![]() Not providing easy testing options for front line workers, and having to wait three weeks before I, or anyone, can kiss our children is cruel. Requiring front line workers and ICU nurses to work overtime before giving us crumbs of pay is cruel. “Mandating that we wear a soiled mask for multiple shifts before providing another one is cruel. “They call us heroes, but staffing three nurses and two techs in a 30-room emergency room is cruel,” said Linda Exantus, an emergency room technician from Miami-Dade County. Roundtable members also renewed calls to give hazard pay to Florida’s front line workers. “My hope is that we can finally have leadership in Tallahassee and in Washington that puts science behind all public policy.” “There is no national strategy to combat this pandemic, and it is a failure of leadership on so many levels,” she said. Mona Mangat, the former National Board Chair of Doctors for America. “I’ve been a nurse for 24 years and I have never been so appalled, scared, disappointed and angry about the people that we depend on due to a lack of leadership,” said Patricia Diaz, a registered nurse from Miami-Dade County. In her opening remarks, Fried said no one was to blame for COVID-19 and acknowledged her outspoken criticism of the Governor’s response. “As Commissioner Fried noted, it’s no secret that she has been critical of the Governor’s response to this crisis” said press secretary Max Flugrath. Her office later commented on Saff’s statement when approached by Florida Politics. The remark went unaddressed and unchallenged by Fried during the roundtable. But when you pull back those superficialities, I really think that he’s part of a far-right wing death cult and it’s quite scary.” “He has a nice public appearance his hair is well groomed he always has a coat and tie on he strings his sentences together well he studied at Harvard and Yale. “I’ve heard Governor DeSantis speak,” said Dr. Ron DeSantis may be part of a “far-right wing death cult” during a health care roundtable hosted by Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried on Friday. It contacted Villa's last wife, 92-year-old Soledad Seanez de Villa, who lives in Ciudad Jua'rez, but she refused to give her authority.Ĭurrently, the group is trying to locate one of Villa's sons, Hipolito Villa, who lives in Mexico City, Hunter said.A Tallahassee doctor suggested that Gov. ![]() He said the group wanted to sue Skull and Bones, but needed some standing. "Then he added: 'We don't have it, but if you can prove we have it we'll give it to you,' " Hunter said. Davis, who described himself as a member of Skull and Bones, telephoned Hunter and said the society did not have the skull. He said he was unable to find a telephone listing for Skull and Bones and called the president of the university. "Williams told him to go to hell, that if he'd known that, would still be in a Mexican jail," Hunter said. The search began 18 months ago when the group read "Let the Tail Go With the Hide," in which author Terry Irvin tells the story of her father Ben Williams, who helped El Paso adventurer Emil Holmdahl out of Mexico after he had been accused of stealing the skull.īack in El Paso, Holmdahl confessed to Williams that he had indeed stolen the skull and later sold it to a Skull and Bones member. The remains of his body were later moved to Mexico City and buried there in the Monument to the Revolution. In 1926, grave robbers stole his skull and its whereabouts have been a mystery ever since. Villa, a bandit turned freedom fighter who led the last invasion of the United States mainland, was assassinated in Parral in northern Mexico in 1923. He explained that some members of the Wednesday Group, so called because its 10 to 15 members meet for lunch every Wednesday, are Mexican nationals from Ciudad Jua'rez who feel very strongly that the skull should be returned.Īn attorney and spokesman for Skull and Bones told Hunter the society did not have the skull, but added that if it could be proved it did have it, it would be returned.Ī letter to Vice President George Bush, who belonged to the club when he was at Yale, was not answered. "We want to retrieve the skull and, with great ceremony, return it to Mexico for burial," group member Frank Hunter, a retired lawyer, told Reuter by telephone from El Paso today. 10 - Yale University's secretive Skull and Bones society possesses the skull of Mexican revolutionary hero Pancho Villa, according to a group of history buffs in El Paso who want it returned to Mexico for proper burial.
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