Tag Archives: refuse

Parents refuse use of vaccinated blood in life-saving surgery on baby | New Zealand

New Zealand’s health service has made a court application over the guardianship of a four-month-old baby whose parents are refusing to allow his life-saving heart surgery to go ahead unless non-vaccinated blood is used.

The parents of the baby discussed their son’s health situation and their medical preferences in an interview with an anti-vaccination campaigner.

In the interview the parents say their baby has severe pulmonary valve stenosis, and that he needs surgery “almost immediately”, but that they are “extremely concerned with the blood [the doctors] are going to use”.

“We don’t want blood that is tainted by vaccination,” the father said. “That’s the end of the deal – we are fine with anything else these doctors want to do.”

The vaccines to prevent severe disease and death from Covid-19 have been found to be extremely safe and effective, with millions of people around the world vaccinated.

According to the blood service, NZ Blood, any Covid-19 vaccine in the blood is broken down soon after the injection.

In a statement, Dr Mike Shepherd, Auckland’s interim director at the health service, Te Whatu Ora, said he knows it can be worrying for parents who have an unwell child and are making decisions about their care.

Te Whatu Ora filed papers in the Auckland high court on Monday under the Care of Children Act. It asked that the baby’s guardianship be moved from his parents so consent could be given to use donated blood, the NZ Herald reported.

“The decision to make an application to the court is always made with the best interests of the child in mind and following extensive conversations with whānau,” Shepherd said.

“As this matter is before the courts, we will not be commenting further.”

On Wednesday, the parties appeared at the court to set a date for an urgent hearing, while a group of 100 anti-vaccination supporters gathered outside the building.

Te Whatu Ora’s lawyer Paul White told the court that medical professionals have said a child with such a condition would have been treated several weeks ago in normal circumstances; while the parents’ lawyer Sue Grey – another prominent anti-vaccination campaigner – said the parents wanted better care than what the state was offering.

“Because they label my clients as conspiracy theorists, [their position] is that anything my clients say can be ignored,” she said.

NZ Blood said: “All donated blood also gets filtered during processing, so any trace amounts that may still be present poses no risk to recipients.

“We do not separate or label blood based on a donor’s Covid-19 vaccination status.” It added there was no evidence that previous vaccination affected the quality of blood for transfusion.

A lecturer in bioethics at the University of Otago, Josephine Johnston, told RNZ it was very rare for a case to get this far. It was a distressing case for everyone involved, she added, because there was significant disagreement between the parents and the healthcare teams, both of whom were trying to act in the best interests of the child.

“Parents have a lot of decision-making authority over their child’s life – there’s a huge zone of discretion for parents to make decisions including about medical issues,” Johnston said.

“But there are limits to that, and this is one of those tragic cases where the limit has life and death consequences.”

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These Republicans refuse to support McCarthy for House speaker

House Republicans will have a narrower majority than they had anticipated and because of that, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy may find he has a more difficult road to be House speaker. 

Already, a handful of Republicans have announced they will vote against McCarthy’s bid to be speaker. He easily won the nomination for speaker within the Republican conference, but he must still win 218 votes on the floor next month. CBS News projects Republicans will have 221 seats in the new Congress, so he’ll need nearly all of them, since all the Democrats in the House are expected to support a Democrat for speaker. 

Here are the Republicans who say they oppose McCarthy’s bid to be speaker of the House:

Rep. Andy Biggs (Arizona)

Perhaps the most vocal opponent to a would-be Speaker McCarthy is Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, who ran against McCarthy within the Republican conference for speaker. The secret-ballot GOP conference vote was 188-31. 

Biggs has expressed frustration that McCarthy and Republicans aren’t doing enough to fight “radical Leftists” and are “failing to put the brakes on the Left.” That’s what Biggs wrote in a Nov. 18 op-ed in the conservative website “American Greatness.” And at this point, he’s saying he will not support him in the full House floor vote.

“Now I am told that we will barely have a 3-seat majority, so we must not change leaders in order to protect unity,” Biggs wrote. “I, however, believe it is time to make a change. Those thoughts are most immutable. Our current candidate for Speaker doesn’t have the 218 votes necessary to become Speaker on January 3, 2023. I do not believe he will ever get to 218 votes, and I refuse to assist him in his effort to get those votes. In the end, I must concur with my constituents: it is time to make a change at the top of the House of Representatives. I cannot vote for the gentleman from California, Mr. McCarthy.”

Rep. Matt Gaetz (Florida) 

Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, one of former President Trump’s most reliable allies in Congress, agrees with Biggs. Gaetz has consistently voiced his opposition to McCarthy as speaker.

“Kevin McCarthy (Establishment-CA) is now reduced to threatening and pressuring incoming freshmen House members to vote for him,” Gaetz tweeted on Nov. 18, along with Biggs’ op-ed. “We have the votes to force a change.”

A day before the House GOP conference election, Gaetz told “The Charlie Kirk Show,” “I’m not voting for Kevin McCarthy. I’m not voting for him tomorrow. I’m not voting for him on the floor.”

