20 Burst results for "Marisol"

"marisol" Discussed on Asian American History 101

Asian American History 101

02:23 min | 6 months ago

"marisol" Discussed on Asian American History 101

"To Asian American history one O one, a podcast about Asian American history from generally known historical happenings to the deep cuts that we don't hear about in school, where your hosts, Jen and Ted, the daughter and father team. Welcome to season two episode 46. So if you're keeping track, you know that we love food and ice hockey and reading and a bunch of other things. And one of the things that we love is that the world of comic books is getting more and more diverse with characters like miss marvel, Shang-Chi, and so many others. But one area that is lacking are comic book creators who are women of Asian Pacific Islander descent. They're out there, but it's a smaller subset. Enter comics founded and led by Cecilia Lim and her daughter waverly Lim, kendo is 100% women and people of Asian descent. It's easy to fall in love with quinto when you read their mission. Our mission is to create stories that introduce Filipino and other Asian mythology through a riveting contemporary fantasy comic series, our stories aim to inspire young women everywhere as they follow our female heroines who learn to spark the warrior goddess within. Our hope is that our readers will be inspired to face the future with hope, compassion and grace born from an understanding of the past and the struggles of our ancestors. And they've created a great comic book with a compelling story and beautiful illustration. Their first offering is mask of halia, and it follows the story of Monica, a Filipino American teen who travels back to the Philippines and finds a wooden mask in her grandmother's belongings. The writing, led by Caitlin faylan, with support and editing from Jennifer Zhang, really makes marisol a relatable Asian American teen while creating a believable, fantastical world. We love how the artwork really amplifies both realism and the amazing with the legend of halia and bakunawa. Please go out and get issues of the mask of halia and support this incredible work. We hope you enjoy the conversation. First of all, thank you so much for joining us today. We're so excited to welcome you to our podcast. Thank you, Jen and Ted. And thanks for having the ladies of quinto comics on your podcast. We're super excited to be here.

Cecilia Lim waverly Lim Jen Ted quinto hockey Caitlin faylan Jennifer Zhang bakunawa marisol Monica Philippines
"marisol" Discussed on Health Babes Podcast

Health Babes Podcast

05:19 min | 7 months ago

"marisol" Discussed on Health Babes Podcast

"And they're like, all my Friends say it's horrible the first year and I'm like, wow, mine's actually not that bad when I talk to my friends because and they loved it, right? So it was great. It was a great because it's a tough time in women's life too. Yeah. I'll call it. And you're feeling bad and you're tired. Oh God. And yeah, so it's just a great thing in that aspect for sure. Well, doctor marisol gave us a code that you guys can use and you get a discount. We literally have all of our patients start with this, right? Most we do 5% of our patients. We have got one year packs. We use them and the great thing about these two is you can use them over and over. And then you can wash them, right? Yep, yep. You do want to replace them after about two to three months. And the reason for that is that it's still unclear, unsure, again, Castro moves toxins in, but we don't know if it could potentially also move it back into the pack. So we want to be cautious there so around two or three months we ask people to replace the pack. And that's, of course, with regular use. So that's someone who's using it every single day. That'll help with that. One other little thing that I did forget to mention is that if someone is trying to conceive that we do work with our packs a little bit differently, so I'll just quickly take a moment there, trying to conceive what we do is we do the packs only during the first two weeks during the follicular phase. So from the start of the period to the start of ovulation or we pause them if they had sexual intercourse or sex anywhere between day ten and 15. So they don't have intercourse until day 15. That's great.

marisol Castro
"marisol" Discussed on Health Babes Podcast

Health Babes Podcast

05:01 min | 7 months ago

"marisol" Discussed on Health Babes Podcast

"Nice. And your bottles are brown too, right? Can you explain that a little bit? Yeah. Yeah, that's for light corruption, right? So Brown blog glasses, you'll notice pharmaceuticals often come in these bottles. And that is truly to prevent any damage from because heat will damage castor oil, so you can't, you don't, you want cold press, not heat pressed, and then light, of course, will damage anything that is high in antioxidants. So we want to keep that completely protected. So that's the oil. But then the pack, the pack is the same thing too. You got to be cautious with what you're buying. The casserole pack was originally promoted to be you done only with cotton, organic cotton and organic wool. There has been a new packs coming out that are made of organic bamboo. But buyer beware because the organic bamboo, although it might sound healthy, it isn't necessarily always the best material because, you know, cotton, if it's not sprayed, the processing is simple and easy and it's clean. Bamboo on the other hand may be organically grown, right? Because it grows like a weed and four years really rapidly. It's a material that's used in construction. And it's as strong as steel. But in order to take the fibers of bamboo and turn them into a flexible fiber, like a cotton, you need to use an enormous amount of chemicals that break down the bamboo fibers, enormous. I'm not like caustic super not good. Chemicals, you know? On this material. So, you know, I had no idea of this, but really working, doing this, bringing Castro packs to the market. I mean, I used to buy organic bamboo sheets. I got rid of the phone. Because the majority of them, I only worked with cotton in my life. That's it. I don't want those chemicals coming into my skin. And sleeping wouldn't be as bad about this problem because you're not using oil, but if you're using oil, like a castor oil, like a Carrie or oil with these materials, you definitely do not want to be using any kind of material that may be made in a different way.

Brown Castro Carrie
"marisol" Discussed on Health Babes Podcast

Health Babes Podcast

04:24 min | 7 months ago

"marisol" Discussed on Health Babes Podcast

"Today we have doctor marisol on. She's a great she's from Queen of Thrones and she talks all about castor oil and castor oil packs and why they're good for your liver and not only your liver, but your thyroid and your gut health and there's so many different uses for castor oil that we actually learned some stuff from her. And it's really amazing towards the end you're going to hear how she uses them for hormone health and actually to help with conception. So we're so excited for you to hear this episode. Well, we have doctor marisol with us with the amazing castor oil packs that she has. We're so pumped to have you on. Thanks for coming on. Thank you. Thank you so much, Chris. It's a pleasure. I love the work you ladies do. It's amazing. Thank you. Yes, we're obsessed with your stuff. So we're so excited to talk about castor oil. So for those that don't know about castor oil, what exactly is it? Castor oil is a vegan oil, which is unique to the Mediterranean basin. So it comes from Greece and Spain and southern Italy. And it's highly produced in India as well, and now in Brazil and different areas of Mexico. This oil is in oil has been used from the ancient doctors back to hypocritical time in ancient Greece, the Roman doctor to the empresses who dealt with mainly problems with ovaries and fertility would use castor oil packs and his name was pliny the elder. So it's truly an amazing oil that is all natural, supports the body's ability to function better, reducing inflammation and wonderful antihistamine, which I know is very important to you, ladies. An excellent antihistamine because it's high in quercetin, amazing antioxidants like vitamin E and it just, is this oil that does actions beyond other oils, a nitric oxide promoter, which means that it helps to support smooth muscle contraction.

