DeSantis to Biden: YOU are the one who is being divisive
'You are trying to plunge people into destitution' with vaccine mandate
It was only a matter of time before Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis responded to the claim by the president who ran on unifying the nation that requiring private companies to ensure that all of their employees receive an experimental COVID-19 vaccine should not be divisive.
"Don't make the vaccines divisive?" DeSantis said at a news conference Friday, with palms up and arms spread wide in a look of incredulity.
"You are trying to take people's jobs away over this issue," he said, addressing his remarks directly to Biden.
"You are trying to plunge people into destitution. You are taking away their livelihoods. Nobody else is doing that," he continued.
TRENDING: Facebook 'whistleblower' blows off the real scandal
"You are the one who is being divisive about this."
Biden said Thursday that his announced mandate "should not be another issue that divides us."
"That's why we continue to battle the misinformation that's out there, and companies and communities are stepping up as well to combat the misinformation," he said in televised remarks.
Meanwhile, as various vaccine-mandate deadlines loom, protests have erupted among federal and state workers, contractors and employees of private companies.
Biden said Thursday the "misinformation" about the mandate and vaccines included the claim that the massive disruption of Southwest Airlines flights that began last weekend was due to his vaccine mandate.
And American Airlines experienced an unusually high rate of disruptions Thursday.
'You're not divisive just because you don't agree'
Establishment media often use the term "divisive" in their references to DeSantis, but when a Bloomberg TV host did it this week in an interview, she got pushback.
"Why is he inherently more divisive than, say, Gavin Newsom or someone on the other side of the spectrum?" responded entrepreneur David Sacks, who is raising funds for DeSantis.
Words such as "divisive" and "polarizing" are slapped on people who don't align with the "information bubble" in which so many Americans reside, he said.
"I would argue that the country — there's a multiplicity of views, and you're not divisive just because you don't agree with the orthodoxy of Silicon Valley," he said, referring to social media.
Sacks said he likes DeSantis because he was "the first governor to stop these insane lockdowns, and he found the right policy on lockdowns, which was to stop them, and he did it despite an extremely hostile media."
"When someone takes the right position on an issue despite the hostility of the media, that's something I really respect," he said.
Biden's vaccine mandate was described this week in a letter to the president by a group of Ohio clergy representing more than 100 congregations as a "unilateral and divisive order" that is "unethical and tantamount to what a totalitarian king would dictate."
"Furthermore Mr. President, with respect to your vaccine mandate, we respond by saying 'We have no king but King Jesus,'" the pastors said, CBN reported.
The ministers pointed out to the president that he said on Dec. 4, 2020, that he would not impose a national vaccine mandate.
And on Oct. 7, 2020, Vice President Kamala Harris stated she "would not take a COVID-19 vaccine if ordered by the president of the United States."
A study by Harvard researchers across 68 countries found "no discernable relationship between percentage of population fully vaccinated and new COVID-19 cases."
In fact, the researchers said, countries with a higher percentage of the population fully vaccinated have a higher number of COVID-19 cases per 1 million people.
Florida, which removed its last COVID-19 mitigation policies six months ago, has seen its case rate plummet. Last month, it dropped 47% in a span of just two weeks, the biggest drop nationwide.
And according to the New York Times chart on Thursday, Florida’s case rate of 13 per 100,000 people was the third lowest in the nation, the Daily Wire reported.
See the Florida governor's remarks:
https://www.wnd.com/2021/10/desantis-biden-one-divisive/

No comments:
Post a Comment