Rep. Ralph Norman (South Carolina)

Rep. Ralph Norman, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, told Politico early this month that he’s a hard “no” against McCarthy as well. But Norman told the news outlet he’ll either vote “present” or not attend the vote, which could be less damaging to McCarthy’s prospects. If some of the Republicans who oppose McCarthy choose Norman’s path, they would lower the threshold McCarthy would have to reach because the number making up a majority would be lower than the 218 he’d need if all 435 lawmakers voted yes or no. Norman cited McCarthy’s approach to the budget and national debt, suggesting the House minority leader doesn’t have an aggressive enough approach to get the nation’s fiscal house in order. 

In 2021, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi won the speakership with 216 votes after three Democrats voted “present.”

Other possible “no” votes 

They aren’t the only ones indicating opposition to McCarthy.

While they haven’t said they’re certain to vote against McCarthy, Reps. Bob Good of Virginia and Matt Rosendale of Montana have voiced serious concerns, and hold the power to tank McCarthy’s chances.  

Rosendale issued a statement after the conference vote accusing McCarthy of wanting “to maintain the status quo, which consolidates power into his hands and a small group of individuals he personally selects.” He continued, “We need a leader who can stand up to a Democrat-controlled Senate and President Biden and unfortunately, that isn’t Kevin McCarthy.”

The vote will take place Jan. 3 on the House floor. 



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The 3 Zodiac Signs Who Refuse To Change For Love During The Moon Square Saturn On November 22, 2022

Every zodiac sign has at one point in time refuses to change for love, and when the Moon squares Saturn on November 22, 2022, these three are the worst.

There comes a time in every relationship when we evaluate the rules and regulations that we’ve established during the time we’ve been with our mate.

RELATED: The 3 Zodiac Signs With The Best Horoscopes On Tuesday, November 22, 2022

As life goes on, we tend to change, and in relationships, we sometimes want our partners to change as well. Sometimes we ask for too much; perhaps we wish for our partners to become entirely different people and so we pressure them into doing things they wouldn’t do ordinarily.

And, sometimes we are the ones who feel the pressure. It happens all the time, especially between couples who’ve been together a long time.

If we can’t accept our partners as is, we try to change them. Do we, ourselves, enjoy being changed, or rather, forced to change into someone we are not?

RELATED: The 3 Zodiac Signs Who Can’t Commit During The Sun In Sagittarius Sun Starting November 22, 2022

No, we do not. And during the Moon Square Saturn, we will see this happen, as we begin to notice that our partners seem less than pleased with the person we are…and have always been.

Certain zodiac signs will feel this more than other signs, in fact.

During the Moon Square Saturn, we will use that Saturn energy and we will say no to our mates. Yes, they are trying to change us, and no, we aren’t about to do that…for anyone.

It’s not that we’re stuck or cramped or unable to change, it’s that we know what’s best for us and even a romantic partner doesn’t have the right to change us to suit their personality.

And so, today is the day we let it be known: we’re not changing for love, for them, for work, for anything. We are happy ‘as is and if they are not happy with that, then that one’s on them. Your move, signs.

The three zodiac signs who refuse to change for love during the Moon square Saturn on November 22, 2022:

1. Taurus

(April 20 – May 20)

It’s taken you so long to just come to the place where you accept yourself ‘as is’ and now that you’re there, you know how cool it is. Being you, being Taurus…it’s the world’s greatest experience. You finally love your body, your mind, and the way you go about doing things in the world.

You’re always open to improvement, but you are not open to becoming someone’s ideal anything. You may notice that your partner is an idealist, and now that they know the ‘full you’ they want more…they want you to change. Change sounds great, but only on your own terms.

You are not about to become someone’s robotic side-squeeze; they have to either take you as you are, or walk on by. You’re not changing for love, not this time; the work you’ve done on yourself is excellent, Taurus. Don’t go backward for the sake of someone else’s power trip.

RELATED: 6 Zodiac Signs Who Let Their Relationships Consume Them, According To Astrology

2. Leo

(July 23 – August 22)

After all, you’ve done to become the person you are today, the last thing you want to do is change your ways because, for some reason, you suddenly inconvenience them by being you. Well, that doesn’t sound fair, does it? And yet, you can expect this kind of request during the Moon Square Saturn, on November 22, 2022.

Not only will it feel like a betrayal, as this person made you feel as though you were perfect for them, just the way you are, but because you can’t understand why they would WANT you to change. Aren’t you good enough as is? Of course, you are, and you know it.

When your mate asks you to change, you will see this request as the beginning of the end. This was not part of the plan; you were supposed to stay together in love and acceptance, not as a work-in-progress that falls into place according to the wishes of one partner, and not the other.

RELATED: Zodiac Signs That Fall In Love Quickly Vs. Those That Get Bored Easily In Relationships

3. Pisces

(February 19 – March 20)

Today’s event, the Moon Square Saturn, does not make you happy. This is because you feel so good about yourself, and for some reason, your partner doesn’t seem to see how great you are. How dare they!