marisol castor Greece Mediterranean basin Castor Chris Spain Brazil Italy Mexico India
"marisol" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

02:08 min | 1 year ago

"marisol" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Center for investigative reporting and PRX this is reveal I'm shirin marisol mirage in for outlets We begin with another breaking news story in the fight over boats in Wayne county It's November of 2020 The day after the presidential election And dozens of people most of them Republicans are trying to get into Detroit's TCF convention center They're shouting their banging on the glass walls and they are upset by false rumors that poll watchers are being illegally turned away All the while poll workers inside are still counting absentee ballots People banging on the doors causing havoc creating distractions to stop the process Brandon Snyder is a local community organizer and he'd been at the TCF center earlier He was keeping an eye on the situation A majority of detroiters vote Democrat The city is almost 80% black But the protesters These were mostly white folks who were coming in to the city who were inspecting the votes of black voters And these were mostly people who weren't detroiters At this moment Biden's on pace to win Michigan But he won't win it without Wayne county The drama in Detroit drags on for two weeks Then it shifts to what's called the board of canvassers There's a board like this for every county in Michigan Each one is made up of two Republicans and two Democrats It's usually this bureaucratic formality They review voter rolls and ballot counts They sign off on the results but Trump is trying to sew doubt about the vote So the board becomes this huge national story And when they finally meet the Republican members say they still aren't sure the results in some precincts are accurate So they vote not to certify the election And that.

shirin marisol mirage TCF convention center Center for investigative repor Wayne county Brandon Snyder TCF center Detroit Michigan Biden Trump
"marisol" Discussed on What's Wrong With Wrestling? WWE Recap Show

What's Wrong With Wrestling? WWE Recap Show

07:02 min | 1 year ago

"marisol" Discussed on What's Wrong With Wrestling? WWE Recap Show

"Just seems perfect. So, yeah. Anyway, is, yeah, let's get to wrestling. We have to do it. We have to do wrestle. I'm sorry. But first, we have to think, for new patrons, actually 5. Kind of, we have to think Isaac McAlester. Okay. Wrong and his girlfriend Marisol. Oh, Marisol, yeah, Marisol Marisol. I don't know something like that. Wayne Mansell and Joshua Watkins. All right, well, thank you to all of you. Yes, thank you so much. Patreon.com $5 a month. Gets you. Everything you can cancel. Anytime. You can also sign up for a year and get a discount. Yeah. So I could go and get a SummerSlam recap later this month. Yes. That's right. That's like, what? Two weeks. Yeah. Two weeks. Two weeks in Vegas in Vegas recording the podcast in Vegas. Yes. So off I don't think we're going to do any sort of live show but we'll definitely be hanging out at a few places. We can always keep everyone posted full show. If you're going to be out there drop us a line. Let us know that way. We can keep you in the loop. Yeah. Also we did the hottest couple bracket? Yes. Submitted by one of our patrons that's right. Rachel Graham. Yes we have more of those to get to as well. We do it's like the flood gates have been opened rights. So many brackets now so many bright but we do have is that bracket going to be ready this month off? I don't know. I'm not sure yet probably the next month because SummerSlam is right here and it's so busy. But I mean, I work from a bracket. Yeah. Are too. I do have thought, you know, contingency plan if we need. Okay, so what's that? Oh SummerSlam 2002. Shawn Michaels vs. Hulk Hogan. Oh that's 2005. Oh mm. Yeah. Right. Yeah. SummerSlam 2002 was great. Yeah, Triple H vs. Shawn Michaels, right? Yeah. SummerSlam 2005. We're HBK magnifico magnifico magnificently. Thank you. I'm Josh Reese. Everyone over sold everything. Yeah. That Hogan dead. That's right. Yeah. Cuz fuck that guy fucked that guy. Yeah. Who, who likes Hogan? Crazy people. All right, so Smackdown starts with Simon. No Sasha Banks week. Yeah, I know this is weird. Believe it or not. Wait I'm sorry. Suck down, doesn't start with Roman Reigns. That's good. Yeah Smackdown also has a CGI robot to now cuz the future wrestling is Rome. Yeah. Like robo-wrestlemania mayor. Yeah. Totally. The Jetsons WWE movie. Yeah. Big Show blast from the past shows up dead. My God. Holy held. Who was the main star of that movie? Big shows a Big Show. No picture was the villain who was like the hero of the movie. I don't remember John Cena, John Cena and Sheamus home. Yeah, I think Seamus might have been there, but yeah, that's right. The future of wrestling is robots. Yeah. All your look at the movie Real Steel. Yeah. Clearly. That's where it's going to be God. Yeah, so yeah, I think box was like, Hey, USA got a robot. Why can't we have a robot? We're so cool. So yeah, so she gets the ring. She says, I came back from my spot life. I deserve. She laughed about attacking Bianca Bel-Air last week and she says, Bianca would be nothing without me. Bianca was crying before her match at WrestleMania because she was standing across from the greatest of all time. So Bellaire comes out until Sasha, you begged me to pick you. After I won the Royal Rumble so that we could make history at WrestleMania. But we are gets in the ring and Sasha leaves and stands on the announce table. Able and Bellaire tell Sasha if you want this, it's on. So then zelina Vega comes out and reminds Bianca that she already accepted her challenge. So, Bel-Air tell Sasha, I'll see you at SummerSlam and then she tells Vega, I'll see you tonight. So that's two matches that Bell are accepted. Wow, this is not difficult to understand unless you're Michael Cole off right now. I am talking about last night. Michael, yes, please. Michael. I don't think that gets utilized enough on. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then he also said that Bell are challenged Vega? No, no, no, no. Big a challenge. Spell are yeah. Yeah. It's how is he that bad? He's been doing this job for twenty-five years. He's been with w. E. I know he still sucked. He was also in robo-wrestlemania. That's right. Rollins. Was in it. Yeah. Cody Rhodes was in it? Yeah. Do we figure out who the star was like, who the main character was? Ennis, McMahon? I don't remember off. Neither. Do I like Roman Reigns is on the poster. I don't think he was like, the hero though, is that? No, Alicia Fox Alicia Fox? Yeah, let me see. Let me look through this Thursday. We recap this movie. He did, we did. Oh, George Jetson. Michael Cole, was either here on the movie now, Bob Alicia. Fox wage. Real name is Victoria Crawford. Oh I was it Shamus. I think it was, it might have been the Usos were there. Seth Rollins Thursdays are good. God, maybe it was a big show. I'm so confused, Big Show was a villain though. Yeah, that's right. My God, let me look at the pictures and I think he was a face during that they're saying that maybe it was Seamus. Yeah, well as in all the fucking things it was fucking Thursday is we we watched this movie where you recapped it and I won't remember anything about. Yeah this is before Rousseau Penitentiary. Yeah. So clearly Seamus was Champion or something. Yeah, well there's vents gosh. Anyways, go listen to that. I think that was the second movie we ever recap. It could have been the first one was the marine and then the second one was robo-wrestlemania. God help us all. What was I smoking? Yeah, let's watch that. You know, man. All right, so back to the show, the originally said that Vega vs. Bel-Air were before the title that night. But then later in the show, Adam, Pierson, Sonya DeVille, tell, Vega that it's not for the title and she has to beat Bel-Air first, and then she'll get a.

