What you’re watching here is Sarah Jo Reynolds of the RPA banning the Pulaski County GOP delegation (except a chosen few). This convention was held in a hotel which is open to the public. Members were even threatened with arrest, as police officers were ordered to keep these duly elected members out.
2.) RPA officials use security officers to kick Pulaski County GOP dues-paying members out of Embassy Suites
2.) Defending The Republic co-files Class Action Lawsuit against US Coast Guard – Department of Defense – Food & Drug Admin, and Department of Homeland Security
Late Tuesday, July 25, 2022, on behalf of members of the U.S. Coast Guard, Defending the Republic – along with co-counsel Dale Saran and Simon Peter Serrano of the Silent Majority Foundation – filed a class action lawsuit against the Coast Guard, the Department of Defense, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Department of Homeland Security.
Our Coast Guard clients all have sincere religious beliefs which prevent then from receiving the mandated COVID-19 “vaccines.” Their religious rights should have been respected and they should have been allowed to continue to serve their country without the shots. Instead, they have been harassed, denied promotions, received discipline, and face imminent separation – while their “vaccinated” Coast Guard peers continue to get COVID-19 in large numbers.
This is a violation of their rights guaranteed under the First Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
In this class action, Defending the Republic has also alleged the implementation of the Coast Guard COVID-19 vaccine is unlawful, as these service members are ordered to receive unlicensed vaccines under an Emergency Use Authorization “as if” they were FDA-licensed vaccines.
We are also challenging the COVID-19 vaccine mandate itself as unlawful, and asking the Court to enjoin the Coast Guard from enforcing the vaccine mandate against all Coast Guard members who have religious objections to these “vaccines.”
Pulaski County Delegates and the Republican State Convention
from Conduit News
Did you hear what happened at the Republican state convention this weekend? The votes of the entire delegation from Pulaski County were stolen. Weeks after nobody objected to the delegate election wherein 71 delegates were chosen for Pulaski County, nine old timers complained because those new delegates were largely new members who joined this past year and took control.
About a month ago, when Pulaski County Justice of the Peace candidate Lorri Justice was, to the surprise of the old guard, elected chair of the delegate-nominating convention, that old guard brought out their dirty tricks. They refused to help during the delegate election, held back the membership list, hid printer paper, and made false claims about the rules. And who did this? Those who were losing their grip on power. Throughout this, Lorri Justice accommodated their complaints.
Prior to the election, there were two attempted ballots. Both times, objections were raised. So, Lorri Justice fully withdrew and collected those ballots. When the actual ballot was presented, someone made a point of order that there were small misspellings. For example, future complainer, Allen Kerr had “Allen” spelled one of the many other ways that name is commonly spelled. Mon dieu. (That’s French for “give me a break!”) So, law professor Rob Steinbuch made a motion to correct the mistakes directly on the ballots. That motion passed unanimously, and all of the errors were corrected.
Thereafter, Lorri Justice asked three separate times if there were any challenges to the ballot. No one objected. None of the nine complainers said a word. Not even all nine were there, but those who were stood dumb. The district chair, Melonaie Gullick, who screamed at the Lorri Justice and other newcomers throughout the process, led the vote count. State Party Chair, Jonelle Fulmer, was present the entire evening. Senator Mark Johnson was the Parliamentarian. No objections to the ballot were made.
Several weeks later, “grievously injured,” misspelling-“victim,” Allen Kerr, and eight other delicate daisies, including some who weren’t even at the meeting during the vote, sought to cancel the election of the Pulaski County delegates. They complained that prior to being elected as chair, Lorri Justice openly stated that she would run for chair and she and her allies will run to be delegates. (Isn’t that exactly what candidates always do?) They complained that the two objected-to and rescinded draft ballots had errors. (Isn’t that why they were objected-to and rescinded?)
Last week, immediately Steinbuch made public the until-then hidden complaint by the old timers working behind the scenes and under the cover of darkness, the author of the complaint, Linda Dyson, proclaimed: “You people have taken over our committee. We will not stand for that.” Misspelling “victim” Allen Kerr, who was standing beside her, told her not to say that. Of course he did! She forgot the most important part of stealing an election: don’t say the truth out loud. Doh!