You count on them to love you for who you are, so what is this sudden change of plans, on their part? It seems that the person you are with has been influenced by someone in their life and now they want you to change as if it were their idea and not the idea of the influencer.

Your mate is enamored by someone else’s idea. It’s not romantic but it could potentially cause damage. It’s as if your partner is under the spell of some cult leader or something along those lines, and now, they feel the need to change YOU, too. This is unthinkable to you. You feel like you’re losing your partner, and if the only way to get them back is to conform to the change they wish to see in you, then fuggedaboudit! Not happening.

RELATED: The Hardest Zodiac Signs To Break Up With — And How Quickly They Move On

Ruby Miranda interprets I Ching, Tarot, Runes, and Astrology. She gives private readings and has worked as an intuitive reader for over 20 years.

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Police Refuse to Describe Horror Discovery of Missing California Woman Alexis Gabe

Investigators needed a forensic odontologist to identify missing 24-year-old Oakley resident Alexis Gabe, whose partial remains were discovered last week, police said in a press conference Monday. “Due to the fact that a forensic odontologist confirmed the partial remains via dental records, you can only imagine what we have recovered,” Detective Tyler Horn of the Oakley Police Department said. “Out of respect to the Gabe family, we do not want to get into specifics of what exact remains were recovered.” Gabe was reported missing Jan. 27 after she didn’t return home from her ex-boyfriend’s house. A visitor from Alaska made the find Nov. 3 while using a metal detector near the town of Plymouth, approximately 40 miles east of Sacramento. The remains were recovered Nov. 4, with police notifying the public Nov. 5. Other items of evidence were found at the scene, Horn said, including earrings, black garbage bag remnants, and duct tape. The earrings were determined to belong to Gabe based on photos of her wearing them. The condition of the remains “did not lead us to a specific manner of death, but we are confident her remains were separated from one another and scattered into similar areas,” Horn said. Gabe’s father, Gwyn, said at the press conference that “when Detective Horn called me asking for our dentist’s phone number, I knew something was up.” Police believe Gabe’s killer was her ex-boyfriend, Marshall Jones, who was killed in a June 1 shootout with federal officers attempting to serve him with an arrest warrant in Kent, Washington.

Read it at East County Today

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LOOK: Disgusted Broncos fans shockingly refuse to stay for overtime of Denver’s improbable loss to Colts

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When NFL fans leave early from a game, it’s usually because their team is on the wrong side of a blowout, but that wasn’t the case Thursday night when Broncos fans decided to bolt from Empower Field at Mile High just before the start of overtime of the Colts’ 12-9 win. 

After suffering through four quarters of watching Denver’s offense, thousands of fans apparently decided that enough was enough, and they ended up making the decision to leave the game at the end of regulation with the Broncos and Colts tied at nine. Apparently, watching the Broncos offense set football back 95 years was just too much to bear for the fans in attendance.

The camera at the game caught the fans leaving after Russell Wilson took a knee on the final play of regulation to send the game to OT. 

This might not be rock bottom for the Broncos, but it has to be close. Broncos fans decided that they would literally rather go sit in traffic instead of watching their favorite team play another down.  

The fans exiting the game were clearly frustrated, and that most likely had to do with the fact that the Broncos probably should have won this game in regulation. With 2:19 left to play, the Broncos were leading 9-6 and facing a third-and-4 from the Colts’ 13-yard line. All they needed to do was avoid making any mistakes, and they were likely going to get at least a field goal from the drive, but that didn’t happen thanks to Wilson, who threw an ugly interception. 

Instead of icing the game, Wilson gave the Colts some hope that they could still win. 

The interception to Stephon Gilmore was Wilson’s second pick of the game, and it seemed to be the final straw for most Broncos fans. The fans did stick around to see if the Broncos defense could stop the Colts on the ensuing drive (and seal the win), but that didn’t happen. Instead, the Colts drove 72 yards for a game-tying field goal that sent things to overtime, and that’s when thousands of fans decided to hit the exits. 

The fans in Denver spent the better part of four quarters booing the Broncos offense, but once overtime hit, they decided leaving the game was way more fun than booing. 

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Republicans in key battleground races refuse to say they will accept results

Of the 19 GOP candidates questioned by The Washington Post, a dozen declined to answer or refused to commit. Democrats overwhelmingly said they would respect the results.

Supporters wait for Wisconsin Republican gubernatorial nominee Tim Michels at a primary night event on Aug. 9 in Waukesha. Michels did not respond when asked by The Washington Post if he would accept the results of the race. (Joshua Lott/The Washington Post)

A dozen Republican candidates in competitive races for governor and Senate have declined to say whether they would accept the results of their contests, raising the prospect of fresh post-election chaos two years after Donald Trump refused to concede the presidency.

In a survey by The Washington Post of 19 of the most closely watched statewide races in the country, the contrast between Republican and Democratic candidates was stark. While seven GOP nominees committed to accepting the outcomes in their contests, 12 either refused to commit or declined to respond. On the Democratic side, 17 said they would accept the outcome and two did not respond to The Post’s survey.

