Washington DC hosts huge anti-vaccine mandate protest with thousands of demonstrators

Thousands gathered in Washington D.C. – a city that mandates vaccines – to protest vaccine mandates, with protesters blaring ballads by Meat Loaf, a musician who is feared to have succumbed to COVID-19 complications at 74 after vocal hesitation about the jab. 

Robert F. Kennedy and Informed Consent Action Network founder Del Bigtree were among big names who addressed the rally Sunday morning. Around 20,000 people were expected to attend the demonstration.

‘Americans want democracy back, and this rally is a demand by Americans to get their democracy back,’ Kennedy said of the rally, according to WUSA9.    

Kennedy compared the plight of the vaccine-adverse to that of Anne Frank on Sunday, saying that ‘even in Hitler’s Germany, you could hide in the attic like Anne Frank did.’

Anti vaccine mandate protesters are filmed in Washington Dc Sunday

Protesters put their hands to their hearts for the national anthem in Washington DC on Sunday

Protesters put their hands to their hearts for the national anthem in Washington DC on Sunday

A crowd of up to 20,000 gathered around the National Mall

A crowd of up to 20,000 gathered around the National Mall 

Meat Loaf was heard playing, days after the anti-mandate singer died of suspected COVID aged 74

Meat Loaf was heard playing, days after the anti-mandate singer died of suspected COVID aged 74 

Many of those who did so were not masked, despite DC Mayor Muriel Bowser mandating masks outdoors for people who have not had their COVID shot when gathered in large groups outside. 

Meat Loaf – who died of suspected COVID side effects last week aged 74 – could be heard blaring out over the demonstration.

The much loved star was vocally anti-vaccine mandate and mask, and has since become a folk hero for those at the demonstration. Rumors that he was killed by the virus itself would also make him one of its highest-profile victims. It is unknown if he’d had a vaccine prior to his death. 

In videos posted to social media, the singer’s hit I’d Do Anything for Love (But I Won’t Do That) could be heard blaring as protesters gathered around the Lincoln Memorial’s Reflecting Pool. 

After the artist’s death on Thursday, some mocked his stances on vaccine and mask mandates on social media. 

‘In the end, he finally let us know what that one thing was that he wouldn’t do for love: Get vaccinated,’ tweeted Gene Wu, a Democrat in the Texas state House of Representatives, referring to the lyrics to his song that protesters played on Sunday.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a member of the ‘Disinformation Dozen’ – 12 individuals who disseminate about two thirds of the anti-vaccine content on social media, according to a study conducted by The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) and Anti-Vax Watch alliance. 

The son of former US Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy Sr. was banned from Instagram in February of 2021 ‘for repeatedly sharing debunked claims about the coronavirus or vaccines,’ a spokesperson for parent company Facebook explained at the time.   

‘While coerced submission with experimental medical products is clearly government-sponsored violence, the anti-mandates movement is committed to nonviolent resistance,’ Kennedy said this week in a statement.

In his speech on Sunday, Kennedy referred to the modern climate as ‘turnkey totalitarianism,’ saying that the government has managed to ‘put in place all of these totalitarian measures for control,’ making COVID-era policies inescapable, and comparing those holding out on taking the vaccine to Anne Frank in Nazi Germany. 

unlike Anne Frank, who hid in a cramped Amsterdam attic with seven other persecuted Jews for 761 days during the Nazi regime before she and her family were rooted out and sent to die in concentration camps, ‘none of us can run and none of us can hide’ from COVID-era policies in the wake of modern technology. 

‘It’s been the ambition of every totalitarian state from the beginning of mankind to control every aspect of behavior, of conduct, of thought, and to obliterate dissent. None them have been able to do it. They didn’t have the technological capacity.’  

‘Today, the mechanisms are being put in place that will make it so none of us can run and none of us can hide.’ 

‘Even in Hitler’s Germany, you could cross the Alps into Switzerland, you could hide in an attic like Anne Frank did,’ Kennedy continued. ‘I visited in 1962 East Germany with my father, and met people who had climbed the wall and escaped, so it was possible — many died doing it, but it was possible.’   

Kennedy also likened Fauci to Mussolini, with the audience erupting into a chant of ‘lock him up!’ 