Marisol Isaac McAlester Marisol Marisol Wayne Mansell Joshua Watkins Vegas wrestling Shawn Michaels Rachel Graham Sasha Josh Reese Bianca Sasha Banks John Cena Hogan Bellaire Bianca Bel Alicia Fox Seamus
"marisol" Discussed on KCRW

KCRW

06:11 min | 1 year ago

"marisol" Discussed on KCRW

"Thank you for having me. So before we dive into your documentary I was thinking about, you know, after my parents divorced when I was young. At one point, my mom learned that she could make more money on the overnight shift at a hospital doing lab test. And she was making during the day And so luckily my grand parents were able to keep us overnight. But not everyone has a family situation like that. And a lot of what you talk about. Is what happens to the kids of working moms who have to work through the night. There's so much more to get into. But tell us a little bit about how you came to this story and how you came to decide. This was something you wanted to take on. Well, interestingly enough, Same. I have a personal story. My mother worked the night shift. While I was growing up. She worked as a home health aide. S O. She raised four kids in New York City, making minimum wage on and did not have steady. Reliable support s so fast forward many, many years later, I'm sitting when they reading an article that was shared in an online mother's will that I'm a part of and it was precisely talking about this child care center. That functions 24 hours a day, seven days a week on looking at the fact that in the United States, many people have to work multiple jobs to make ends meet, or just the people are working overnight, irregular hours that you know our conversation about work, and when that happens Eyes is really outdated. You know, I'm not in sync with the reality on so I'm reading this article. I was immediately brought back toe many memories of my childhood and my mother. And as a documentary filmmaker was like, Oh, my God, I got to make a film about this, you know? Yeah, I mean, It's amazing. I did, you know, Pay child care after school. Sometimes when I was a kid, and just thinking back to Mrs Rose, Who's the woman who kept me? You know, and how she was like a a den mother For all these kids from around the neighborhood, you also seem to have found an entry point into someone who was so personally invested in her work. Taking care of kids. Tell us who were who were going to meet in your film. Through the night follows a few folks. It follows the Loris Hogan, who is known and called by new new by everyone. The Children and the adults like everyone calls her known you. I've been doing this for 22 years. What about that? About that husband and wife team we've been working together forever. Her husband, Patrick, who co founded the daycare with her ah few decades ago, and then we also follow two mothers whose Children she cares for Marisol Valencia. Who is working multiple jobs when we meet her, and she Nana Tate, who is a pediatric, er nurse when we meet her in the film. Yeah. So tell us a little bit more about the Hogans, Nunu and Pop pop. Yes. So Delores was born and spent the first few years of her life in Mississippi. On. According to her she was taking care of kids. You know, as early as like she could. Basically, you know, so she was the seven year old that was like looking after the three year old, you know, running around in the backyard. There might have been adults around, but she was this kind of den mother. Child, you know on then her family moved up to New York to Westchester County on you know, she also talked about like when they were living in the projects. Her mother would take care of neighborhood Children are the Children and the building and she would help her mother take care of these Children. So, really, when you talk about someone's life's work, Caring for Children truly is no. No's life work. It is truly her calling and her purpose in life. And so no new had people bringing her their Children informally for many years until eventually, they realized, you know for this to grow, they would need to Formalized the operation and, you know, go through some of the training and get the licensing from from New York State that is required. Now, from what I understand there was a huge die off of Mom and pop childcare centers during the pandemic. A lot of them went out of business. How How is new news business doing? How is she doing? Yeah, yeah, something like 60% of home based childcare centers had to close during the pandemic because the thing is that Child care, uh, in the United States is not supported the way that it should be on. So we have this kind of patchwork of private entities that provide child care. But the work is very Labor and costs and sensitive and so childcare providers themselves typically operate on very thin margins, which means that they don't have the bandwidth. So with sand, you know this time of financial crisis, our prices on so many different levels. And so, yes, Many have closed. Nu Nu M. Patrick made the decision early on to stay open precisely because so many of their families are essential working families. You know that's kind of the irony of the film. We made it long before the pandemic, But in this moment, it turns out to be a portrait of the lives of essential workers. Everyone in the film is an essential worker on so new new said, You know, we can't close our family's needles. But it's been really, really hard. Their financial model has been decimated. So you know they've gone into their savings almost depleted, you know all of their savings and.

Loris Hogan New York Nana Tate New York City United States Mississippi 60% Westchester County Patrick Nunu Hogans 22 years Marisol Valencia New York State Rose Delores few decades ago four kids seven days a week first few years
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

04:07 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"She's like do this. And do this. And i'm like wait. What am i doing wait hold on. I'm nervous. I feel like a megan in public. Waiting for me you know. I'm not in the political realm. You know i'm a mom. I have two kids. I go to work and eleven beautiful san diego and i'm trying to enjoy it for all you know kobe's changed but You know. I'm learning a lot as i go and i'll tell you. I had several calls today with local delegates politicians offices so kind so open to listening but really what matters is that signature at the end of the day. And so i do. I do want to reach out and say everybody. You know you're listening and you feel you feel like you need take action. You wanna take action. It is your signature but you know bigger than that. The stories from families about their loved ones being abused as hidden. It's under a rug. It's behind a curtain Today i was I was shamed on facebook for putting making my sister story public trying to get support for the resolution. You know there's a fine line. I understand that but at the end of the day if you don't see a face and a name you don't think it's real. I'm here to make this real and i think god that my sister she can't go to the internet and she can't turn on the tv and i will tell you that would most definitely be a game changer for me and i am fairly religious person you know and i you know i. There's a plan for me in. My plan is during my lifetime to change the legislation around those. My life will have been wasted. If i do not act in a positive manner knowing what i know and you guys offering this form is so incredibly helpful by my again. I've been working on this for three years. You know what. I'm so thankful to be here. And i think the next the next three years are going to be gang buster. Because you have helped us you know what this podcast build a community. Mari soul has helped me develop a framework..

two kids three years today Today facebook Mari soul san diego next three years eleven kobe
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