The reluctance of many GOP candidates to embrace a long-standing tenet of American democracy shows how Trump’s assault on the integrity of U.S. elections has spread far beyond the 2020 presidential race. This year, multiple losing candidates could refuse to accept their defeats.

Trump, who continues to claim without evidence that his loss to Joe Biden in 2020 was rigged, has attacked fellow Republicans who do not agree — making election denialism the price of admission in many GOP primaries. More than half of all Republican nominees for federal and statewide office with powers over election administration have embraced unproven claims that fraud tainted Biden’s win, according to a Washington Post tally.

Acceptance of an electoral outcome — win or lose — was once a virtual certainty in American politics, although there have been exceptions. In 2018, Georgia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams cited voter suppression as a reason for refusing to concede defeat to Republican opponent Brian Kemp. But unlike Trump, Abrams never sought to overturn the certified result or foment an insurrection.

In competitive races for governor or Senate in Arizona, Florida, Kansas, Michigan, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas, GOP candidates declined to say that they would accept this year’s result. All but two — incumbent senators Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Marco Rubio of Florida — have publicly embraced Trump’s false claims about 2020, according to a Post analysis.

The Post asked candidates if they would “accept the result” of their contest this year as well as what circumstances might cause them not to.

Several used the opportunity of The Post’s survey to raise further doubts about the integrity of U.S. elections. Michigan GOP gubernatorial nominee Tudor Dixon answered the question of whether she would be willing to accept the result in November’s race by renewing her unfounded attacks on the Democratic secretary of state for her handling of the last election.

“In 2020, Jocelyn Benson knowingly and willfully broke laws designed to secure our elections, which directly correlates to people’s lack of faith in the integrity of our process,” said Sara Broadwater, a spokeswoman for Dixon, who is challenging Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) and has said repeatedly that the 2020 election was stolen.

No evidence has emerged that Benson, the Michigan secretary of state, broke any laws in 2020. Dixon’s campaign added that if authorities “follow the letter of the law” this year, then “we can all have a reasonable amount of faith in the process.” She pointedly did not say whether she will accept the results.

Whitmer, for her part, responded to The Post’s survey by pledging to accept the outcome and accusing her opponents of “trying to weaken our democracy, undermine trust in American institutions and silence the voice of Michiganders.”

The question of whether elections can be trusted has been central to campaigns from both parties this season, though the substance of their messages has been marked by vivid contrast.

Many Republicans have sought voters’ support — and Trump’s — by repeating his false statements about a stolen election. Democrats have warned that such claims put democracy in peril. Candidates willing to deny the results of a legitimate election, they argue, can’t be trusted to oversee future votes.

Biden, in a speech earlier this month railing against “MAGA Republicans” for their refusal to accept the 2020 result, said: “Democracy cannot survive when one side believes there are only two outcomes to an election: either they win or they were cheated.”

Election results under attack: Here are the facts

In nonpartisan circles, too, democracy advocates and election-law scholars agree that growing mistrust in U.S. elections presents a grave threat to the nation.

“Faith in election integrity is a huge piece of what makes democracy work,” said Paige Alexander, who leads the Atlanta-based Carter Center, a nonpartisan group founded by former president Jimmy Carter that promotes freedom and human rights around the globe.

The organization has monitored elections in foreign nations for many years, often asking candidates to sign pledges that they will accept the certified result of a free and fair contest. With the proliferation of false claims about the 2020 election, Alexander said, the center’s leadership agreed that it was time to circulate a similar pledge among candidates in the United States as well.

The center is focusing on five battleground states this year — Arizona, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Michigan — but its pledge welcomes any candidate, former elected official or organization to sign.

“When the integrity of U.S. elections began to be questioned via lawsuits, via media, via misinformation, we realized that one way to gather all the candidates and people who really do respect the election process was around these principles,” she said. She said the center has just begun sending the pledge out to candidates, obtaining commitments so far from Republican and Democratic nominees for Georgia governor and secretary of state.

Dixon was the only candidate who responded to the survey with an explanation of why she would not necessarily commit to accepting the result. The campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) responded that he would have nothing to say. Ten other Republicans did not respond to the survey despite repeated inquiries. And seven pledged to accept the results, including Colorado Senate contender Joe O’Dea.

O’Dea, who is behind in the polls as he attempts to unseat incumbent Colorado Sen. Michael F. Bennet (D), did not reference Trump by name, but used his response to offer notably sharp criticism of candidates who refuse to concede when they lose.

“There’s no polite way to put it. We have become a nation of poor sports and cry babies,” said O’Dea. “We’ll keep a close eye on things, but after the process is done and the votes are counted, I’ll absolutely accept the outcome. If the Senator is up for it, we can certify it over a beer. It’s time for America’s leaders to start acting like adults again. Loser buys.”

Bennet also responded to The Post’s survey by pledging to accept the results of a certified election.

Others who have questioned the 2020 result told The Post that they would nonetheless accept the result in their own races this year.

