to this fetal cell issue.” Troup said he believed this increase signaled that employees may be filing for a religious exemption because of health concerns about this specific vaccine rather than deep moral convictions. . . . In response, he and other administrators developed a so-called “attestation form” that employees requesting an exemption would be forced to sign. The form requires those employees to commit to refraining from everyday medicines such as Tylenol, Pepto-Bismol, ibuprofen, Benadryl and Claritin, among others. The form says these medicines have used fetal cells during their development, so employees must not take them in order to “support your claim of a ‘sincerely held religious belief.'”