To all those patriots out there who are “resisting” mandates for vaccines and masks, please read this.
George Washington was not only “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,” he was also first to impose a vaccine mandate. A reader called “Quikwrit” sent the following comment, which I fact-checked. It is true.
The United States Supreme Court has twice ruled that states and school districts have the constitutional right to mandate vaccinations, rulings that also apply to masks — and those who would like to see those rulings overturned had better think twice because those rulings are also the basis for states having the power to regulate abortions: If state authority to mandate vaccinations is overturned, so is state authority to regulate abortions.
The key Supreme Court ruling that recognizes the authority of states to mandate vaccinations is Jacobsen v. Massachusetts. In this case Pastor Henning Jacobsen had a previous bad reaction to a vaccination and therefore refused the state’s mandate that he and his son be vaccinated because he believed that his family had a hereditary danger from vaccinations and that he also believed that vaccinations caused disease. The State of Massachusetts fined Jacobsen for his refusal to be vaccinated, so he took Massachusetts to court, and his case went all the way to the U. S. Supreme Court. The Court ruled in favor of the state, pointing out that “in every well ordered society charged with the duty of conserving the safety of its members, the rights of the individual in respect to his personal liberty may at times, under the pressure of great dangers, be subjected to such restraint, to be enforced by reasonable regulations, as the safety of the general public may demand” — adding that “real liberty for all could not exist under the operation of a principle which recognizes the right of each individual person to use his own [liberty], whether in respect of his person or his property, regardless of the injury that may be done to others.” Furthermore, the Court ruled that mandatory vaccinations are “necessary in order to protect the public health and secure the public safety”. The Supreme Court reaffirmed that ruling again in the case of Zucht v. King in which the Court ruled that a school system can refuse admission to any student who fails to receive a required vaccination.
George Washington mandated vaccinations
The practice of mandating vaccinations for the Common Good of all Americans is part of America’s tradition from the very beginning: General George Washington, The Father of America, issued the order on Feb. 5, 1777, that mandated vaccinations for all Revolutionary War soldiers and any citizen wanting to join the Revolutionary Army. General Washington declared in writing that “I have determined that troops shall be inoculated. This expedient may be attended with some inconveniences and some disadvantages, but I trust its consequences will have the most happy effects. Necessity not only authorizes but seems to require this measure, for should the disorder infect the army in the natural way and rage with its virulence we should have more to dread from it than from the sword of the enemy.”
General Washington, who had himself suffered from smallpox as a teenager, strongly believed in the effectiveness of vaccination and in 1776 had persuaded his wife to be vaccinated. Back then, vaccination was nothing like the painless pinprick of today’s vaccinations with vaccines produced on germ-free labs — back then vaccination was painful because it required taking a sharp metal “scratcher” on which there was smallpox virus gotten from someone else’s smallpox sores and scratching those viruses into your skin.
General Washington mandated vaccination because he and America’s other Founding Fathers believed that Americans should always act first for the Common Good of every other American, not for their personal interest — and America’s Founding Fathers put that belief in the Common Good being first above individual interests in writing in the Preamble of our Constitution.
I googled “George Washington inoculation” and up popped a Washington Post article published on August 26, 2021, written by Gillian Brockell.
It begins:
On a trip to Barbados in his late teens, George Washington caught one of the luckiest breaks of his life: Smallpox. It probably didn’t seem like good fortune just then. It was a deadly disease, and even survivors suffered miserably from fever, vomiting, headaches and pus-filled pox. But after convalescing for a month at a rented house, young Washington had lifelong immunity — a rare gift at the time for a Virginian, and one that would come in handy decades later.
By 1776, he was the commander in chief of the Continental Army in the Revolutionary War, and his protection from smallpox was a factor in his getting the job. When an outbreak of smallpox devastated the young nation, he made a bold decision to require his troops to be immunized. [Ben Franklin’s bitter regret that he didn’t immunize his 4-year-old son against smallpox] It was an act that has been repeated by presidents and military leaders throughout American history, including Monday, when the Defense Department announced it would require service members to get a coronavirus vaccine.
George Washington knew the threat smallpox posed to the new nation, calling it “the most dangerous Enemy” in a July 1776 letter to John Hancock. He described how, as recruits joined up, “I have been particularly attentive to the least Symptoms of the small Pox” and so far they had quarantined anyone with symptoms so soon “as not only to prevent any Communication [contagion], but any Alarm or Apprehension it might give in the Camp.” If people worried smallpox was spreading in the camp, they might abandon their posts, he was saying.
