Mill Creek View Volume XXV - Issue 02 January 2022 B 4
Terry Ryan, Aerospace Econom- ic Development Director's column writes nothing about Snohomish County's major aerospace industry, Boeing Commercial. The Company has become a major economic disaster over the last several years. The Seattle Times has done an excellent job of documenting the con- tinuing failure of Boeing to compete with Europe's Airbus Industries which is eating Boeing's lunch. Ever since McDonnell Douglas purchased Boe- ing and taken charge, the company has had a series of major flops on one new commercial airliner after another. The primary fault seems to lie with the top management of Boeing, not with the lower level engineers or the people who are building the planes. First, they moved corporate head- quarters to Chicago, far away from the heart and soul of the Boeing that made it the best airline manufacturer of the past. All Boeing senior management cares about is making money, not the As a Washington citizen and the son of survivors of 1930s Germany who's entire family line on my father's side was wiped out, I am very troubled for my children by the language of WAC 246-100-070 and allowing local health officers to use law enforcement to detain a person or group of persons to be isolated in a quarantine facility WAC 246-100-045 following refusal to voluntarily comply with requests for medical examination, testing, treat- ment, counseling, and vaccination WAC 246-100-40 including covid19 injections required as school immuni- zation using WAC 246-105 Mr. Grellner, Mr. Pendergrass, Ms. Bessermin, Ms. Crawford, Ms. Crock- rell, Mr. Kutz, Mr. Lentz, Mr. Lunz and especially WA Secretary of Health Mr. Shah proved their ignorance to the science of covid and vaccines and public health on their January 12 State Board of Health Public Zoom meeting If you've never seen the mov- ie Conspiracy, staring Kenneth Branagh and Stanly Tucci, I highly recommend it. Or the book Banality of Evil by Hannah Arendt. In both you will dramatically see how Nazi- ism itself began with the legal cover installed by a bureaucratic committee to promote exterminations under cov- er of law. Man's law. Not natural law as enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. To the eight board members of the WA State Board of Health, this is your moment. Therefore, they were put on this earth at this time. Each has the obligation, to repeal this illegal, inhumane cancer from the world in its infancy in the name of liberty and hu- manity and thereby save Washingto- nians from medical tyranny. One sim- ple vote of this board has the ability to deny WAC 246-100 and restore the inalienable rights of the 4th amend- ment to the US constitution and the Nuremburg Code. A vote to approve this abomination will leave a legacy that will be a stain on history that their friends, family, neighbors, co-workers, fellow citi- zens, Republicans, Democrats, vac- cinated and unvaccinated will suffer under indefinitely and hold you each accountable for, as will nature's God. Yes, vaccinated; What the chief ex- ecutive of Pfizer is telling them, their boss, is that if you received two doses of his company's vaccine last year, your protection is gone. Even against hospitalizations and the severe dis- ease. So no one is safe from this dra- conian round up. Please first do no harm and re- establish informed consent, the 4th- amendment, and the Nuremberg code and bodily autonomy in Washington by voting against immoral and ille- gal medical tyranny and vote down this proposal. This board can revive the spirit of the liberating Allied army that defeated Naziism and made the world safe for democracy for 90 years. Washington is a free state. We must protect against the biomedical security state that divides our society. There is no one else who can. Steve Abramowicz River Crossing
Movie: Conspiracy
Hold McDonnell Douglas managers feet to the fire
Boeing of yore that built the best air- liners in the world. Management has had a bad habit of by-passing senior engineers judgement and decisions in favor of saving a few bucks. As a consequence, quality and sales have fallen year after year in a major way. Ryan, who's job should be dedi- cated to Boeing's economic develop- ment seems to be missing in action. I don't know who's paying his gener- ous salary, but his employers are not getting much for their money. It's time Ryan did his job and he should be holding the imported McDonnell Douglas managers of Boeing's feet to the fire and try to rescue this former excellent corporation from disaster and collapse. A lot of local jobs are hanging in the balance. The student programs he talks about won't have the employer they are preparing to work for around much longer David W. Wood Evergreen
Letters
All Letters to the Editor for publication must contain the writer's name, address and telephone number. The opinions in such, are strictly those of the writer.
My job as Aerospace Director is to help grow our Aerospace Industry and the great paying jobs it provides to Snohomish County. (Including 38,000 Boeing jobs at Paine Field). Additionally, we work with Boe- ing, their suppliers and also attract new Aerospace and Aviation busi- nesses (such as magniX, Eviation and ZeroAvia) to Snohomish County. Just to point out some inaccuracies in the letter from Mr. Wood: McDonnell Douglas did not buy Boeing. If it did, the company would be called McDonnell Douglas. Boeing merged with McDonnell Douglas and the Boeing CEO at the time of the merger, remained as the Boeing CEO after the merger. Little known fact: After 911, it was Boeing's thriving defense divi- sion that helped carry Boeing through the tough economic times caused by 911. They had that division through the merger with McDonnell Douglas. Terry Ryan Parkside
Terry Ryan response
At its January 18 meeting, the city council is expected to authorize the In- terim
City Manager, Martin Yamato, to sign a collective bargaining agreement between the city and the Washington State Council of County and City Employ- ees, for the period of January 1, 2020 to December 31, 2023. The agreement includes the following wage increases: 1) A 2% increase retroactively effective January 1, 2021. 2) A 3.5% increase effective January 1, 2022 3) A 3.5% increase effective January 1, 2023. Other terms and conditions have also been agreed upon, but are not spelled out in the public resolution agreement.