03:43 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"Is a child and had this happen to a child imagine the outrage and that is exactly the reaction. Everyone should be having his outrage. Yeah that's so true. This morning i was reading. I was on. You guys both have a website together and on your website and i clicked on the npr link. And i was reading that. And i was just i was sobbing and my husband comes out. He's like are you okay. No i'm not okay and you know i just think like many times we read these stories and at least for me i just feel so hopeless and helpless like what. What can i do and so i. I love that you guys have come together. So can you. You share with us in the listeners. Like what how we can be involved like. Because that's what. I'm hopeful about the that you guys have come together and you ve given us something that we can do. We can come behind you guys because you guys are leading the charge we can come behind you and and tell us tell us what we can do first and foremost your this step. One right here is getting our message out. We really appreciate you creating space for us and for our loved ones step two is we are collecting signatures both from elected officials and california delegates as well as the public. We have two different links one for each because we are approaching this from both within the party the california democratic party but also outside the party we are trying to We out to resolutions Julian i have a created and The secret settlement transparency for dependent adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities were victims of sexual assault. And we have the second one that is support for caregiver rights and disabled dependent inheritance protection. And there's just a ton of information about all the statistical information are why we're doing this and there's also a call to action From our legislators asking them to create policy on these issues and so what we all understand very well that this works in a step wise process. We need the public. We need the public to stand in solidarity with our loved ones to stand in solidarity with our families and often these li- cars because there are like i said twenty. Five percent of adults are suffering with some form of disability one in seven children are have a disability. It is not uncommon and we need help. Give them a voice. It's our job to do that. And so You know. Julian irony have a more than happy to share the link if anybody would like to reach out to us on the mirasol. Julia advocate dot com. They are able to reach out to us and if they like to help us. Let us know Connect us with the people that you may know who can help advance our resolutions to transform them into policy on this show. We do a lot of work around sharing our stories in making aware of all the different things that are happening in the lives of these families as much. We haven't had a lot of chance to have politicians religious leaders or folks involved in that arena. Share about you know these kinds of things that we can do. It even took me a minute as talking to julie to kind of process like okay. What exactly are we talking about that. We need signatures for..

Julian Julian irony Five percent julie twenty both This morning second one one seven children each One Julia step two first california democratic party advocate dot com two different links california
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

03:04 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"Were going to give her a tracheostomy because she was aspirated a lot of her fluid into her lungs but she was paralyzed from Half of her face including her throw her vocal cord so she didn't have a gag reflex on this side and i argued against him. I said no. I'm not going to do that. That makes absolutely no sense. If i can go in through the left side. And she's not fighting me. What's the difference from here to here. Nothing you know. And so. And i said had i done that. She would never have been able to eat by mouth. Fortunately i didn't listen to them in about two months after that while traveling with her. You know I noticed that. I used to carry portable oxygen tanks portable oxyde of of suction machines. I had everything. I had the portable hospital literally and the wheelchair and i noticed i was like you know. I haven't suctioned her for two days. She hasn't coughed needed. It at all. I said what's going on and it was literally just a little bit of zipped preventing there's just like no other way to now. I gave him only a tiny tiny out one day one morning and i said that's it. I'm gonna wait twenty four hours and seeing hope to that. I didn't do something wrong. You know twenty four hours later no fever. Nothing wrong is so. I gave her about four times. The amount the second day no problem again she ate it and that is essentially how we discovered that she was able to now eat out. It was completely two months earlier the right to censor to never be able to eat by off again and again the fact that this respite care required that i thought was so ironic as if we were this. Everybody was this sort of like a A checkmark checkmark. We're a very diverse community. People are very diverse and they should be honored that way you know and you know this is one of the things that are really fighting personally myself and i know julius to we're trying to fight the b- the bureaucracy that wants to put people with different abilities into categories. But they're not they're off all have a very different history. They all have very different needs. They're human beings and as an and they think in feel and respond very differently and we have to honor that if we want them to be able to live to that their you know their best ability to best live we can give them and it had it. Been in julie's case. I always think about her situation. Saddens me with with you. Know her sister's may be an adult age..

julie twenty four hours two days julius one day second day one morning two months earlier twenty four hours later about four times one of things about two months after
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

02:17 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"My daughter is now alive. And she's twenty five years old about to celebrate her twenty sixth birthday in july. So all these things just went wrong wrong. All every step of the way i was beginning was giving brought misinformation and had i not had the know how the ability because english as my first language. I know how to use technology. I knew how to advocate for my daughter. And i thought to myself. Wow imagine how many other parents didn't get a chance to fight for their own kids because he just didn't know how now so all they had was a word of that doctor and no offense to doctors. I get that there. You know hundreds and hundreds of patients but this is really showing you that that we as a society really need to realize the important pivotal role that primary caregivers who by the way are often yes the mother or the children of an elderly person who are caring for someone and they are literally providing lifesaving care because in my situation my daughter would be dead today if i left it up to the doctors and so so this is something that i just became very passionate about over the years and started getting more and more involved i was even pursued my degree neurobiology because i i knew that even from the educational standpoint system standpoint she had multiple learning disabilities as a function of the multiple you know surgeries in our brain that she added plus not to mention that chemo's neuro toxic. It's and Like i said there surgeries 'cause You know Scar tissue near brain. So we should all these multiple learnings abilities that i know. Our school systems were not equipped to meet her where she knew where she needed to be met. And so it was something that i spend a minimum of three to four hours a day six days a week working with her in going through every single subject and teaching our one on one in ways that i knew.

hundreds today july first language twenty sixth birthday three twenty five years old english four hours a day six days a week hundreds of patients single subject one
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

03:08 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"I was my daughter's disabled but she it was for her daughter but she knows that as she mentioned earlier long-term she will eventually be in that role being the primary caregiver for her sister but nonetheless she has seen the pain and the struggle that her mother has experienced during this alone and it and i had just incredible empathy for her. I understood exactly what she was talking about her frustration with the system that Frankly did not see our family members as people but rather clients that they just have to sort of deal with And so there was just a a you know. I think it was a blessing in many ways. There was a lot of pain a lot of hurt a lot of frustration but yet still a lot of passionate and a lot of fight to do something and so I had You know started already in you know dabbling with some politics and getting involved with being Congressional district again being a delegate to the democratic national convention in two thousand sixteen and You know really and drafted a A proposal for the Disabilities characterised and disabilities rights. Unfortunately they didn't adopt it but it was. It wasn't prioritized so but at least it was put out. There is site and this is a lotta times. It's a hit or miss for us. You know But my story. My journey began actually the twenty five years ago And had to do more for me. I just saw systemic problems within our healthcare and education systems While i always tell people. It's not that i think they're not well meaning. It has nothing to do with that has to do with acknowledging there are errors and fixing them and with my daughter's healthcare for example I starting from a diagnosis of cancer. You know i spent. She went to four different pediatric doctors for thirteen months. Trying to figure out why she was in developing her meeting her developmental milestones and none of them diagnosed correctly if it had not a window only way. She got diagnosed with the colleague of her the her primary care physician at the time. Her pediatrician went on vacation and his colleague took over looked at this binder. Very thick two inch thick fa- binder of of appointments with her her coming with all these medical problems. You know Having being irritable crying all the time not meeting her development so milestones and he just looked at it and literally just said. I don't know what's wrong with your daughter. But i'll i can tell you is that this is a very sick little girl and i need you to take her to the emergency room. Now and he's he's like don't stop for food..

