Thursday, September 09, 2021

Too soon? Another Herman Cain contender plucked from the pages ...

 

 


 

 

This headline came from the NY Daily News ... where you  can see a snap of the victim ...

 The pond will keep to the text ...

 

A Manhattan court officer lieutenant who was ardently opposed to taking the coronavirus vaccine has died of COVID-19, the Daily News has learned.
Lt. Stephen Shyti, 63, died around 5:45 p.m. Tuesday after spending more than two weeks on a ventilator, officials said.
Multiple sources said the veteran court lieutenant and father of two was outspoken in his opposition to taking the vaccine and did not wear a mask at work. He was responsible for enforcing mask-wearing and other safety measures at the sprawling lower Manhattan courthouse.

Ah yes, of course, of course ... one of Killer Creighton's soul mates ...





Dennis Quirk, the court officers’ union president, said Shyti’s beliefs about the vaccine were the result of work at Ground Zero in the aftermath of 9/11. Shyti suffered breathing problems from exposure to the toxic rubble of the World Trade Center.
“He’s one of the people that was working down at the site of 9/11 and received some ailments from that,” said Quirk.
“He had total mistrust in the government and wouldn’t get the vaccine.”
A spokesman for the Office of Court Administration said Shyti was “a calm and reassuring presence at Manhattan Criminal Court,” where he worked for 26 years.
“He was well-liked by all members of his command and was known for his fairness and care for his co-workers. He had an encyclopedic knowledge and grasp of all aspects of criminal court operations and case processing and was a resource for younger officers throughout his career,” said the spokesman, Lucian Chalfen.

As for his encyclopedic knowledge of Covid and comorbidities, ailments he himself carried, and his deep understanding of our current pandemic, far better than mere epidemiliogists, what can be said?

 





The CDC recommends everyone 12 and older receive a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as possible. An FDA review of about 22,000 people who received the vaccine and 22,000 people who received a placebo found that Pfizer’s shots were 91% effective at preventing COVID-19.
The vaccines have proven to be highly effective at saving lives and preventing hospitalizations, particularly for those with underlying conditions, such as respiratory problems.
Earlier this month, the state’s chief administrative judge, Lawrence Marks, said all state court employees must get vaccinated by Sept. 27.
Marks said the policy move is for “those who work in our courthouses, who are required to conduct business in our courthouses and who are compelled to be in our courthouses.”
Out of the court system’s 15,600 employees, approximately 60% — or 9,400 staffers — are vaccinated, according to public data.
Only about 39% of the state’s court officers are vaccinated, while about 80% of New York’s judges are inoculated against COVID-19.

Mandatory?

But, billy goat butt, the pond is a firm believer that the Herman Cain awards should be open to all contenders, no matter what profession, and mandatory protection would run completely against the spirit of the awards ...

 

 


 


The death comes amid an unusually nasty fight between the court officers’ union and the state’s chief judge over a vaccine mandate.
A former court officer colleague of Shyti’s had only good words to say about his former boss.
“Steve was a great co-worker and a great guy all around. He was a great sergeant when I worked for him, and was always there to put a hand on your shoulder, an ear to listen or a good stern word to straighten a person out,” said Michael Aranda.
Tributes poured in online for the longtime court officer.
“He was such a kind soul, may he Rest In Peace. Praying for comfort and strength for all his loved ones,” wrote Loreily Rodriguez-Pardo.
Shytis’ wife declined to comment through a state court officers’ spokesman.

Yes, he might even have helped straighten a few out in relation to vaccines, and given them a stern word or two about masks, which would make him a hero in Killer Creighton's eyes.

Thoughts and prayers after the event, they always help ... which brings the pond to a story in Crikey yesterday ...



There must be a cartoon for that ...



 

But the pond isn't prejudiced and acknowledges that in some cases Ivermectin might well prove useful, at least when a de-worming is required ...




3 comments:

  1. He had total mistrust in the government..." So, he works for "the government" - a specialised, localised part, true, however, still, the government - but has a total mistrust of it. Does that "total distrust" mean that he disbelieves everything that "the government" says, does or just says it does ? Or does he somehow reckon that 9/11 was a 'false flag' act ?

    But this Herman Cain thing really is taking on a life of its own with people like Steve Shyti giving up their lives in the name of truth, beauty and the pursuit of freedom from masks and vaccines.

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    1. Yes GB that struck the pond as truly weird too, a kind of ouroboros loop, because by definition, as a government employee, he must have had no confidence in, or a total distrust of, himself and any actions he took in pursuit of his government-ordained duties. Thinking about it for more than a nanosecond produces Kafka-esque paranoid delusions ...

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    2. It's sort of a not-quite-schizophrenic 'split mind' state: one half of the brain believes one thing, and the other half believes something quite different, and the two can cohabit because they are activated in completely disconnected circumstances.

      Nor all that unusual, I suppose: consider the 'Sunday religionists' who believe one thing on Sunday and very different things through the rest of the week.

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