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Source: New York Post
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon threatens to fire unvaccinated workers
By Ariel Zilber | January 11, 2022
Citibank is in on the program giving their employees an ultimatum: take the jabs or lose employment:
The Unvaccinated Are Looking Smarter Every Week
Here is the pharmaceutical industry attempting to make sure their vaccine (injection) profits aren't "flattened" by the massive worldwide rejection of vaccines (injections).
Study: Flu Shots, Measles Vaccines Could Help 'Flatten the Curve' for COVID-19
COVID-19: Heathrow demands all testing is dropped after 600,000 passengers cancelled Christmas flights
Source: New York Post
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon threatens to fire unvaccinated workers
By Ariel Zilber | January 11, 2022
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon says the investment bank will fire any Manhattan-based staffer who refuses to get the COVID-19 vaccine. The Washington Post via Getty Image
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said any New York City-based staffer who refuses to get the COVID-19 vaccine is now at risk of getting fired as Wall Street tightens a clampdown in the face of the Omicron variant.
Dimon flagged the prospective shift in policy on Monday — just days after another investment banking giant, Citigroup, set a Friday deadline for all of its US-based employees to get inoculated.
"If you aren't going to get vaxxed, you won't be able to work in that office. We're not going to pay you not to work in the office," Dimon told Reuters.
"We want people to get vaccinated."
Dimon's comments signal a harder line at JPMorgan Chase, the largest asset-holding bank in the country, which last month had told its Manhattan-based staffers that they could work from home if they declined to get vaccinated.
Previously, those who were unvaccinated and chose to work from the office could do so if they submitted to regular testing. Last month, JPMorgan had told unvaccinated employees they could work from home temporarily until "alternative solutions are considered," according to Bloomberg.
When asked this week whether JPMorgan Chase would adopt a hybrid work policy allowing employees to split their time between home and the office, Dimon said: "We don’t have to answer this right away."
Please go to New York Post to read more.
Dimon flagged the prospective shift in policy on Monday — just days after another investment banking giant, Citigroup, set a Friday deadline for all of its US-based employees to get inoculated.
"If you aren't going to get vaxxed, you won't be able to work in that office. We're not going to pay you not to work in the office," Dimon told Reuters.
"We want people to get vaccinated."
Dimon's comments signal a harder line at JPMorgan Chase, the largest asset-holding bank in the country, which last month had told its Manhattan-based staffers that they could work from home if they declined to get vaccinated.
Previously, those who were unvaccinated and chose to work from the office could do so if they submitted to regular testing. Last month, JPMorgan had told unvaccinated employees they could work from home temporarily until "alternative solutions are considered," according to Bloomberg.
When asked this week whether JPMorgan Chase would adopt a hybrid work policy allowing employees to split their time between home and the office, Dimon said: "We don’t have to answer this right away."
Please go to New York Post to read more.
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Source: CNBC
Pfizer CEO says two Covid vaccine doses aren't 'enough for omicron'
January 10, 2022 | By Spencer Kimball
KEY POINTS
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla on Monday said two doses of the company's vaccine may not provide strong protection against infection from the Covid omicron variant, and the original shots have also lost some of their efficacy at preventing hospitalization.
Bourla, in an interview at JPMorgan's health-care conference, emphasized the importance of a third shot to boost people's protection against omicron.
"The two doses, they're not enough for omicron," Bourla said. "The third dose of the current vaccine is providing quite good protection against deaths, and decent protection against hospitalizations."
Bourla said omicron is a more difficult target than previous variants. Omicron, which has dozens of mutations, can evade some of the protection provided by Pfizer's original two shots.
"We have seen with a second dose very clearly that the first thing that we lost was the protection against infections," Bourla said. "But then two months later, what used to be very strong in hospitalization also went down. And I think this is what everybody's worried about."
Real-world data from the United Kingdom has found that two vaccine doses are 52% effective at preventing hospitalization 25 weeks after receiving the second shot, according to data from the U.K. Health Security Agency.
Please go to CNBC to read more.
Source: CNBC
Pfizer CEO says two Covid vaccine doses aren't 'enough for omicron'
January 10, 2022 | By Spencer Kimball
KEY POINTS
• "The two doses, they're not enough for omicron," Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said.
• Bourla said the two-dose vaccine does not provide robust protection against infection and its ability to prevent hospitalization has also declined.
• He said third shots are providing good protection against death, and "decent" protection against hospitalization.
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla talks during a press conference with European Commission President after a visit to oversee the production of the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine at the factory of US pharmaceutical company Pfizer, in Puurs, on April 23, 2021. John Thys | AFP | Getty Images
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla on Monday said two doses of the company's vaccine may not provide strong protection against infection from the Covid omicron variant, and the original shots have also lost some of their efficacy at preventing hospitalization.
Bourla, in an interview at JPMorgan's health-care conference, emphasized the importance of a third shot to boost people's protection against omicron.
"The two doses, they're not enough for omicron," Bourla said. "The third dose of the current vaccine is providing quite good protection against deaths, and decent protection against hospitalizations."
Bourla said omicron is a more difficult target than previous variants. Omicron, which has dozens of mutations, can evade some of the protection provided by Pfizer's original two shots.
"We have seen with a second dose very clearly that the first thing that we lost was the protection against infections," Bourla said. "But then two months later, what used to be very strong in hospitalization also went down. And I think this is what everybody's worried about."
Real-world data from the United Kingdom has found that two vaccine doses are 52% effective at preventing hospitalization 25 weeks after receiving the second shot, according to data from the U.K. Health Security Agency.
Please go to CNBC to read more.
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Citibank is in on the program giving their employees an ultimatum: take the jabs or lose employment:
Hopefully, Dimon's JPMorgan doesn't have too many employees with PhDs working at the bank?
Those who have a powerful conviction the vaccines (injections) are wrong will in the end prevail:
The Unvaccinated Are Looking Smarter Every Week
Here is the pharmaceutical industry attempting to make sure their vaccine (injection) profits aren't "flattened" by the massive worldwide rejection of vaccines (injections).
Study: Flu Shots, Measles Vaccines Could Help 'Flatten the Curve' for COVID-19
Punishing those who decide they do not want an experimental medical procedure injected into them.
The next big market for Pfizer and its investors with approval from the federally subcontracted drug sales corporation the FDA: children:
In the EU countries like Italy are ramping up pressure for travelers to have their Covid injections including a "green pass" needed to enter facilities including banks. This is a move to shut those who do not want the injections out of the economy.
Outside of perhaps New York, California under Silicon Valley's control of Newsom is the most militarized state to inject every Californian including ongoing boosters.
Boycotts work:
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