How Billions in COVID Stimulus Funds Led to Dangerous, Tyrannical Policies in U.S. Schools

Via Children’s Health Defense

In 2020 and 2021, Congress passed trillions in COVID-related stimulus funds, a good portion of which went to schools — but only if school officials aligned their policies with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention COVID guidelines.

In this article, The Defender covers how federal money affected schools. We will cover the impact of federal money on hospitals in a separate article to follow.

In a January interview on Del Bigtree’s “The Highwire” —“COVID-19: Following the Money” — policy analyst A.J. DePriest, a member of the grassroots Tennessee Liberty Network, shared the group’s jaw-dropping findings about the undue influence of federal relief monies on school and hospital policies.

In this article, The Defender covers how federal money affected schools. We will cover the impact of federal money on hospitals in a separate article to follow.

In 2020 and 2021, Congress passed trillions in COVID-related stimulus through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act, the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act and the American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act.

Sizeable portions of those funds went to schools.

Digging into the education allotment, the Tennessee network discovered public, charter and nonprofit private schools in the U.S. received nearly $190.5 billion during three rounds of Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funding (called ESSER I, II and III).

One of DePriest’s disquieting take-home messages is that this education lucre came with major strings attached — federal strings that are persuading ignominious school board members to adopt policies unfavorable and even dangerous to student health and well-being.

While DePriest characterized the stimulus bonanza as a “BIG carrot” for cash-strapped schools, that assessment may be too generous. If one examines the disturbing conditions attached to the U.S. Department of Education’s (DOE’s) dazzling largesse, the government billions seem closer to a godfather-like “offer they can’t refuse.”

The $190 billion ‘carrot’

The size of the federal “carrot” increased with each ESSER iteration. The $1.9 trillion ARP package alone assigned state educational agencies and school districts a whopping $122 billion (ESSER III).

On Jan. 18, the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) crowed about its disbursement of the final chunk of ESSER III monies, claiming the funds were “critical” for addressing “recent challenges” such as the putative and much-ballyhooed Omicron variant.

In Tennessee, the state’s initial take from ESSER I was nearly $260 million, but ESSER II quadrupled that amount to over $1.1 billion. By ESSER III, Tennessee’s educational haul had reached almost $2.5 billion.

The school district encompassing Memphis received roughly three-quarters of a billion dollars, DePriest noted, while Nashville schools pocketed a cool half a billion.

Schools and COVID vaccines

In DePriest’s view, there’s a catch that explains why school boards in every state have been so coldly unresponsive to parental pleas to unmask their children and abandon other COVID restrictions.

The catch is that federal generosity for state educational agencies is contingent on states proving to DOE (in reports submitted twice a year through fall 2023) they are meeting requirements synced with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC’s) “safety recommendations.”

The CDC’s aggressive “recommendations” include:

  • Enforcing “universal and correct wearing of masks”
  • Physically modifying schools to facilitate “distancing”
  • Ensuring “respiratory etiquette” and handwashing (likely with carcinogenic sanitizers)
  • Implementing strenuous cleaning protocols to maintain “healthy facilities”
  • Facilitating contact tracing, “in combination with isolation and quarantine”
  • Conducting testing (both screening and diagnosis), helped along by additional resources from a federal-CDC-Rockefeller Foundation partnership to “ensure that all schools can access and set up screening testing programs as quickly as possible”
  • Coordinating with state and local health officials
  • Engaging in “efforts to provide vaccinations to school communities”

In its Jan. 18 press release, DOE took pains to emphasize that expanding access to vaccinations is “critical” for “safely reopening schools and sustaining safe operations.” And it furnished two ominous illustrations of how its stimulus monies are supporting vaccination efforts on the ground.

First, DOE noted, the Vermont Agency of Education is partnering with other statewide agencies “to vaccinate all Vermonters, including eligible students.” DOE approvingly stated that three-fourths of 12- to 17-year-olds in Vermont already received at least one dose.

DOE also considered the Hawaii Department of Education’s hosting of dozens of vaccination clinics for students, staff and “school communities” to be exemplary.

Further evidence of the feds’ hold over schools comes from the fact that some school districts have already taken steps to mandate COVID shots for some or all K-12 students, even in advance of formal U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval.

Weaponizing HVAC systems?

More than 40% of school districts plan to spend some of their ESSER funds on “improvements” to heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems.

This raises a potential red flag in light of the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) authorization in February 2021 — through a slippery “Public Health Emergency Exemption” — of a potentially hazardous, nanoparticle-based “air treatment” called Grignard Pure.

Dispersal of the chemical, authorized for indoor use in public spaces, occurs primarily “in-duct” via HVAC systems.

EPA’s authorization allows for Grignard Pure’s use in indoor spaces “when adherence to current public health guidelines … is impractical or difficult to maintain.”