“Ohio is blessed to have a fantastic Secretary of State who has made election security a top priority — we have no doubt Ohio’s election in 2022 will be run with integrity,” a spokesperson for Ohio Senate contender J.D. Vance wrote in an email. “J.D. encourages other states across the country to follow Ohio’s lead by implementing common-sense measures like voter ID and signature verification.”

A spokeswoman for Abrams, who is challenging Kemp again this year, said she “will acknowledge the victor of the 2022 election” and noted that she “has never failed to do that” — a reference to Abrams’s refusal to concede when Kemp defeated her in 2018. Republicans have accused Abrams of being an election denier much like Trump and his supporters, but the candidate has rejected that comparison, given Trump’s fantastical claims of fraud and the violence that ensued.

“I have never denied that I lost,” Abrams said on a recent appearance on the ABC television show “The View.” “I don’t live in the governor’s mansion. I would have noticed.”

When Abrams ended her campaign in 2018, she acknowledged that Kemp had secured enough votes to claim victory, but she never conceded and she maintained that voter suppression had played a role in denying her victory. She said on a 2018 appearance on “The View” that she “absolutely” stood by that decision because “the election was not fair.”

Exactly what would happen if multiple candidates refused to accept their defeats after Nov. 8 is not clear — and depends on the state. Certainly a flurry of litigation, much like 2020, would be likely.

But absent hard evidence of irregularities, such legal efforts are likely to meet the same fate as the dozens of lawsuits filed two years ago, all of which went nowhere.

In many of the battleground states, election officials who have not embraced Trump’s false claims about widespread election fraud continue to have the power to certify election results — or the power to ask a judge to order a state or local election board to do so. In other places, the potential for chaos is hard to predict because election deniers now hold positions such as county clerk or electoral board member.

If Dixon questioned the result in Michigan, for instance, it is possible that the Board of State Canvassers, a four-person panel made up of two Democrats and two Republicans, would deadlock over whether to certify the results. What might happen next could take the state into uncharted territory.

Benson, the Michigan secretary of state, said in an interview that candidates are entitled to contest a result they believe is inaccurate or tainted, and there are multiple avenues to do so, including recounts and litigation. If those efforts do not produce evidence of inaccuracies, however, Benson said, it is the legal obligation of county and state boards of canvassers to certify the result. If they don’t, she said she would immediately seek an order for them to do so from the state Supreme Court.

It’s a plan she drew up in 2020, when the Board of State Canvassers nearly succumbed to pressure not to certify Biden’s win in the state.

“We have to recognize that the real motivation here is to delay the certification process in such a way to allow more misinformation and cause chaos and confusion around elections,” she said. “That’s what this is all about. We need to make sure their ability to sow seeds of doubt is minimally successful.”

Benson is running for reelection to be the state’s top election official against Kristina Karamo, a Republican who has made unfounded theories about a stolen 2020 contest central to her campaign.

Just because candidates declined to confirm they will accept the results does not mean they will follow Trump’s lead and try to challenge them. Republicans seeking to curry favor with their party’s base may see a benefit in leaving the question open.

Don Bolduc, who won the Republican Senate primary in New Hampshire on Tuesday, ran as a far-right Trump allegiant who embraced the former president’s unfounded claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

During an August primary debate, when asked whether he could “conclusively say who won the 2020 election” the retired brigadier general pointed to an open letter he signed in 2021 that warned, among other things, that “election irregularities” in 2020 were ignored.

“I signed a letter with 120 other generals and admirals saying that Trump won the election, and, damn it, I stand by my letter,” he said. “I’m not switching horses, baby. This is it.”

But days after his win, Bolduc performed a dramatic about-face.

“I’ve done a lot of research on this, and I’ve spent the past couple weeks talking to Granite Staters all over the state from every party, and I have come to the conclusion — and I want to be definitive on this — the election was not stolen,” Bolduc said in an interview on Fox News.

“Elections have consequences, and, unfortunately, President Biden is the legitimate president of this country,” he said.

Bolduc’s campaign is among those that did not respond when asked whether he would accept the results of his own election. The Democratic incumbent, Sen. Maggie Hassan, said in an email that “yes,” she would accept the results of her election and “no,” there were no circumstances that would lead her not to.

More troubling to some democracy advocates than the prospect of election deniers losing and crying foul is what happens if some of them win.

Doug Mastriano, a state senator and the Republican nominee for Pennsylvania governor, led efforts to overturn the 2020 result in his state, organizing a public hearing to air baseless conspiracy theories about election fraud and attending the Jan. 6, 2021, rally at the Ellipse before marching toward the Capitol. Mastriano has said he respected police lines and that he and his wife departed when it became clear the event was no longer peaceful.

Mastriano did not respond to The Post’s survey, and he is widely expected to contest his own result if he does not win. But with a Democratic governor and secretary of state, his power to block certification would be minimal.

Election deniers march toward power in key 2024 battlegrounds

If Mastriano wins, however, he will have the power in future elections, notably the next presidential race in 2024, to make good on his promises to decertify voting machines when he believes results are rigged and to appoint a like-minded ally to be secretary of state, whose responsibilities include certifying election results.

