Indiana University in the eye of the hurricane, forces its students to get vaccinated

  


The University of Notre Dame in Indiana is being strongly questioned after an internal statement came to light in which it is stated that every student who returns to campus for the fall semester of 2021 must be fully vaccinated as a mandatory requirement.

 

"The safety of the University and local communities is always our highest priority," wrote John Jenkins, the president of the institution, as an argument to impose the obligation to get vaccinated.

 

Due to this order, the Notre Dame administration is working to make the two doses of the vaccine available to all students and staff. Two application deadlines were scheduled, one in April and one in May.

 

According to the report, Notre Dame "requires that enrolled students also be vaccinated against hepatitis B, meningitis, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus and chicken pox."

 

The central controversy around the obligation to get the CCP virus vaccine is that they are not approved as safe vaccines by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), because they are still in a trial period and are available under an “emergency use authorization”.

 

This means that these drugs are merely "experimental" and, therefore, research studies on their safety and efficacy continue.

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