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Southwest Idaho becomes nation's first to remove COVID shots from state-run clinics

Southwest Idaho becomes nation's first to remove COVID shots from state-run clinics


Southwest Idaho becomes nation's first to remove COVID shots from state-run clinics

The Board of Health in one of Idaho's districts has become the first in the country to pull COVID shots from its clinics.

The Southwest Idaho District's Board of Health voted 4-3 to remove the shots from its facilities on late last month.

This came after around 300 public comments pushing the board members to do this, according to The Defender, the news website for Children’s Health Defense.

Twila Brase is president and co-founder of the Citizens' Council for Health Freedom.

She tells AFN she thinks the 4-3 vote means the public is very concerned about the shots.

"Those who are watching anything but mainstream media know that there are a lot of injuries that are taking place.

Brase, Twila (CCHF) Brase

Some people have died shortly thereafter. The turbo cancers are on the rise and people have probably experienced or known somebody who has had one of these cancers that just appeared out of nowhere, and then took the person within a matter of weeks or a few months."

Brase clarified though that if there is someone in the Southwest district who wants to take a COVID shot, they are able to get it from other places. The public health agencies just cannot give them.

"The government itself is not going to be making that shot available, which is a good recognition of the fact that the shot is controversial. Some people consider the shot dangerous. It's untested in a way that other medications are. So, I think it's a recognition that the people have spoken in that district of Idaho and said, ‘we do not want to pay to give these shots to people, which are endangering people, including children.’"