His Democratic opponent, Attorney General Josh Shapiro, has made Mastriano’s election denialism a central argument against the Republican.

“Unlike my opponent, I believe the integrity of our elections must be protected and every eligible vote must be counted,” Shapiro said in an emailed statement. “I will continue working to protect every citizen’s vote — and of course, I will accept the results of the election once the votes are counted and the election is certified, as I always have.”

Matthew Brown in Atlanta and David Weigel in Washington contributed to this report.

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Uvalde children return to school after 21 students and teachers were slaughtered. But some kids refuse to go back to classrooms

“I went and talked to my son and I told him, ‘They’re gonna have more cops. They’re gonna have higher fencing. And he wasn’t having it,” said Zayon’s father, Adam Martinez.

“He said, ‘It doesn’t matter. They’re not gonna protect us.'”

Zayon’s fear is not unfounded. Since the tragic end to the last school year, the grief enveloping Uvalde, Texas, has been compounded by outrage.
Families learned law enforcement officers waited more than 70 minutes before entering the two classrooms where 19 students and two teachers lay mortally wounded.
And authorities repeatedly changed their stories about what happened as damning new evidence emerged.

Now, families who already lost one child in the massacre worry about sending another child back to school. And months of preparation by parents and school administrators will be put to the test.

Robb Elementary School will not reopen

No students or staff will return to the site of the deadliest school massacre in almost a decade.

“We’re not going back to that campus,” Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Superintendent Hal Harrell said in June.

Instead, children who were first graders at Robb Elementary last year will start second grade at Dalton Elementary.

Second and third graders at Robb last year will go to the new Uvalde Elementary, located at an existing educational complex in town. Many Robb Elementary teachers have relocated to Uvalde Elementary.

And some students have left the school district entirely.

Enrollment at Sacred Heart Catholic School in Uvalde began its new school year with double the enrollment of elementary-age students compared to last fall, its principal said. The new students include 30 from Robb Elementary who received scholarships to go to the private school.

All students remaining in the Uvalde public school district could sign up for remote learning and use tablets provided by the school district.

Martinez said both his children opted for remote learning. “I talked to my son and daughter, and they said that they were afraid that if it happened again, they weren’t going to be protected,” he said.

“There’s no fencing at the junior high where my daughter would be going. There’s no way that I’m gonna convince her to go when there’s no fencing.”

But remote learning isn’t possible for some families in which both parents work outside the home.

And changing the scenery won’t erase the horror tormenting victims’ families — especially those debating whether to send their other children back to school.

‘I don’t feel like my kids are safe’

Uziyah Garcia should be starting the fifth grade today. But he was gunned down in his classroom at age 10, leaving his family crippled with grief.

“This is something that terrorizes you daily and nightly,” said Uziyah’s uncle Brett Cross, who was raising Uziyah like his own son.

“I close my eyes. All I see is my son. I hear the gunshots. It is something that doesn’t ever go away.”

But Cross has four other children in the school district. He’s struggled to decide whether to send them back to school in person.

“You want your kids to be able to go and have that education and everything, but at the same time, you’re fearful that they’re not gonna make it out by the end of the day,” he said.

Cross spent much of this summer demanding accountability from the school district and lambasting the law enforcement response.

“We’ve already seen that they didn’t do their job. So how are we supposed to trust that?” he said last week. “I don’t feel like my kids are safe.”

Cross has two 15-year-old daughters who have decided to return to school in person. He said they’re old enough to make their own decisions, with their parents’ guidance.

“But my little ones (ages 7 and 10) … we’re not certain yet,” he said. “I don’t feel like everything has been done to protect our children.”

Cross said he appreciated some changes made by the school district. After the district announced 33 Texas Department of Public Safety officers would work at Uvalde schools this year, Cross said he was assured those DPS officers would not be among the dozens who responded the day of the massacre.

But he wants to see more active monitoring of schools. “We’ve had several requests about somebody … watching the surveillance and everything like that, a dedicated person,” he said. “That would make me feel a lot safer.”

What the school district is doing

After months of public outcry, the Uvalde school district fired its police chief, Pedro “Pete” Arredondo. State investigators and law enforcement analysts say Arredondo was the de facto incident commander the day of the massacre.

The Uvalde school district also announced new safety measures planned for this school year. They include hiring 10 more school police officers; installing 500 new security cameras; the assignment of 33 Texas DPS officers to the Uvalde school district; and searching for a new interim police chief.

The school district said it has also increased emotional support for students, including comfort dogs on every campus for the first few weeks of school, additional school counselors and trauma-informed care training for all staff members.

But Cross said he’s not done demanding more safety measures — not just for his surviving children, but for all children in hopes no other family has to endure the agony he’s suffering.

“I’m fighting the system that let him (Uziyah) down. I’m at every city council meeting. I’m at every school board meeting,” he said.

Cross has also questioned why 18-year-olds in Texas can buy assault-style rifles like the one used to kill Uziyah.

“You have to be 21 to buy cigarettes and alcohol — things that can kill yourself. But you only have to be 18 to buy something that can kill multiple people,” he said.