thirteen months two inch twenty five years ago democratic national convention two thousand four sixteen
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

02:12 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"Who are at risk or victims of sexual assault in nursing homes or being cared for at home by government employed. Home care providers. Well done so you guys can read these resolutions for yourself over and julie advocate dot com as mentioned to understand. This is that the we need to rally public support so that a particular party adopt something in present it into law in and move forward from there so this is. This is a bipartisan issue. No matter where you are On your political party We're all in this in so they want to be able to show that the public is actually behind this and so that's what those signatures are largely four. There is when you get to their site. You'll notice that there's one section to sign off if you are actually a democratic leader or an elected official and then there's another section for signing as a member of the public so that's where if you are not the former to i mentioned you can do that otherwise it doesn't matter if you're in california or not this is actually if you are all over the nation you can sign this and show that we are rallying support around these two issues so folks. We were putting this together because they've got a march thirtieth deadline. I believe to get Some attention towards the issue so the democratic party can adopt the platform and actually move forward with the bill But having the public signature support around it helps to show them the public about this and we need to do something about it. So that's what we're asking you guys to do is come on over and sign in support of these two resolutions and if you happen to be a democratic li-listening or an elected official listening or if you have family members who are friends of those who are connected to please pass this on or yourself head over to mirasol and julia advocate dot com and sign off on the so without further ado. Let's welcome. julie. Saul to advocate like a mother..

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

03:54 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"Leave and vacation more accrued paid sick days in permanently end the seven percent cut to consumer and three our state and federal representatives to protect dependent inheritance. So that's that's a mouthful. That's that's a lot but it's needed and yeah like paid paid sick days. You know leave and vacation. It's so sad. I think that we don't have that as caregivers right. And that's just it. It's like that realizing the transition is whether you're a parent caregiver or the caregivers. You've hired to be in your home or as a sibling as a caregiver. Wherever you're at it suddenly realizing that the responsibilities you take on Are different than folks who have nursing degrees in are working in hospitals and it is. There's a huge disparity between the needs that our caregivers have versus ones that are provided for those who are quote unquote professionals. And so that's really what this resolution is getting at is attempting to close the gap between those of us. That are just. You are at home caregivers. Either for children or for our siblings or for our parents or whoever it is to actually take that more seriously and get the support that we need. Okay and then the second one. The second one is called secret settlement transparency for dependent adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities who are victims of sexual assaults. There's a sexual assaults among dependent adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities according to national public radio. Npr individuals with add assaulted at a rate seven times higher than the general population and many of these crimes go unpunished. Npr added victims are easily. Manipulated will have difficulty testifying leader. These crimes go mostly unrecognized unprosecuted and unpunished and the abuser is free to abuse again. This is an epidemic among a highly vulnerable population. That is largely silent and incapable of self advocacy. We need data to speak to us about the scope of the problem to inform consumers and to drive and inform policy secret settlements. Seek to cover a large issue and prevent advocates from taking on systemic reform and from holding organizations in criminals accountable for human rights violations protected by the act disability justice dot org found the just three percent of sexual abuse involving people with developmental disabilities are ever reported and significantly approximately eighty percent of women and thirty percent of men with developmental disabilities. Have been sexually assaulted. Half of these women have been assaulted more than ten times. Therefore we asked the california democratic party join us and asking our county state and federal representatives to consider legislation that will mandate government agencies that serve dependent individuals to file an annual report that updates the number or sorry that outlines the number of settlements that have entered into an wia claim was brought forth it would require reports to be filed dating back ten years so that we can have a historical data government funded. Monetary settlements will provide text with transparency and accountability. About how their money is being spent and discourage government agencies from covering up sexual crimes against a largely silent intellectually disabled population therefore a percentage of monetary settlements will go towards better care provider screening research into better protocols prevent document incidents of sexual assault and technologies that will enable this vulnerable population to better communicate distress and installing protective and remedial measures for intellectually disabled individuals who are at risk or victims of sexual assault in nursing homes or being cared for at home by government employed. Home care providers. Well.

seven percent thirty percent three three percent second one ten years california democratic party seven times eighty percent org more than ten times Half
"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

02:16 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Advocate Like a Mother Podcast

"The the settlements are are cleared and people can talk about it. And that's kind of that dance that we have here with julie story where you know. She s to be cautious with what she says. Really united to safety of her mom who signed an nda and we gotta be careful with that so that yes that's why we unfortunately can't go a bit deeper into her story and understand some of those details. I know there's so many more questions around them and with that being said you guys listening need to know. You know julia's go in to natalie story in it is disturbing and it has to sensitive conversation around sexual abuse. Oh please listen at your own discretion. So let's go ahead and get into those resolutions. Yes i'm going to read you guys. The first one is about support for caregiver writes it says family caregivers. On average lose ten years of life and thirty percent die before those that they care. For due to twice the rate of chronic illness. This part gets me. It's advanced cellular aging at six times. The rate of a single parent. So that's why my talks. Bill is so high. It says twenty three percent higher level stress hormones. Fifteen percent reduced antibody responses forty to seventy rate of clinically significant depressive symptoms thirty three percent moderate to severe anxiety and one in four commit suicide. I did not know that. That stats scott green. That's so sad. It says overburdened caregivers. Inevitably experienced declining cognitive function and overall wellbeing compromising recipients quality of care is says a two thousand sixteen seventeen study found that thirteen one hundred three deaths among disabled persons were due to treatment delays neglect or abuse says therefore to correct the serious injustice. The california democratic party joined the home care providers and asking for a mandate that one the board of supervisors to pay caregivers a livable wage equivalent to their level of skilled services and protect their retirement benefits through cal savers or pension to the state. Let's legislator to pay family..