In one early action in Boston, where the disease was raging, Washington sent a force comprising 1,000 men who had previously had smallpox. In another, an invasion of Quebec was called off because so many of the soldiers had become ill.
By early 1777, Washington knew a more dramatic measure was needed. A method of immunization called inoculation had existed in the colonies since the 1720s, but it was controversial. With inoculation, pus from an infected person was gathered, either in a small vial or by passing a string through one of the sores, and then passed through an open cut in a healthy subject. The subject became ill with smallpox, though generally with a milder case. When they recovered, they were immune.
Critics argued it was playing God, and it was banned in several colonies. Though the death rate was much lower than “natural” infection, it was still dangerous and patients did occasionally die. (The much safer vaccination method using cowpox — the word vaccine derives from the Latin word for cow — would not be developed until 1796.) Plus, because the idea had come from an enslaved African, some alleged it was a trick to get White masters to kill themselves. [Enslaved African Onesimus taught Cotton Mather how to inoculate against smallpox] But inoculation had its supporters, too. Benjamin Franklin supported it constantly in his Philadelphia newspaper. John Adams went through it in 1764; his wife and children followed suit in the summer of 1776. Even Martha Washington underwent the procedure that summer, further convincing her husband of its efficacy.
Thus, anti-vaxxers are on the wrong side of history.

Good morning Diane and everyone,
Yes, it’s true. And if you want to read a great book about George Washington, try Ron Chernow’s Washington: A Life. It’s really great.
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Thanks, Mamie!
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Georgia School Crisis: “All GA kindergarten through grade 12 schools should institute vaccine mandates for teachers and staff and mask mandates for students, teachers, and staff. Requiring them to participate in in-person instruction in the ABSENCE of a mask mandate is fueling the current outbreaks.
Current University System of Georgia policies are antithetical to the educational missions of our state institutions.
Faculty are proscribed from asking about vaccine status or requiring students to wear a mask in their classrooms or their private offices. This “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy approach from USG allows no flexibility on the part of individual institutions or faculty members.”
Harry J. Heiman, M.D., M.P.H., is a family physician and public health expert in Atlanta. Heiman is a clinical associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Behavioral Sciences at the School of Public Health at Georgia State University.
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This is a fascinating read. Wouldn’t it be ironic if we won our freedom because Washington protected the troops from smallpox? A vaccine plays a role in the founding of the nation.
This is from Wikipedia.
“Onesimus (late 1600s–1700s[1]) was an African man who was instrumental in the mitigation of the impact of a smallpox outbreak in Boston, Massachusetts. His birth name is unknown. He was enslaved and, in 1706, was given to the New England Puritan minister Cotton Mather, who renamed him. Onesimus introduced Mather to the principle and procedure of inoculation to prevent the disease, which laid the foundation for the development of vaccines.[2] After a smallpox outbreak began in Boston in 1721, Mather used this knowledge to advocate for inoculation in the population, a practice that eventually spread to other colonies. In a 2016 Boston magazine survey, Onesimus was declared one of the “Best Bostonians of All Time”.[1] ”
The man that had the knowledge of how to vaccinate people and save lives was a slave from Africa!
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Great information! Thanks for sharing it. As a former nationally certified pediatric nurse practitioner, I rarely saw anyone try to refuse a vaccine when their child had a well visit. But, times have changed. It’s too bad. We need the vaccines and as many as possible to be vaccinated. It truly is for the good of all. I really like what the post says about individual liberties and how they must be put aside occasionally for the common good.
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Thanks for this word of sanity!
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Look, if you’re telling me the cherry tree and silver dollar stories aren’t true, I don’t want to hear anymore, especially this fake tripe (tripe is this week’s choice for the word of the week club). They didn’t even know what vaccines were back then. Come to think about it, we don’t either. This just sounds like more CRT infiltration, if you ask me.
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If you bothered to actually READ the article, you would know that, although the principal was the same, it was not a vaccine as we now understand them.
The cherry tree and silver dollar stories were, of course, apocryphal, (word of the day) and never meant to be believed. The smallpox story is historical and we’ll documented. Perhaps you don’t believe he was president either??
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So, it seems you lack a sense of (dark) humor.