“I’m channeling my grief into the fight right now because this fight is a fight that everybody should be a part of — but nobody is until it’s them. And it’s a lot harder on this side with this hole in your heart to do this fight.”

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Freya the walrus euthanised after crowds at Oslo fjord refuse to stay away | Norway

A walrus nicknamed Freya that attracted crowds while basking in the sun in the Oslo fjord has been euthanised.

“The decision to euthanise was taken on the basis of a global evaluation of the persistent threat to human security,” the head of Norway’s fisheries directorate, Frank Bakke-Jensen, said in a statement.

“We carefully examined all the possible solutions. We concluded that we could not guarantee the wellbeing of the animal by any of the means available,” he said.

Officials had previously said they were considering euthanasia because repeated appeals to the public to keep their distance from the young female weighing 600kg (1,300lb) had been in vain.

Freya, whose name was a reference to the Norse goddess of beauty and love, had been making headlines since 17 July when she was first spotted in the waters of the Norwegian capital.

Walruses normally live in the even more northerly latitudes of the Arctic.

Between long naps – a walrus can sleep up to 20 hours a day – Freya was filmed chasing a duck, attacking a swan and, more often than not, dozing on boats struggling to support her bulk.

Despite repeated appeals, curious onlookers continued to approach her, sometimes with children in tow, to take photographs.

Freya had already been sighted in the UK, the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden and chose to spend part of the summer in Norway.

Freya first gained notoriety in Norway by climbing on to pleasure boats in Kragerø, an idyllic southern coastal village.

The walrus is a protected species that feeds mainly on invertebrates such as molluscs, shrimps, crabs and small fish.

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Some lab techs refuse to take blood from possible monkeypox patients, raising concerns about stigma and testing delays

Labcorp and Quest don’t dispute that in many cases, their phlebotomists are not taking blood from possible monkeypox patients. What remains unclear, after company statements and follow-ups from CNN, is whether the phlebotomists are refusing on their own to take blood or if it is the company policy that prevents them. The two testing giants say they’re reviewing their safety policies and procedures for their employees.

Infectious disease experts who treat monkeypox patients say that the refusals are based on stigma and slow efforts to identify and isolate patients with monkeypox at a time when the nation’s health officials are coming under criticism for struggling to get the outbreak under control. As of Tuesday, there were 6,326 reported cases of monkeypox, an 81% increase from a week before, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This is absolutely inexcusable. It’s a grave dereliction of duty,” said David Harvey, executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors, which represents 1,600 sexual health clinics in the US, some of which have phlebotomists from commercial labs including Labcorp and Quest in their offices. The commercial labs employ tens of thousands of phlebotomists — health care professionals who draw blood — in various types of clinics and doctors’ offices across the country, as well as in their own patient service centers.

Although monkeypox is diagnosed by swabbing lesions, blood tests are necessary to differentiate the virus from other types of infections, infectious disease experts say. Harvey said doctors at sexual health clinics have had to find workarounds when phlebotomists have refused to take blood from suspected monkeypox patients.

“We can’t afford a delay in diagnostic testing because commercial labs aren’t doing the right thing,” he said.

Harvey added that it feels like the refusals are “a modern-day example of discrimination” — a viewpoint shared by others.

“This reminds me of the olden days when people didn’t want to care for HIV patients,” said Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at New York University.

Monkeypox cases in the US have been mainly among men who have sex with men, and when a technician does not draw blood, it “perpetuates more stigma and fear and anxiety” for a virus that’s already stigmatized, added Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, a member of the California Department of Public Health’s Monkeypox Virus Scientific Advisory Committee who is caring for monkeypox patients.

Chin-Hong, an infectious disease specialist at UCSF Health, said men are avoiding getting tested for the virus for fear of being stigmatized.

“The fact that phlebotomists are afraid of taking specimens makes it even more unappealing for someone to ask for a monkeypox test,” he said. “So this is going to make it even worse.”

Phlebotomists take blood from people with many kinds of infections on a regular basis, and monkeypox is not new: The US has seen cases before, including two last year and dozens in 2003. The amount of pox virus in blood is “low,” according to the CDC, which instructs health care workers to use standard precautions to prevent transmission when handling specimens from suspected or confirmed monkeypox patients.

‘Some of our phlebotomists have been scared’

Blood tests are necessary not only to differentiate between monkeypox and other infections but to test for other sexually transmitted infections, such as syphilis, since people with monkeypox sometimes have STIs.

If suspected monkeypox patients don’t have their blood drawn, “the standard of care is not being followed,” said Harvey, the director of the sexual health clinics association.

In an email to CNN on Monday morning, a Quest spokeswoman wrote that “we follow CDC guidelines that state that patients with confirmed or suspected monkeypox infection should be isolated. Once an individual is out of isolation, we will provide service for them.”