Fifteen percent thirty percent julia natalie twenty three percent thirty three percent julie six times twice ten years two thousand sixteen seventeen one forty single parent seventy rate thirteen one hundred three dea first one green california democratic party more questions
"marisol" Discussed on Beauty Marketing Simplified podcast

Beauty Marketing Simplified podcast

06:34 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on Beauty Marketing Simplified podcast

"Body artsy. We need to get back. So navigating is is a bit of a initial hurdle. But once that gets done you know. There's nothing that you cannot solve by calling someone on the phone. And by that i mean called the health department be incessant and somebody will pick up the phone real ben. Hopefully an answer all rushing point you in the right direction. That's one thing. The other one is digital marketing. And how the space of digital marketing is constantly changing and for anyone that is trying to advertise a business or post on social media thinking that they're doing something positive for their business and they're trying to like well. I'm gonna tackle this one on this loan this line and it just got so overwhelming it so quickly changing that i feel like that is one big challenges for anyone in this case is most women who start on this and i'm gonna say women because ninety nine percent of them are women. They're juggling children a husband life. How stores work. In addition to that you have to find the time to create content and most on social media and these odds and figure out how to get a google ads in it can be quite challenging for anyone. That's getting started in this industry but if you make it. Pay offs are amazing. It's so true. Because the minute you feel like you've figured out facebook or the infamous algorithm and or even i g instagram. All of that. It's like constantly changing i. I mean i've heard. I don't know why maybe it's just in my area are so but i keep on hearing about more and more getting their account shutdown or glitches or just all kinds of craziness. It's like you really do have to kind of stay on your toes kind on keep on top of it and like my one feels like only by hosting on having this added pressure hosting on social media everyday is too much i would say and this is probably gonna like russell fathers. I was just. Don't do it like if those should media is To be too much of a burden for you. Don't do it in focus your energy instead on google ads or facebook ads. Something that is going to give you return on investment and it's going to bring in clients without such overwhelm especially if you don't like fading confident because content creators right now are like the most in demand thing across the web you know like creating content it so easy and everybody's doing it and everybody loves it so it feels like three and content your business and you like being on tiktok instagram By all means fun but if it's going to be a burden not do it. I think your business. April iran enhanced beauty in new york. And you guys. You're not posting on instagram. Time right now we were like i was for awhile and then i just decided what's gotta give an even on this business page. I'm now looking at okay moving forward instead of just feeling like you have to constantly be there. Maybe just creating quality content that it's going to reach more people than just having a post. Just to have a post so are one of the gurus that follow. Her name is andrea beeman. She's amazing. I have her on facebook. And so i've selected told facing one-seat content. I come and by the way do that. For april go to april page my facebook page and click on follow and see for started that way. Never gonna miss anything. But i had to ask her because every day when i log onto facebook. See something new. And i'm like jesus. This woman is prolific like. How's she doing this. And so i've discovered. I asked her she said look. I admitted this business twenty years. So i've written a pool author of content in. It's all on my wife's side five. I hired someone to just make little facebook posts every single day pushing the concept that i've already published on my website and they take care of it. It's like months on out. And then every now. And then. I just go in and i write any block those because i love writing. And it's all taken care of like you hire. Which ascendant they just re utilize the concert that you've already created which is also something anyone should do repurposing. Yeah you'd always repurpose. I always think of what is the princess. Kate middleton and you know how like. I mean it was such a big thing that she wore an outfit twice because this idea that nobody wears an outfit twice. You know to a speaking engagement here. She's photographed over here in. It's like yes people we. This is the princess of the uk. We could definitely where she can. Recycle repurpose office. We repurpose our content for shore up the queen of norway. Seen a wearing the same outfit like three or four times a few things around. But it's always the same house. Yeah yeah repurpose repurpose okay. So then yes. We talked about some industry norms. That kinda need to be changed. Which friends do you see happening in our industry or any future predictions. O- that's pretty interesting. Yeah so i have been debating with this for a while. And i asked the question a russell feathers to there's someone on instagram Adamantly she hates micro blading and she says it everywhere. She hasn't on her bio she likes she super super against it and she has a bunch of arguments about like. Why just does not work. And it's really radical in this industry enough for someone. To be that against micro plating i think microblogging might phase out of it. I feel like was an initial groom that but earning hispanics on the map and it stopped being like this weird thing. When i was a kid. April i was embarrassed to tell people who my mom did because it was so weird and whenever on colombian whatever had like american people over or lying. She had american clients or their american people nearby. Like i'd have to explain because they were none. That's why i'm the distinction. Mike hispanics and russian and vietnamese like these people. They know what it was because they've they've not decades but for the americans. It was nunes.

Kate middleton andrea beeman twenty years new york uk april ninety nine percent facebook norway twice instagram Mike three four times jesus google russian one thing one big challenges vietnamese
Suspect in Peoria Amber Alert in hospital after attempting to take his own life

Gaydos and Chad

00:19 sec | 2 years ago

Suspect in Peoria Amber Alert in hospital after attempting to take his own life

"Education is cheering the CDC these new guidelines for reopening schools, calling it an actionable data driven plan to get back to in person Learning. Arizona Education Association's VP Marisol Garcia says it gives her hope the guidelines along with layered mitigation measures as well, The resource is that we desperately need to be able to walk into a safe school. Collectively, I think we might be able to get there, Garcia Calls on the state to provide the funding needed to implement the suggested safety measures,

Arizona Education Association Vp Marisol Garcia CDC Garcia
"marisol" Discussed on 710 WOR

710 WOR

05:37 min | 2 years ago

"marisol" Discussed on 710 WOR

"Away from me. You're dead. Someone else controls Marisol. I'm boo myself long ever can can fear the presence of another man waiting for me to say 103 2107 10 Hood. We have Go ahead. Give us a call 803 2107 10. A few of the financial question for us. Call us right now. 800 32107 10. Have a question for you. Should we bail out the airline industry? Should we let him go bankrupt? Let him go bankrupt. Let him re Imagine themselves To be more consumer friendly. We'll let them re imagine themselves to be more cost conscious. So Um, now I would be heartbroken about the jobs lost, but you know, we're lacking capitalism. All I do with capitalism is you're supposed to have what's called creative destruction. So companies Better bad they're either not serving their customers. That have not followed sound financial planning. No wonder and new companies that are more innovative. You know, not just the government gave a bailout Barnes and Noble. You'd have never had Amazon drive prices really low or let the government give a bailout to Kmart. You would have never had Wal Mart and Target thrive. So do we want this kind of quasi? It's really Socialism in a way where we are Um, uh, privatizing the gains and socializing the losses. It's not true capitalism and then people, Then kids growing up, then capitalism's bad. We'll tie capitalism. This is in some ways a weird Quasi. Um Socialistic dream where we just Happened with car companies. We would have that innovation with Tesla's 10 years ago. Instead of the innovation we're seeing today we would have had than innovation much quicker. 10 years ago if we let the auto industry fail, no, wait. It was all what about this? What about this, You know The banks. They didn't let the banks failing away. Well, did the banks really do anything? It's the same 45 big banks that control everything that controlled everything, then years ago So we didn't have creative destruction because we didn't have capitalism. Now. Now there's a fin tech revolution. We would have that 10 years ago. In case in point. Look at Kmart. Nobody gave Kmart a bailout. Nobody gave Barnes and Noble a pail out. Barnes Noble still exists, but much smaller imprints. They had innovate little bit. So give us a call. 88 89 88 Josh. Here's some questions from IRA help dot coms. Mailbag from Sarah Brenner. Can a retired person not working? Contribute to a Roth There are no age elements for a Roth IRA contribution. This allows older people to contribute. However, you must have Earned income, for example, and come from a part time Job could work. If you are married and your spouse's earned income. You can also make a spousal Roth contributions. A lot of you don't make the spousal IRA or the spousal Roth Contributions. And then here's another question regarding the 10 year requirement to empty inherited IRAs under the Secure Act. Is it 10 years? From the date of death. Or the end of the 10th year following The death. The 10 year. Rule under the Secure Act requires that if you get in inherited IRA From your late mother or your late father or your late Uncle Joe. It must be emptied. By December 31st of the 10th year following the year of death. So if somebody died February 17th 2020 You have to completely empty out the IRA. December 31st 2030 That's why Ah lot of you with large our IRAs. You can't just leave it to your loved ones. Unless you want them to have a big tax bill. So there will be a 10 year drain down plan and it's far better to leave you your loved ones Roths or life insurance that passes tax free. So give us a call..