As examples of spaces where the chemical’s use is permitted, the agency lists government facilities, healthcare facilities, food processing facilities and public transit.

EPA’s definition of “government facilities” does not appear to include schools, but the agency does admit to studying use of “air treatment technologies” on school buses.

A senior EPA scientist conceded last August, “how safe [the technologies] are, particularly for sensitive populations such as children, is not fully understood.” Given the experimental use of “air treatments” on school buses, it would behoove parents to query schools’ motives for upgrading their HVAC systems.

Moreover, though EPA initially green-lighted Grignard Pure in just two states (Georgia and Tennessee), it added four more states — Maryland, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Texas — last July.

The manufacturer’s website indicates that applications for Public Health Emergency Exemption are pending in another 15 states.

Nor does EPA’s vaguely worded list of indoor spaces seem to preclude use of the chemical in facilities not on that list. For example, Grignard Pure’s CEO is openly publicizing his product’s use in religious spaces, and a member of the company’s engineering steering committee elatedly stated last year, “There’s no limit to where we can use it!”

St. Simons Presbyterian Church in Georgia paved the way for church use, with the facility’s HVAC vents, which “run the length of both sides of the sanctuary’s ceiling,” apparently having been deemed ideal for spritzing congregants during services. This generates “a light haze [that] comes from the air vents and settles over the sanctuary.”

According to news accounts, the Georgia church’s pastor views Grignard Pure as “an added layer of safety,” a fact that the church emphasizes in its weekly bulletins. The pastor also is considering using the chemical-dispensing system during flu season.

Health risks associated with triethylene glycol

As The Defender previously reported, Grignard Pure’s supposedly virus-killing active ingredient is triethylene glycol (TEG), a chemical whose prior claim to fame was its use in theatrical fog machines.

Shortly before EPA reached its upbeat decision to approve TEG, the UK’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) recommended against TEG’s use as a virucide due to its limited effectiveness and “potential health effects for those exposed over a long period of time.”

After WWII and in the early 1950s, there was an attempt to deploy TEG for “air disinfection” purposes in school settings. However, “wartime and post-war authors would not have had access to much of the toxicological and health data now available for this chemical,” said the UK SAGE group.

These data show “a number of potential acute health effects,” including respiratory tract irritation in case of inhalation.

A Berkeley, California lab — the Indoor Air Quality Scientific Findings Resource Bank — recently expressed multiple concerns about TEG in relation to air disinfection.

The indoor air quality experts cautioned, “careful attention should be given to dosage of triethylene glycol in indoor settings in order to minimize potential health effects caused by chemical exposure,” particularly in light of evidence of health effects with repeated exposure.

The Berkeley group also warned “TEG could react with other indoor chemicals” — including common disinfectants — “leading to additional and perhaps unexpected adverse health effects,” including toxic effects on human airway epithelial cells.

In light of these “uncertainties about TEG dosing, chemical mixtures, and health risks,” they suggested TEG should be viewed as a “lower priority” option.

In similar comments about the use of TEG “or other similar chemicals” for air disinfection (p. 23), SAGE wrote in November 2020:

“There is currently no strong evidence that using a continuous spray chemical in the air will be an effective control against SARS-CoV-2 transmission. …[T]here is no precedent for such an approach to be used as a continuous spray in an occupied space for infection control. Cleaning the air by spraying it with a chemical is a misnomer – it is simply swapping one contaminant for another.”

TEG’s cousin polyethylene glycol (PEG)

As The Defender reported a year ago, TEG is a chemical cousin to and sometime-component of polyethylene glycol (PEG), a synthetic, nondegradable polymer of questionable biocompatibility.

PEG is known to be associated with adverse immune responses, including anaphylaxis.

Both the Pfizer and Moderna COVID jabs use PEG to make their mRNA “carrier systems” work, and the compound is also present in numerous other drugs and consumer products.

Up to 72% of the U.S. population may have anti-PEG antibodies — including an estimated 8% with highly elevated levels — that could lead to life-threatening anaphylactic reactions. Research is needed to assess potential TEG-PEG cross-reactivity.

Children’s Health Defense (CHD) in August 2020 first sounded the alarm about the risks of PEG in COVID shots, pointing out that well before COVID, PEG had already been flagged, including by Moderna itself, for its potential to trigger immediate hypersensitivity reactions.

CHD was so concerned about the potential for anaphylaxis that it followed up with a letter to the FDA on Sept. 25, 2020, outlining the need for critical safeguards for Moderna clinical trial participants.

Those concerns have since been borne out by repeated reports of PEG-linked anaphylaxis that began surfacing concurrent with the two mRNA vaccines’ rollout.