He espoused theories about 5G, too, saying that ‘within five years, we’re going to see 415,000 low-orbit satellites — Bill Gates and his 65,000 satellites alone will be able to look at every square inch of the planet 24 hours a day.’ 

Other speakers included Robert Malone, a physician and prominent coronavirus mRNA vaccine critic and former CBS correspondent Lara Logan, who compared White House chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci to infamous Nazi doctor Josef Mengele on a November Fox News appearance. 

Groups formed by public employees, including Feds for Medical Freedom and 200 representing the D.C. Firefighters Bodily Autonomy Affirmation Group, were also in attendance. 

The event’s organizer, Matt Tune of Chicago, 48, said that he ‘wanted to change the current narrative’ surrounding those against vaccines and vaccine mandates. 

‘The goal is to show a unified front of bringing people together — vaccinated, unvaccinated, Democrats, Republicans, all together in solidarity,’ he said. 

‘The current narrative … which is basically saying that we’re a bunch of weirdos and freaks who don’t care about humanity… [is] not true at all.’

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (pictured) was among anti-vaccine mandate protests who spoke at the DC rally Sunday, and is pictured on the steps of the Lincoln Monument

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (pictured) was among anti-vaccine mandate protests who spoke at the DC rally Sunday, and is pictured on the steps of the Lincoln Monument 

Some of those who attended Sunday's event were heckled for wearing face masks - despite local mandates saying unvaccinated people must don the coverings even while outdoors

Some of those who attended Sunday’s event were heckled for wearing face masks – despite local mandates saying unvaccinated people must don the coverings even while outdoors 

Some of those who attended were pro-vaccine but anti-vaccine mandate - but this protester, dressed as the grim reaper, clearly has issues with the COVID shots themselves

Some of those who attended were pro-vaccine but anti-vaccine mandate – but this protester, dressed as the grim reaper, clearly has issues with the COVID shots themselves 

Another anti-vaxxer held up a sign proclaiming 'I am not a lab rat.' Many of those who attended Sunday's rally said they were unvaccinated

Another anti-vaxxer held up a sign proclaiming ‘I am not a lab rat.’ Many of those who attended Sunday’s rally said they were unvaccinated 

Another protesters held up a sign suggesting those in favor of mandates were 'Karens' - an insulting term given to people deemed entitled and rude

Another protesters held up a sign suggesting those in favor of mandates were ‘Karens’ – an insulting term given to people deemed entitled and rude 

Protesters can be seen acting out a dramatic interpretation of a forced vaccination at Sunday's protest

Protesters can be seen acting out a dramatic interpretation of a forced vaccination at Sunday’s protest

Firefighters, police officers and healthcare workers who have been effected adversely by vaccine mandates showed out in numbers to the protest

Firefighters, police officers and healthcare workers who have been effected adversely by vaccine mandates showed out in numbers to the protest

Those who were wearing masks were seen being taunted, with one man heckling people wearing face-coverings by saying 'Take those masks off...it's all a lie!'

Those who were wearing masks were seen being taunted, with one man heckling people wearing face-coverings by saying ‘Take those masks off…it’s all a lie!’

Sunday’s protest drew a wide range of protesters, many elderly, with others babies in strollers. According to the Washington Post, many held up signs backing former President Donald Trump, himself an outspoken supporter of the vaccines his administration developed.

Others toted signs with slogans like ‘Let’s go Brandon,’ ‘F**k Joe Biden’and ‘Trump Won.’ Those who were wearing masks were seen being taunted, with one man heckling people wearing face-coverings by saying ‘Take those masks off…it’s all a lie!’ 

About 10 men wearing the insignia for the Proud Boys, an extremist group involved in the insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6,lingered on the Lincoln side of the Reflecting Pool according to the Post. 

The protest appeared to include both demonstrators who are pro-vaccine but anti-mandate, and others who are both anti-vaccine and anti-mandate.

One person with the latter belief was seen holding a sign saying ‘Vaccines are mass kill bio weapons.’ Kelly Clarkson’s song Stronger – with the lyrics  ‘What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger,’ could also be heard blaring out, according to the Post. The song was blaring from a bus parked beside the Washington Monument, covered in signs reading ‘ARREST OR EXILE’ along with photos of Anthony Fauci, Bill Gates and Jacob Rothschild.