Kmart Um Roth Barnes Noble Marisol Wal Mart Amazon Sarah Brenner Tesla Josh
Actress Selenis Leyva and Her Trans Sister Marizol Are Closer Than Ever

Latina to Latina

03:41 min | 2 years ago

Actress Selenis Leyva and Her Trans Sister Marizol Are Closer Than Ever

"What is just so striking to me throughout my sister is that you to clearly love each other so much and you come from a deeply loving family, and even with all of that love, and with more resources than than a lot of people. Have you still ended up running up against a lot of the challenges that lgbtq Specifically Trans Specifically Trans Women of color run up against including having a really precarious housing situation at some point right and you go through your late teens early twenties. You're housing is in flux. There's a period where you're living with Salinas and. And that just doesn't work for either of you and so I sort of I want to hear from you. mean you play the role that a lot of us play in our own families right where we are? The eldest and people rely on us, and people expect us to show up, and at the same time have trouble with boundaries and knowing how to set them in when to set them so this is sort of a critical moment for you because it's the first time you really set a boundary with muddy, so and you do a thing that i. I cannot imagine having to do which is to say. You cannot live here and we have to find another place to live, and that other place is shelter. Those are moments that I think about now that that hurt and that. Obviously it worked out right, and it was the moment of tough love. And, it's a moment that I had been told by my parents and my other siblings and I needed to do with Maricel here. I am trying to be everyone's everything. Right and then I'm struggling with my own stuff. You have a marriage that is falling apart. You're going through depression. Your career stuck in the mud I. Mean I. It was uncanny. How often youtube were in a very challenging place at the same time? Oh my God, so it was so hard and I didn't have anyone to talk to. There was no one that I can say. You know what today I thought about how I'm going to kill myself today. That's my thought and that moment where I literally said. I. You can't live here anymore. It was literally like. Let me try. This I've tried everything else, but the tough love, right? I cried I cried so much in that car, but there was something. Something that told me this really could possibly be a turning point and I think you know obviously after reading writing the book together and going through it, and talking about that moment was when Marisol had her own epiphany that night. When she told me like okay, you can live. Yes, I was completely heartbroken. I was like Oh my God like I'm so used to having my sister. And then I knew that at the same time. This is like a half to do this regardless. Because I'm going on issues, I knew my sister was going through her own initial, so I didn't want to continue to add my baggage onto her and saw. I knew that this was at this I to make the best out of this situation and make something happen so that night when I got dropped off and I'm meeting everyone at the shelter. I felt relieved. I had hope I have faith. I went to sleep in my mom, so as the pray. And I. Just pray that night. cried myself to sleep, but not of like sad tears. It was happy tears because I falling was finally going somewhere in my life that was more positive than all experience that I experienced beforehand.