Resistance is NOT futile

In mid-August, Tennessee’s governor issued an executive order giving parents ultimate decision-making authority over their children’s masking behavior at school.

U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona evinced no compunction about immediately chastising the governor and his education commissioner for taking matters into their own hands.

In a letter dated two days later, Cardona wrote that the Tennessee governor’s action was “at odds with the school district planning process embodied in the U.S. Department of Education’s. . . interim final requirements,” pointedly adding that CDC safety recommendations include “universal and correct wearing of masks.”

Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey on Jan. 14 that the Biden administration is prepared to take back Arizona’s relief funds — and also withhold future federal aid — due to the state’s active discouragement of school mask mandates.

Yellen offered no explanation as to why the Treasury Department, rather than DOE, was issuing the warning.

In response, Ducey emphasized Arizona’s focus on “things that matter” — math, not masks. Attorney General Mark Brnovich urged Yellen to rescind the threat, arguing that Treasury is “trying to overstep its constitutional bounds” by dictating how the state should run and fund its schools.

These types of intimidation tactics are also evident at the school-district level, prompting parents’ growing frustration.

Rather than continue to beg for mask lenience, DePriest reminds parents they have every right to confront school board members about the feds’ cash-in-exchange-for-obedience arrangements.

“They’re getting the money to mask your kids. It has nothing to do with health and safety,” DePriest said.

As evidenced by the quadrupling of homeschooling since the beginning of COVID, many families have simply had it. However, for parents for whom homeschooling is not an option, there is every reason to push local school boards to address their student-unfriendly behavior more transparently.

Here are a handful of possible questions and actions:

  1. Borrowing DePriest’s no-nonsense wording, a first step is to ask, “How much money are you taking from the federal government to commit this egregious, tyrannical behavior on our kids?” If school board members profess not to know, prepared citizens can easily present them with the financial information listed here.
  2. As one state describes it, “The governance of local school boards by democratically-elected individuals remains at the heart of two vital United States structures: the public education system and democracy itself.” Remind school board members that when they put politics and financial arm-twisting ahead of their relationship with the public and the students they are supposed to serve, they are engaging in a fundamental betrayal of trust and ethics.
  3. Emphasize to school board members that the damage caused by COVID restrictions has far outweighed any threat from the illness, turning schools into “a physically, spiritually, and emotionally unsafe place” for children. Moreover, none of the restrictions are genuinely evidence-based.
  4. Continue to present school board members with evidence about the experimental COVID injections’ dangers (see sample talking points here).
  5. Ask schools whether they are planning for or engaging in HVAC “improvements.” If yes, ask them to describe the purpose of the “improvements” and whether schools intend to use HVAC systems to disseminate unsafe chemicals. Tell them EPA is doing research on “air treatments” in school buses, and let them know about the risks — both known and hypothesized — of chemicals like TEG.
  6. Finally, for officials who claim that their hands are tied, A.J. DePriest has a ready solution: Tell them to “give the money back”!
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11 Comments
Winchester
Winchester
January 21, 2022 8:32 am

Best course of action is to get kids out of public schools. You can’t negotiate with these unions and mentally ill liberal teachers. My daughter is in 5th grade and they took two days in her social studies class to talk about MLK, Rosa Parks, and the Birmingham incident. I understand those things are all a part of history, but the word “racism” was used quite a bit in those lessons. I asked her, who was the racist? She responded, white people against blacks. I wrote up an addendum to that lesson on the subject of racism, especially modern day racism. She learned a real lesson about race issues in this country, from the fabrication of lies and division to the high number of racist incidents that occur from black people toward Asians and whites. I sent the lesson to her teacher and heard nothing more on it.

She will be finishing this school year and be placed into a home school curriculum. We meant to do it years earlier, but couldn’t find the time. At least now she can be self guided. Good news is, we always stayed on her schooling, so there is absolutely no indoctrination of that child.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  Winchester
January 21, 2022 9:09 am

I have been pulling my hair out these last few days because our son is resisting any sort of attempts of me “teaching” him anything, and tells me that either “Mom, I already know that (roll eyes)” or “Mom, I can better figure it out myself”, so I am trying to remember what HSF said and find much calmness within:

It is much better to be an autodidact than a student.

With that, I wish your daughter much enjoyment with that lifestyle, Winchester.

Winchester
Winchester
  Svarga Loka
January 21, 2022 9:59 am

I have learned with kids to not force them into doing something they may not like. I wish she would read more, but she hates it. My solution was to let her read her weird fiction books while mixing in a little non-fiction history and such. Same approach to “correcting” her schooling by simply giving her real life examples to counter whatever nonsense they are spewing.