The spokeswoman, Kim Gorode, sent a link to these CDC guidelines to back up Quest’s policy. However, those guidelines don’t say that health care services should be delayed until after an isolation period. In fact, the CDC says its isolation recommendations “do not apply in healthcare settings.”
CDC spokeswoman Kristen Nordlund said that “CDC’s monkeypox isolation guidance specifically states that people should remain isolated, except to get medical care. Obtaining a sample for testing is medical care that could lead to diagnosis or treatment if warranted.”
Since the first US case was identified in May, the CDC has given monkeypox infection control guidelines to health-care providers. That page offers detailed instructions on how to treat these patients safely and notes that transmission in health-care settings has been “rarely” reported.

Later Monday, Gorode wrote in an email to CNN that “we are now evaluating our guidance in light of updates posted on the CDC site today.” She did not specify what those updates were. CDC spokesman Jason McDonald said the only update Monday was that the sentence about the isolation guidelines not applying to health-care settings was moved higher on the page.

Gorode added that “we want to ensure every patient has access to the testing they need while also fostering a safe environment for our employees and all of our patients.”

Labcorp executive Dr. Brian Caveney told CNN last week that “up until now, we have typically not been doing” blood draws from suspected monkeypox patients but that the company was reviewing its policies, and this was “likely to change.”

Caveney, the company’s president of diagnostics, said Labcorp was “trying to make sure that our work force is safe but also to ensure that we take care of our customers while we were figuring out the appropriate occupational safety regulations and policies.”

“(Monkeypox) is new — nobody knew what it was — some nurses and doctors are scared of it. Some of our phlebotomists have been scared — appropriately — of it,” he said.

But the head of a phlebotomists’ group said they shouldn’t be scared, as long as they take standard precautions.

Diane Crawford, CEO of the National Phlebotomy Association, said she is “disappointed” that labs are allowing phlebotomists to refuse to draw blood from suspected or confirmed monkeypox patients.

“It is a problem. It’s just like a doctor refusing to take care of a patient,” she said.

Calls for CDC to do more education

Caplan, the bioethicist, questioned why Quest and Labcorp are working on guidelines now for their phlebotomists when the first monkeypox case appeared in the US more than two months ago.

“This should have been done already,” he said.

Caplan said the CDC needed to do more to educate phlebotomists beyond the pages on its website.

“They need an educational rollout (for phlebotomists) and not just issue guidance. That’s very, very important,” he said.

He said education about standard safety precautions should help phlebotomists feel comfortable taking specimens from these patients.

“I don’t want you sicking out or leaving or taking a new job, which would harm the availability of these services,” he said. “And we have the obligation to make their work as safe and risk-free as we can, and that goes beyond just information on websites.”

But Caplan added that at the end of the day, phlebotomists do need to take blood from people who have, or might have, monkeypox.

“We want you to do it, it’s important to help control the outbreaks, and this is the kind of risk factor you signed up for,” he said.

CNN’s Nadia Kounang contributed to this report.

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Poland, Sweden and Czech Republic refuse to play Russia in FIFA World Cup qualifiers: ‘We all want war to end’

The reverberations of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continue to ripple across the sports world. What will happen in UEFA World Cup qualifying just got a little murkier as Poland were slated to play Russia with the winner of the match taking on the winner of Sweden against Czech Republic. Initially, those teams released a statement that they would not travel to Russia for these matches leaving FIFA with a decision to make. Now they’ve taken their stance even further.

“In light of the escalation of the Russian Federation’s aggression against Ukraine, the Polish national team is not going to play a match against the Russian Republic,” federation president Cezary Kulesza said on Twitter.

“This is the only right decision. We are in talks with the Swedish and Czech association to present a common position to FIFA.”

The Swedish federation released a statement backing Poland’s decision that was short but to the point, and a day later, the Czech FA joined the fray.

“The men’s national team will not play against Russia — regardless of where the match is played. The Federal Board also urges FIFA to cancel the play-off matches in March in which Russia participates.”

“The Czech FA executive committee, staff members and players of the national team agreed it’s not possible to play against the Russian national team in the current situation, not even on the neutral venue. We all want the war to end as soon as possible,” said the Czech FA statement released on Twitter.

These steps came after FIFA president Gianni Infantino refused to commit to a plan of action on Thursday, instead hoping that things would blow over. “The first match is one month from now and of course we hope that this whole situation will be solved before then — well before then, as soon as possible, he said. “We want to strongly believe in that. But we have a body in place, the bureau, who can take a decision at any time. We are analyzing the situation and we will take the decision when we have to take it.”

Poland’s players took to twitter to express their support for the decision to not play Russia. Bayern Munich’s superstar striker Robert Lewandowski said, “Russian footballers and fans are not responsible for this, but we can’t pretend that nothing is happening.”

The ball is back in Infantino’s court but it’s clear that waiting to make a decision won’t be acceptable as federations are taking things into their own hands. Even with matches still a month away, a solution needs to be found. 

UEFA World Cup qualifying schedule

March 24
Russia vs. Poland, 1 p.m. ET
Sweden vs. Czech Republic, 3:45 p.m. ET

March 29
Winner of Russia/Poland vs. Winner of Sweden/Czech Republic

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