Body therapist Justin Perrault, from Fairhaven in Massachusetts, said he’d been moved to attend after clients had stopped coming to his clinic because he’d refused to have a vaccine.  

The event's organizer, Matt Tune of Chicago, 48, said that he 'wanted to change the current narrative' surrounding those against vaccines and vaccine mandates. 'The goal is to show a unified front of bringing people together — vaccinated, unvaccinated, Democrats, Republicans, all together in solidarity,' he said

The event’s organizer, Matt Tune of Chicago, 48, said that he ‘wanted to change the current narrative’ surrounding those against vaccines and vaccine mandates. ‘The goal is to show a unified front of bringing people together — vaccinated, unvaccinated, Democrats, Republicans, all together in solidarity,’ he said

He said he’d recently started using food stamps, and was worried about what his four and eight year-old children would make of him.

Perrault, who traveled with his wife and her friend, said he also wanted to take a stand against scientists’ claims that COVID vaccines are safe.

Suzanna Robertson of New Jersey, 52, carried a sign explaining that she was a lifelong registered Democrat until recently, before she decided this year that she didn’t identify with either political party. Robertson campaigned for Bernie Sanders and even voted for current President Joe Biden in 2020. She had COVID-19 in March of 2020, she said, but only exhibited mild symptoms. 

She said she had never voted for a Republican candidate until recently, after she was ‘disappointed’ by Biden’s rhetoric against those who chose not to get the jab.  

‘This is not a political thing,’ she said. ‘If you want to get the vaccine, get it.’

Robertson told the Post she would ‘die first’ before she got vaccinated. 

Some 20,000 protesters gathered in Washington DC for the mandate, According to the Washington Post , many held up signs backing former President Donald Trump, himself an outspoken supporter of the vaccines his administration developed

Some 20,000 protesters gathered in Washington DC for the mandate, According to the Washington Post , many held up signs backing former President Donald Trump, himself an outspoken supporter of the vaccines his administration developed 

The protest appeared to include both demonstrators who are pro-vaccine but anti-mandate, and others who are both anti-vaccine and anti-mandate

The protest appeared to include both demonstrators who are pro-vaccine but anti-mandate, and others who are both anti-vaccine and anti-mandate

Sunday's protest drew a wide range of protesters, many elderly, with others babies in strollers

Sunday’s protest drew a wide range of protesters, many elderly, with others babies in strollers

A protester holds a sign, insinuating that it is more important to tackle the 'virus' of Democrats in power than COVID-19

A protester holds a sign, insinuating that it is more important to tackle the ‘virus’ of Democrats in power than COVID-19 

Also present was Jaedyn Wetzel, 12, who toted a sign saying ‘I have natural immunity.’ Wetzel, from Warfordsburg in Pennsylvania, caught COVID over Thanksgiving, and has since recovered. 

Wetzel’s mother, who did not wish to be named in fear of retribution, learned of the protest on Telegram channels, including one for auditing the 2020 presidential election results. She told the Post that she doesn’t use Facebook or Twitter because those companies ‘promote censorship.’ 

Police had small but visible presence on the Mall during the protest, with about 10 mounted officers lining the group’s march route. Fences had been erected around the Lincoln Memorial to prevent protesters from climbing the steps.

It is unclear whether they attempted to enforce the city’s mask mandate, although the Post described one officer pacing the area around the Smithsonian subway stop exit as bare-face protesters walked by. 

Thus far, there are 25 states that have vaccine mandates for employees of various categories, with 21 requiring vaccines or continuous testing for healthcare workers and six taking a ‘vaccinate or terminate’ approach and putting healthcare workers who are unvaccinated on leave. 

Conversely, 13 states have passed laws barring employers from mandating vaccines.

On Wednesday, NYPD officers were heckled for arresting five organized anti-vax mandate protesters and detaining a nine year-old girl Wednesday after they barged into the Natural History Museum without showing proof of COVID vaccination.  

Trouble began when a half-dozen purported members of the New York Freedom Rally – a group that has been staging anti-vax protests throughout the city – attempted to enter the Manhattan museum without showing their vaccine passports in violation of rules. Those require every visitor five years and older to show proof of vaccination.