Another example recently was the climate change crap they love sending home. I showed her some old earth science material about periods throughout the history of earth. She came out understanding that the earth works in cycles and has been for billions of years. I then showed her data the “experts” such as Al Gore have been pushing for 30 years. Data such as the rise in ocean levels and that some coastal cities were supposed to be underwater by now according to them. Today she was getting ready for school and it was a balmy -19 degrees outside. I asked her if such cold weather could be possible with global warming they claim. She responded “It is really good for those extinct polar bears”. We laughed, she went to school, I went to work.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
  Winchester
January 21, 2022 10:29 am

She has a good sense of humor.

I love writing, so, naturally, I was hoping that my son would, too, but he hates it. And then he surprised me when he happily wrote a 1200 word essay about his favorite video game as part of an online coding course I signed him up for. At the end of the day, (despite my “trust issues”, as my husband calls it), I trust that they will learn whatever it is that they need or desire.

realestatepup
realestatepup
January 21, 2022 8:42 am

Talk to any janitor…sorry, sanitary staff…of any school district and you will hear tales of spraying CLOSED and EMPTY schools with these chemicals EVERY DAY.
Seriously.
You will probably also hear of staff quitting or becoming unable to work due to constant exposure to this crap.
Cue lawsuit commercial
“Have you or a loved one been injured or killed by Grignard’s Pure? We can help..call 1-800 blah blah blah”
Of course, the manufacturer of this garbage has long since drained the coffers and filed bankruptcy, and the potential lung damage etc will have already happened.
People are so stupid. How many “medical” devices, chemicals, treatments, cars, machines, tools, electronics have seriously maimed or killed people over the last 100+ years?
If you do the research you will be astounded.
Particularly the medical device field is rife with dangerous and poisonous products that are still in use and killing people every damn day or making them live in constant pain and debilitation.
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/medical-device-dangers
This is from MSM NBC news folks, so imagine the real threat here.
Just the name “Grignard’s Pure” sounds straight out of an old Western movie where the scene is a snake oil salesman with a cart, a smooth pitch, and a quick exit from town. I mean shit, we used to allow cocaine in soda, and quite frankly it was probably safer than the crap they put in there now.
These are the things I know:
1. You cannot leave politicians with a pile of money. The money will be gone, they will lie about where it went, and then have the balls to ask for more. A toddler with a package of cookies alone in a room is more honest.
2. Big Pharma, in all it’s iterations, is nothing more than a scam to make money.
3. The FDA is in on said scam and doesn’t give even one tiny shit about you or me.
4. Lawsuits do absolutely nothing to prevent further fraud and harm, and I am quite sure they see it as part of the business model. After all, the “company” is the one paying the fine, and that gets transferred to the taxpayer anyway down the line. Jail, and I mean real jail time, is the only solution to this BS.
5. “Healthcare” has absolutely nothing to do with health or care. It’s a scam set up so you and I are actually forced to pay to be poisoned and maimed. Take the money out of the equation and so much of this shit just goes away.

I don’t like doctors, don’t trust them, and feel they stopped being on our side a long fucking time ago.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 21, 2022 9:56 am

What is it with the pushing of various glycols?

https://royalglobalenergy.com/service/ethylene-glycol/

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
January 21, 2022 9:59 am
Gmpatriot
Gmpatriot
January 21, 2022 10:22 am
Anonymous
Anonymous
January 21, 2022 11:37 am

Tyranny led to theft led to more tyranny?

Who’da thunkit?

Rise Up
Rise Up
January 21, 2022 1:44 pm

I want to know WHO authorized and WHY hospitals are given money to inflate Covid treatments and statistics.

Follow the money always leads to who is responsible.

I think this is a core question to be answered that will end up in prison terms.

The hospital payments include:

A “free” required PCR test in the Emergency Room or upon admission for every patient, with a fee to hospital by the federal government.

Added bonus payment for each positive COVID-19 diagnosis.

Another bonus for a COVID-19 admission to the hospital.

A 20 percent “boost” bonus payment from Medicare on the entire hospital bill for the use of remdesivir instead of other medicines, such as Ivermectin.

Another and larger bonus payment to the hospital if a COVID-19 patient is mechanically ventilated.

More money to the hospital if the cause of death is listed as COVID-19, even if the patient did not die directly of COVID-19.

A COVID-19 diagnosis also provides extra payments to coroners.

https://www.redvoicemedia.com/2022/01/receipts-hospitals-paid-to-kill-providers-incentivized-by-feds-to-murder-covid-patients/

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
January 21, 2022 2:51 pm

So, let’s fog antifreeze into all our buildings. Being an experienced (22+ yrs) IAQ Professional, that’s CRAP. We use an EPA Approved probiotic for 1 minute/100 cu ft, which is around 1 gallon/1,000 sq ft.

Subjecting students for 6-7 hrs of a carcinogenic aerosol is CRIMINAL. Hey, it might only reduce IQs by 10%.