The agreement is subject to ratification by the union's membership.
City Council to approve col- lective bargaining agreement
As the State Board of Health con- siders mandating the covid-19 vaccine for school-age children, increasing re- ports are showing the inefficacy, lack of necessity and even potential danger of this vaccine on our population. The CDC reported a 99.998% co- vid-19 survival rate for kids under 20, a less than 1% mortality rate. A ma- jor November 2021 study conducted by four German universities affirmed not one healthy child in Germany aged ive to 18 has died of covid-19 during the first 15 months of the pandemic and the odds of a healthy child age 5 to 11 would require intensive care were about 1 in 50,000. As for the general population, ar- eas where the majority of residents have been vaccinated are seeing spikes in breakthrough cases. A Houston Medical Hospital study revealed 50% of the Omicron cases in a major Texas hospital involved the vaccinated. In August, the Director of Jeruselum's Herzog Hospital reported 95% of se- verely ill covid-19 patients were fully vaccinated. Gibraltar, which has a 99% covid-19 vaccine compliance rate, reported a 2,500% rise in co- vid-19 cases since June 2021. There is a reason why nearly one- third of healthcare workers in U.S. hospitals would rather resign and lose their livelihood than accept this vac- cine. Many see firsthand, the carnage of the vaccine-injured in hospitals and/ or family circles, or are naturally re- luctant to get a vaccine that, unlike other vaccines, does not contain the actual live virus, but a minimally test- ed spike protein. The Vaccine Adverse Events Re- porting System, known as VAERS, is a national vaccine safety surveillance program overseen by the CDC and FDA. This month, VAERS recorded 21,745 deaths; 115,754 hospitaliza- tions and 1,894,633 adverse reactions, including myocarditis, blood clots, pneumonia, menstrual problems, neu- rological issues, and fatigue. At the same time, 30,551 fatalities and 1.1 million adverse events due to all four covid-19 vaccines have been report- ed by the European Union's official database, The European Medicines Agency. As information is very limited on mainstream, censored news media, I visited alternative news sites such as Zero Hedge, Epoch Times, Newsmax, and Unmuzzled News to access docu- mented studies. I respect the right for all citizens to choose for their own bodies, whether to vaccinate or not and humbly submit this information to equip residents to decide the best op- tion for themselves. After all, inject- ing a foreign substance into our bodies is a personal decision, not the govern- ment's. Pietra Gaebel Autumn Meadows
Knowledge is power: The other side of Covid-19 vaccines
County Council selects leadership team for 2022
The Snohomish County Council has selected Councilmember Megan Dunn as chair of the council for 2022. Dunn is in her first term on the coun- cil; representing the second council district. The council selected Councilman Jared Mead to serve as vice chair of the council. The vice chair is part of the leadership team for the council and serves as chair in the event of an ab- sence. Mead is in his first term on the council and represents District 4. The council votes for a chair and vice chair annually during the first meeting of a new year.
City seeks volunteers for Art & Beautification Board
The Mill Creek Art & Beautifi- cation Board meets on the second Wednesday of each month from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. For information about the du- ties and responsibilities of this board, please visit cityofmillcreek.com > City Government > Boards & Commissions Art & Beautification Board. If you are interested in volunteer- ing for the Art & Beautification Board, please request an application by email- ing your request to communications@ cityofmillcreek.com. Once completed, please return your application to: communications@ cityofmillcreek.com or deliver it to city hall at the address below no later than 5 p.m. Monday, February 14.
Two Snohomish County law en- forcement agencies placed an em- phasis in the current trend of catalytic converter theft. The Everett Police Dept. hosted its second free catalytic converter engraving event. The Sno- homish County Sheriff's Office shared prevention tips for protection of cata- lytic converters on social media. There have been many suggestions to protect catalytic converters circulat- ing over the past few years. Have a cage of a hard material that is difficult to cut installed over the converter. Set an alarm or camera to sound off or take video when burglars jiggle your car. Park your car in your garage if you can and when parking when you shop or go to work, park in a well-lit, busy area of the parking lot. Preventing catalytic converter theft has proven to be difficult. It only takes simple, hand-held battery-oper- ated tools to cut out the converter in seconds. The suggestions, however, should help take away an opportunity for the thieves to take your converter or at least slow them down. But, if they are able to cut out your converter, then there is no way prove that it was stolen. That is where the idea of engraving your auto's VIN on it comes in. By engraving an identifi- cation number or symbol on valuable piece of equipment you help the Sher- iff's Office make a criminal case.
Catalytic converter theft
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