The nine year-old, named Jayla, was filmed sobbing as she was marched down the steps by two cops, with onlookers filmed heckling and abusing the NYPD officers over her apprehension. She and her unnamed mom were taken to a nearby precinct, and released two hours later. It is unclear if the youngster’s mom will be charged.

The six anti-mandate activists affiliated with the New York Freedom Rally had made reservations to visit the museum on Wednesday, but were denied entry after failing to produce their COVID vaccine passports.

Even Fauci thinks the end is in sight! COVID tsar predicts almost all of US will have hit Omicron peak within WEEKS as early tri-state epicenters see infections plunge by up to 64% 

The nation’s top infectious disease specialist says Omicron cases will likely start dropping throughout the nation by mid-February as the hardest-hit cities experience infection rate dips of up to 64 percent.

Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday that the US will likely start to ‘see a turnaround’ in cases and hospitalizations as the highly-contagious variant begins to slow – and that it could signal a gradual return to normal.

‘We would hope that as we get into the next weeks or month, we will see throughout the entire country, the level of infection get to below what I call the ‘area of control,’ the famously gloomy White House COVID expert told ABC’s This Week on Sunday. 

‘Control means you’re not eliminating it, you’re not eradicating it, but it gets down into such a low level that it’s essentially integrated into the general respiratory infections that we have learned to live with.’

His shared an outlook of  cautious optimism as infections plunge in the country’s early epicenters on the east.

 

Infection rates are dropping in states considered the early epicenters of the Omicron variant, including in New York, where the infection rate has dipped 82 percent week-over-week

Infection rates are dropping in states considered the early epicenters of the Omicron variant, including in New York, where the infection rate has dipped 82 percent week-over-week

New Jersey has gone from 28,514 cases January 9 to 8,924 confirmed infections January 23, representing a 68 percent decrease

New Jersey has gone from 28,514 cases January 9 to 8,924 confirmed infections January 23, representing a 68 percent decrease

The situation also appears promising in Connecticut, where cases dropped from a January 10 high of 10,179 cases to 4,872 cases January 22

The situation also appears promising in Connecticut, where cases dropped from a January 10 high of 10,179 cases to 4,872 cases January 22

In New York – where parts of the state were paralyzed by Omicron last month – cases have dropped 58 per cent in a fortnight, and 82 per cent week-over-week. New Jersey’s infection rates dropped 64 per cent in a fortnight, and 89 per cent during the same last seven days, Johns Hopkins University data indicates.

The Empire State went from having 79,777 cases January 9 to recording 27,643 cases Saturday, representing a 54 percent drop during the past two weeks, according to New York Times data. 

Deaths related to the virus spiked 71 percent in the past two weeks; more than 62,600 New Yorkers have died from Covid since the pandemic began.

New Jersey has gone from 28,514 cases January 9 to 8,924 confirmed infections January 23, representing a 64 percent decrease.

However, the death rate jumped 71 percent in the Garden State, where  30,746 people have died since the virus took hold in early 2020.

Deaths traditionally lag behind infections, sparking hopes that they too will begin to slump in the coming weeks, as people infected by COVID at the recent peak either recover, or succumb to the virus.  

Dr. Anthony Fauci said during an appearance on ABC's This Week that most US states could peak by mid-February

Dr. Anthony Fauci said during an appearance on ABC’s This Week that most US states could peak by mid-February

The situation also appears promising in Connecticut, where cases dropped from a January 10 high of 10,179 cases to 4,872 cases January 22, marking a 39 per cent dip. The state’s deaths are up 52 per cent.

Of course, the situation isn’t universal. The Eastern seaboard was the first to get hit by Omicron in early December, with the variant raging through quickly, as initially predicted.

But some states – such as Alabama, Kansas, Arizona and others are yet to peak, with cases still rising, and records being broken. 

Cases in Washington have spiked 52 percent in the past two weeks as the infection rate in New Mexico ratcheted up 134 percent during the same timeframe, according to NYT data.

As of Sunday morning, the US had recorded 70,495,874 COVID infections, and 865,968 deaths, according to a DailyMail.com analysis of Johns Hopkins’ University data.  

 

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