Source: Linda Jiang

With California's deadline of mandatory COVID-19 vaccination for all health care workers approaching, boycotts are gaining momentum.

Article by Linda Jiang from our news partners at The Epoch Times.

On Aug. 21, California's frontline health care workers held simultaneous protests in Riverside and Irvine against the government's mandatory vaccination order at Kaiser Permanente-Riverside Medical Center and Kaiser Permanente Orange County-Irvine Medical Center.

Many protesters told The Epoch Times that their hospitals had given them an ultimatum: they had until Sept. 30 to choose between mandatory vaccination and getting fired.

The California Department of Public Health issued an announcement on Aug. 5 that workers in hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, long-term care homes, and other health care-related fields must be vaccinated by Sept. 30.

Kristina, a registered nurse in California, said her hospital requires staff who are not vaccinated to be tested twice a week. "If we still don't meet those criteria to have our exemption approved, then up on October 1 we're going to be placed on 45 days unpaid administrative leave and after that, they said they don't know what they're going to do but we can assume what they're going to do, we're gonna get fired."

As a health care worker who has been on the front lines during the outbreak, Kristina believes that mandatory vaccination policies are not for public safety, but are instead politically motivated. For example, people who oppose the mandate and fight for freedom of choice are labeled as "anti-vaccine" and "anti-science."

"We're super pro-science. We want people to survive this. We want this pandemic to end more than anybody does," Kristina said. But as a health care professional, she said she needs to tell people that "it's not as safe and effective that people are saying."

Currently, there has been a spate of serious adverse events and deaths due to vaccination. The effectiveness of the vaccines has also been called into question. In July, a cluster of infections occurred in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, where 74 percent of the 469 cases had been vaccinated.

"What is the point of getting the vaccine, if we're still gonna spread it?" Kristina asked.

"I know that there's been a couple studies that have come out [about] how the coronavirus spike proteins affect our cardiac cells, which makes a lot of sense, because we're having increases of myocardial infarctions, mild carditis, pericarditis, all of these heart issues," she added.

On Aug. 21, California's frontline health care workers held simultaneous protests against the government's mandatory vaccination order at Kaiser Permanente-Riverside Medical Center and Kaiser Permanente Orange County – Irvine Medical Center. The photo above was taken in Riverside, California. (Linda Jiang/The Epoch Times)

In June, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said it had received reports of more than 1,200 cases of myocarditis following vaccination. The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) indicates that many of these cases occurred after receiving a second dose of mRNA vaccine.

According to a study published on BioRxiv last December by a team of Translational Health researchers from the University of Bristol, the capsid spike protein of the CCP virus by itself can trigger a chain reaction in human cardiac pericytes, leading to heart inflammation and cardiovascular cell damage. These findings suggest that mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, which produce the spike protein when inside the human body, may elicit vascular cell dysfunction.

The Epoch Times has reached out to Southern California Region Kaiser Permanente for comments, as it is one of the many hospitals in California that have issued mandatory vaccination notices.

The hospital replied in an email: "We strongly believe in the science and evidence supporting COVID-19 vaccine safety and efficacy. … All Kaiser Permanente employees and physicians must provide proof of full vaccination by Sept. 30. Those who don't must submit to weekly testing."

"We are working with labor leaders on implementation of this vaccination requirement and will also be complying with local, state and federal laws."

Mickie Fairburn, a pediatric registered nurse who attended the protest rally, said the authorities should not force the vaccine on everybody, "because the vaccine is not for everybody."

Her primary concern is the safety of the vaccine.

"It's just an experimental vaccine. They don't know everything about this vaccine. Some side effects from the vaccine are detrimental and are lifelong … It's not safe yet [as] it hasn't even been a full year," she said.


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