Is Your State Bribing Schools to Play Vaccine Roulette with Your Kids?

by
Steve MacDonald

Millions of dollars in COVID relief funds are still floating out there looking for a purpose. How about an incentive to pay schools that vaccinate a significant majority of Students? A Cash incentive. We know that Vermont is on board.

The state wants schools to play vaccine roulette with your kids in exchange for cash (yours).

If you think this is a great idea, I’m sorry, it’s not. Not one single child in Vermont has died from COVID19. The same is true in New Hampshire.

But the vaccine is already killing children.

Related: NH Public Health Policy Has Officially Killed More “Kids” than COVID

And now Vermont is bribing schools to vaccinate as many kids as possible.

 

Two-million dollars from emergency federal funding will go to Vermont schools if their students get vaccinated.

Any public or recognized independent school that hits 85% will get $15 per student.

For a minimum of $2,000 and up to $10,000.

At 90%, schools can get up to $15,000.

Vermont Education Secretary Dan French thinks some schools are already there but others are only now hosting their first clinics for kids 5-11.

 

Is your state doing that? Is mine?

Related: School Vaxes 6 Year Old After Parent Told Them Not to Vaccinate His Son

They don’t need this, and we just reported on a student in New Hampton who was given three times the regular dose of COVID vaccine at a school clinic.

She didn’t need one, and she got three. But we have no idea yet what happened to her or what will happen to any of them. What we do know is that when the fallout comes, if it comes, and these advocates are still around, they will claim they didn’t know any better.

That will be another lie.

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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