This was never about a ballot. This is about the fact that the old guard see the new folks as being on their playground, and the old timers don’t want to share the swings. Well, there’s a new sentiment in the Republican Party. Constitutionalists are replacing cronies. Freedom lovers are replacing mega-corporation apologists. And truth is replacing corruption.
State Senator Alan Clark had this to say:
“A terrible thing happened at the Republican State Convention today…. We voted 303-295 not to seat the Pulaski County delegates. Ostensibly that was because rules were broken in their county convention…. But that’s not the real problem. The problem is the wrong people were elected. Trump has brought a lot of new people to the Republican Party that are impatient with the rate of change. The status quo feels downright under siege in some locales. Sorry. This is politics, and that is how it works.”
3.) School districts had the money all along to pay teachers more. Instead, the woke superintendents and school boards chose to use the money on buildings and athletic programs. If you are a teacher, your complaints should be directed toward your superintendent, not your legislator. This article explains:
1.) New York COVID-19 Quarantine Rules Unconstitutional and Illegal: Judge
“A New York Supreme Court judge this month quietly ruled that regulations mandating that people infected with or exposed to highly contagious communicable diseases be quarantined are a violation of state law, declaring them null and void.“
The Isolation and Quarantine procedures, known as Rule 2.13, were enacted in February.
Three Republican state legislators, Sen. George Borrello, assemblyman Chris Tague, and assemblyman Michael Lawler, along with Uniting NYS, filed a lawsuit against Democrat Gov. Kathy Hochul, Commissioner of Health Mary Bassett, the state’s health department, and the Public Health and Health Planning Council.
Plaintiffs argued that the Isolation and Quarantine procedures were in violation of the New York State Constitution and a violation of the separation of powers.
“It’s unconstitutional in our eyes, and anything like that should go through the legislature,” Tague told local media. “It should have an opportunity to be debated. To be able to have facts brought forth by health professionals, and leaders within our communities before we just decide to put something into law.”
2.) Judge grants temporary injunction against COVID vax mandate for airmen seeking religious exemption
A district court judge in Ohio granted a temporary injunction Thursday against the Air Force’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for all of the branch’s members requesting a religious exemption.
U.S. District Court Judge Matthew McFarland, of the Southern District of Ohio, granted the 14-day injunction in the case of Doster v. Kendall, giving the government seven days to respond and explain “why this Court should not grant a class-wide preliminary injunction,” according to the court order.
Under the injunction, which applies to the entire Air Force and Space Force, including the Air Force Reserve, no punishment, discipline, or adverse action may be taken against service members who submitted a Religious Accommodation Request for exemption from the vaccine mandate.
“This is a huge victory for many of my Air Force clients,” said R. Davis Younts, a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserves and a Judge Advocate General’s Corps lawyer privately representing several military members seeking the exemptions. “Another federal judge has found that ‘The facts show Defendants have engaged in a pattern of denying religious accommodation requests.’
1.) Jody Harris statement on Friday’s court hearing:
“The outcome from my hearing in Franklin County today was disappointing. Judge Sutterfield dismissed the case citing the case was filed in an improper venue. When my attorney, Clint Lancaster made a motion asking the judge to transfer the venue from Franklin County back to Crawford County, the request was denied because the judge did not think he had jurisdiction to do so. I have maintained through this entire campaign that I am a fighter. Election integrity is vital to our Republic. Elections should always be and appear to be fair & transparent. I appreciate those of you who showed up today and those who have fervently prayed over this injustice. Thank you. I will keep you updated on next steps as we go through the appeals process.”
2.) Will 100 Million Die From Covid Injections by 2028?
1/100: It's time to examine the biggest snake oil seller of the planet – @BillGates: his detached worldview, his alleged philanthropic motives, the monopolisation of science, behavioural patterns of the wannabe saviour of the planet & possible endgames. It's a #WildRide-Thread.⬇️ pic.twitter.com/tZDkTX1kA2