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The process was a crude and dangerous one called variolation. “An inoculation doctor would cut an incision in the flesh of the person being inoculated and implant a thread laced with live pustular matter into the wound.”. “The hope and intent was for the person to come down with smallpox. When smallpox was conveyed in that fashion, it was usually a milder case than it was when it was contracted in the natural way.”https://www.history.com/news/smallpox-george-washington-revolutionary-war
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LOL. Greg. But it isn’t tripe. It’s poppycock (from Indo-European roots pap, meaning child, and caca, meaning–well, you know what that means). Or balderdash (from the fact that Frigg, Balder’s mother, made everything in the universe promise not to hurt Balder, so the gods used to entertain themselves by chucking things at him; Loki took advantage of this and made a spear of mistletoe, which Frigg had overlooked, and with this spear, he dashed Balder, which was Frigg-ing awful).
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If Republicans had not politicized vaccines, they would likely not even have to be mandated.
There would have been a great demand, with a small percentage of anti-vac people resisting – the same ones who object to their children being vaccinated for mumps, measles and rubella.
There would be outbreaks that cause huge outbreaks in anti-vac communities, the way there were in NYC when Orthodox Jews refused the vaccine.
Fortunately, because most people were vaccinated, the harm done by those outbreaks was minimized because hospitals weren’t overwhelmed.
By the way, as the selfishness of the anti-vac folks caused measles to spread outside their community, a smaller percentage of exposed people who were vaccinated did catch it, too. That is always the case. It is not evidence that the vaccine doesn’t work. It is evidence that vaccines do what they are supposed to do and prevent massive, harmful pandemics where only the privileged get decent medical treatment in overwhelmed hospitals.
“NYC Health said the outbreak, which officially began in October 2018, cost the city more than $6 million, and response efforts employed more than 500 staff to disseminate pro-vaccine booklets, publish ads, and host community events
“Ending the measles outbreak required extensive collaboration with community organizations and Jewish leaders. They helped encourage vaccinations and achieve record immunization levels in parts of Brooklyn,” said New York Mayor Bill de Blasio. “As we head back to school this week, we just remain vigilant. To keep our children and communities safe, I urge all New Yorkers to get vaccinated. It’s the best defense we have.”
Eighty percent of measles cases in Brooklyn occurred in children, and 73% of cases occurred in people who had never been vaccinated against the virus.
Two other New York outbreaks, one in Rockland County and one in Wyoming County, are still ongoing, as is an outbreak in El Paso, Texas.
“These outbreaks are linked to travelers who brought measles back from other countries such as Israel, Ukraine, and the Philippines, where large measles outbreaks are occurring,” the CDC said.
The number of measles cases reported this year is the highest since 1992 and since the disease was declared eliminated in 2000.”
The Republicans politicized vaccines and they did not care how many Americans died when they saw a chance to get some political advantage.
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Ummmm, contrary to your extensive CNN brainwashing, it was actually DEMOCRATS who ran around saying no one should trust a vaccine developed under Trump. Sorry, princess, but some of us were actually paying attention.
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The interesting part of the story is that there was real risk in those days. You might catch smallpox and die from it. People did not mind experimenting on themselves. Taking risk was a part of life.
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Reblogged this on Lloyd Lofthouse and commented:
George Washington was not only “First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen,” he was also first to impose a vaccine mandate.
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I thought I should share this “fix” that allows me to reblog/share posts after I click “LIKED”
For years, there were posts I LIKED that I could not reblog and share for some reason. Some worked and some didn’t after I clicked LIKE.
A few months ago, I decided to try something to see if it would resolve that problem I was having.
I clicked that clockwise circular arrow in the toolbar at the top far right and rebooted the screen for one of Diane’s blog posts that I could not share, and viola, I was allowed to share it through one of my blogs.
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Diane, would you have the data for how many of the people who have died in the last 2 months have had their two doses of vaccine?
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from NBC, July 30: “At least 125000 fully vaccinated Americans have tested positive for Covid and 1400 of those have died, according to data compiled by NBC.”
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So about 1%.
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I would think that is 1% too many especially when it was initially said that any infection of those who have received the 2 doses will be mild.
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Here is a bulletin from the North Carolina Department of Health:
https://www.ncdhhs.gov/news/press-releases/2021/08/27/adult-icu-patients-hit-record-highs-pandemic-new-report-shows-unvaccinated-people-are-more-15-times
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Here is the text of the NC Department of Health bulletin. If you are vaccinated, you might die. If you are unvaccinated, you are “1,540 percent more likely to die.” Make your choice!
The report:
As Adult ICU Patients Hit Record Highs for the Pandemic, New Report Shows Unvaccinated People Are More Than 15 Times More Likely to Die From COVID-19 Compared to Vaccinated People
Raleigh
Aug 27, 2021
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services yesterday released new data in the weekly respiratory surveillance report showing that unvaccinated people were 15.4 times, or 1,540 percent, more likely to die from COVID-19 during the four-week period ending Aug. 21, 2021. This comes as the state hit a pandemic high on Aug. 26 with 912 adults in the ICU with COVID-19. The number of COVID-19 patients on ventilators also reached a record high at 574.