Marisol Salinas Youtube
The modern anti-vaxxer movement, explained

The Conspiracy Farm

12:02 min | 4 years ago

The modern anti-vaxxer movement, explained

"So Jeff if you wanna give me your views real quick on on what you're thinking about the vaccine. The debate is very, you know, like, you said Champa, very very controversial subject, and, you know, very, polarizing, you know, we see the news. I have an article right here on unvaccinated air, Oregon boy had severe tetanus nearly died. Basically, I think it was a reaction to then you've got the measles outbreak recently. So I mean, it winds up becoming unfortunately, this kind of binary conversation of either your four vaccines or you're completing against vaccines. And I'm just not that binary with it because I know the application of vaccines is medically sound introducing certain substances even body to make human body create a kind of immune defense if you will. But it gets more into for me. What's in these vaccines as our experts going to speak today? I mean, you got live monkey viruses. You got aluminum you got the Marisol which is mercury and there's a lot to this conversation. And there needs to be more education about it. So here we go so Brickley. Please inform us a little bit more about what I have not mentioned in terms of your qualifications in this row. Tom. There are I think that great introduction. So that he for that person. I'm a mother I'm gonna mother read Unical healthy children. My middle daughter was backing injured. And so that was really the old shit were doing what fall delayed schedule the a lot of conscious your answer teasing. Either spread backing out or do a little bit of late schedule making get into the nets bolts of how the schedule increased riot increase in you know, when somebody that's older than even something might find thirty six Yuan. I was it'd be eight vaccines child today will get thirty six axes by the first year of life. Fifty a forty nine by the age of five in seventy two by eighteen in that schedule has never been interested in crews will abdomen form here. And I would say first and foremost mother protecting my children, and the research, I did floored me on it really woke me up out of this haze. That vaccines are safe and effective. Vaccine save lives near the marketing ploy that offered you know, second grade and it. Roure will be into just a tremendous amount of research. So I've been researching vaccines every single day for the last decade Flatow on. Out of reaction that he decided out Emily that we were no longer going back seat. And I think one of the things that we're seeing in the meteorite now, the big anti vaccine Bush, but most urine said are speaking out against axioms are actually Xboxes they're they're your maximum needed their children. They believed in the system. They believed in the FBI and something terrible happen to their child after vaccines. So I think it's a mole issued feed into talk about those details. This is something that for me. I gave us some some deep thought at one point because I'm married to a doctor of chiropractic, and when she became pregnant with our our oldest daughter. My mother was a nurse nursing director. She ran the the college of nursing in my area at Molin public hospital. So she was obviously on the side of vaccines at the time. And that's all I knew I knew nothing nothing else. And so I asked my I asked my wife, I said, you know, what are we gonna do here because I knew I know you see things differently. And my wife's just said, listen, go do research on your own with an open mind. That's all I ask you do to do. And so I went, and I did that in the further I dug into it, it it it, really. Did. It scared me. And so I made the decision as a parent with my wife to not vaccinate our kids. And now our kids have been very healthy, very resistant to any whenever the other kids getting the flu strep throat, and a lot of other things are kids seem to be a lot more resilient than the than the heard in terms of that stuff. And I am criticized I'm criticize I'm not afraid to say it, you know, that this is the decision that I made, but at the same time, you know, I think about if a roller coaster, and I don't know the exact numbers of minor injury compared to death and everything in that spectrum in between. I know some of the statistics I know that one in six children now have learning disabilities that is that is Onda unacceptable, but that's just just one of the statistics. But so if somebody said to me, all right, you're gonna put your kid on this roller coaster. There's a one in fifty thousand chance that they might get hurt. You know, the roller coaster does go awry every once in a while and kids get hurt. And sometimes they actually get killed are you gonna put your kid on their roller coaster. No, you're not putting your kid on that roller coaster. Now, I'm using a little bit of an extreme example. But you know, please take that and and kind of throw out some facts for folks a little bit. Sure. Well, I think one of the things that we need to be consciously aware of just as a American population is not so much fearing the diseases that we've accident for because that's real bear. The pharmaceutical industry has strong will this is they thrive on fear and a fear. Everybody with the flu chickenpox in. You know measles. The big fear. Measles right now. Measles is a five day rash for most healthy individuals. And you have lifelong immunity neat. Measles was Brady bunch episode. Their books. Sally the needles Toomey measles. I guarantee you guys both have chicken pox at some point. So did I were still living breathing have lifelong immunity. So we we tend to add the culture only fear the diseases that we've accident for right? And that's a brilliant marketing system designed by the pharmaceutical industry. Now, the reality is that parents should be conscious of diseases that vaccines cause and at one of the things that I teach all around the world. My inbox is always full of asking questions about vaccines in. So to me that shows a huge problem with the system that they have to actually reach out to me through social media every single day hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people from all different walks of life searching for answers. But one of the things that so critical to understand is that most of the diseases that we currently vaccinate for are not deadly their illnesses. They're not diseases, so they're temporary asses. And we are trading are are beautiful healthy children whose immune systems are. Still growing functioning for this false reality that they they're going to be saved in some way. They're going to be protected from all diseases the way, that's just not the kiddies and in the process of backsitting because there's so many back scenes in. I know somebody mentioned a minute ago. Just the agreements we can get into that. But you're looking at dozens dozens dozens of vaccine related lifelong diseases lifelong disabilities, and like you said, you know, one six children has a neurological neurological. A learning processing disorder, but in actual neurological disorder that we never seen that in our history. We had the the sickest generation of children ever recorded. And my belief is a huge amount of that has to do with vaccines. Now, there is a part of it. That's also GMO's in fluorinated water. You know, that's a better topic. But the fact is that we've all been exposed to this one thing in the one thing is the current CDC vaccine schedule. So there's a lot of there's a lot of moving in that. I go down whatever avenue you wanna go down. But yeah, I mean, I will be here. It should be very very fearful and office of diseases and lifelong disabilities that axes how are proven by law to caught and we can get into the laws. Well, there's a pretty direct correlation when you start talking about. I mean, what was it like you said hundred eighty five there was basically DP Emaar, basically three or four vaccines now like you said from ninety one on it's like almost fifty fifty different. Doses. Like fifteen sixteen vaccines. And the thing is trips me out is that they hit these kids like fresh out of the womb like they're not even kind of developed, and they're just hitting them with all these toxins that and then and then kind of the larger culpability or lack of accountability are these are these vaccine courts that congress has basically prohibited people from any legal recourse, there's no way to sue them. And they know your own CDC's own children that they're not even following these schedules because they know it goes back to almost the tobacco study or the sugar study. They know the information is there, but like you said with the firm Asuka companies and everything else there's so much money in this. And I take like I say, I take a constitutional stances when the government can mandate, you know, that's that's my fear is that, you know, with all these people pushing for this that the government can mandate that a medical procedure done on my children. And this is a medical procedure make note make no mistake in a one size fits all medical procedure. That. That's not none of those. No medical procedure is a one-size-fits-all for every patient. Right. The beautiful thing now chant they don't I mean with they almost a lot of states, and I did this with my stuff years ago with my oldest daughter there forms, you can fell out religious exemptions. And things are some states have personal philosophical exemptions there. So he's trying to remove that though. Well, no, you're right. But at least it's not the federal government mandating it quite yet. Tenth amendment states rights are still being invoked. And I think that that's where I mean like congress met the other day in talked about vaccines, and that was a huge deal. We've got you know, the letter that Adam Schiff just wrote on to the US house saying how important back seeds are. He just like, you know, pharma, mouthpiece really poster boy for bomb suitable industry because in one of my biggest insurance they're violating their own law, and one of the reasons that the schedule expanded like we've been talking about is the nineteen eighty six congress was bought out by the pharmaceutical industry so vaccine manufacturers were going bankrupt. Because so many people were doing that from the debilitating effects of the DTP, which the wholesale protests at diptheria ten is in protest vaccine, which now we have the tap, which is a different version. But at the time, it was is d and Sony kids were developing seizures in dying that they had millions and millions of dollars lawsuits in. So the Zukile industry was gonna go bankrupt. And instead of making a safer more effective product providing education going back to the drawing or. Frigging something out. They just went in and bought a congress in created the nineteen eighty six childhood back seen injury Protection Act, which like you mentioned totally stripped vaccine may earth from liability. Now, there is not another product in the world that I can think of that is mandated by law to be injected into east that has no civilized -bility attached to it. So when you talk about public health, this was really about public health for about parents would be informed. They're they're supposed to be informed about the nineteen eighty six law and the vaccine insurance before accepting or declining vaccines so across the board medical professionals in this country are violating the law that was put in place in the nineteen eighty six production act. So you insert those inserts themselves even list, these these toxics through mariesville on mercury on them will actually so under the left that law is in the inserts, but you can't actually pull the ingredient list on the inserted to suffer documents, which I so interesting because if they were really being transparent with their product ever. Just the document, right? But they have an additional document called the CDC media excipient summary, and that's on the CDC website in that has every listing griant of but the actual routes in back scenes are not listed in the inserts, which also builds your mind because what other product when we buy a product were so big on labelling laws here. Right and everybody wants to know what's in their food now. But yet at the same time, they don't wanna know what's in their medicine. And some of those ingredients are

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