This week’s respiratory surveillance report is the first to provide age-adjusted death rate data for COVID-19. Adjusting for age is a way to make fairer comparisons between vaccinated and unvaccinated people because the vaccinated population is older than the unvaccinated population and older people are more likely to die from COVID-19. Data is preliminary and is subject to change as additional cases and deaths are reported.
During the week ending Aug. 21, 2021, unvaccinated people were also 4.4 times, or 440 percent, more likely to catch COVID-19 than vaccinated people. The difference between vaccinated and unvaccinated teens was even greater during the week ending Aug. 21, 2021, with unvaccinated people aged 12 to 17 being 6.3 times, or 630 percent, more likely to get COVID-19 than vaccinated people in the same age group.
There is urgency to get vaccinated now. North Carolina has been experiencing the fastest acceleration in cases and hospitalizations since the pandemic started. The COVID-19 vaccines authorized and approved in the United States continue to be remarkably effective in reducing risk of severe disease, hospitalization and death, even against the widely circulating Delta variant.
“The vast majority of people dying with COVID-19 are unvaccinated. If you are not vaccinated please don’t wait until it is too late,” said Mandy K. Cohen, M.D., Secretary of the NC Department of Health and Human Services. “The authorized and approved vaccines have been through rigorous clinical trials and met scientific standards. Millions of North Carolinians have been safely vaccinated.”
There were 187 deaths among unvaccinated persons younger than 65, compared with eight deaths among vaccinated persons younger than 65 during the four-week time period. There were 215 deaths among unvaccinated persons older than 65, compared with 67 deaths among vaccinated persons older than 65. [The previous version of this release stated the number of deaths over a one-week period, which showed there were 29 deaths among unvaccinated persons younger than 65, compared with one death among vaccinated persons younger than 65, and 30 deaths among unvaccinated persons older than 65, compared with seven deaths among vaccinated persons older than 65. This has been corrected to show the number of deaths in the full four-week period used for death rate comparisons, based on case data reported through Aug. 22.]
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From the Centers for Disease Control:
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/covid-19/health-departments/breakthrough-cases.html
Hospitalized or fatal COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough cases reported to CDC as of August 23, 2021
As of August 23, 2021, more than 171 million people in the United States had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
During the same time, CDC received reports from 49 U.S. states and territories of 11,050 patients with COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough infection who were hospitalized or died.
Total number of vaccine breakthrough infections reported to CDC
Deaths
[Total=2,063] Hospitalized, non-fatal
[Total=8,987]
Females 919 (45%) 4,300 (48%)
People aged ≥65 years 1,801 (87%) 6,268 (70%)
Asymptomatic or not COVID-related* 440 (21%) 2,205 (25%)
*Patient had no symptoms of COVID-19 or their hospitalization or death was not COVID-related
Previous data on all vaccine breakthrough cases reported to CDC from January–April 2021 are available.
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Of more than 171 million people vaccinated, 2,063 people died.
Any death is tragic, but the vaccines dramatically reduce the possibility of hospitalization and death.
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Sorry fuckheads, we’re not getting your experimental vaccine. If you want to shoot your kids up with it and possibly make them sterile, or worse, then have at it. But you will NOT mandate what my family does to our own bodies. You can go suck Fauci’s dick for all I care.
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The CDC announced yesterday that people who are unvaccinated are eleven times more likely to be hospitalized and to die. At some point, you and your family will be pariahs, unable to go to school or college or to get jobs. 75% of Americans have had at least one shot. Sorry you refuse to protect yourself and your family. You endanger the rest of us.
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Lovely. I must say, that there is a perfect marriage between the perfect idiocy and ignorance of what you said and the near illiteracy of its presentation. Content AND form! Well done!
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That comment was meant, ofc, for the kooky Mr. Lamp, who clearly isn’t a light unto the world.
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Well, there you go, Diane, confusing people with clear, cogent, careful, fact-based reasoning!
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I try.
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It’s hard to know if you’re on the wrong side of the history books when you are oftentimes led by someone who says, “I don’t read books.”
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A Florida teacher in a school district where 3 educators died in a single day slams Gov. DeSantis’ mask war: ‘I haven’t had kids in 41 years ever act that immature’
https://news.yahoo.com/florida-teacher-school-district-where-113300802.html
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