Veronika Kyrylenko Ph.D. Discussing Individual Rights vs. The Greater Good in the Age of COVID 5PM Monday, October 18, 2021 on KWRO

BIO:

Veronika Kyrylenko is a research associate at a defense consulting firm GeoStrategic Analysis located in Arlington, VA.

She has been contributing commentary on various international and domestic political topics such as elections, healthcare, education, economy and foreign affairs at the American political outlets for the last 8 years, and currently writes for The New American Magazine.

Veronika holds a Ph.D. degree in Political Science.

Fauci Almost Cancels Christmas, Says Americans Need to Give Up Individual Rights for the “Greater Good”

AFL Requests Investigation into Garland Memo Targeting Parents

ABOUT 21 HOURS AGO | By Veronika Kyrylenko | The New American

AP Images Merrick Garland America First Legal (AFL), a conservative non-profit legal organization headed by former Trump White House Advisor Stephen Miller, has requested the Office of Inspector General (OIG) to investigate Attorney General Merrick Garland’s order to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to mobilize against parents who oppose Critical Race Theory (CRT), masking regulations, and LGBTQ-related policies in public schools.

California Makes "Ethnic Studies" a Graduation Requirement for Class of 2030

2 DAYS AGO | By Veronika Kyrylenko | The New American

kali9/iStock/Getty Images Plus First in the nation, all California high-school students, starting with the class of 2030, will be required to take a course on so-called ethnic studies, which is arguably nothing but critical race theory (CRT), alongside the traditionally required English, math, and science classes required to graduate, per a bill signed by Governor Gavin Newsom on Friday.

Pfizer Officially Asks FDA to Approve COVID Jab for Children Aged 5 to 11

3 DAYS AGO | By Veronika Kyrylenko | The New American

aquaArts studio/E+/Getty Images Pfizer and its partner BioNTech asked the U.S. government Thursday to allow use of its COVID shot in children aged 5 to 11. If the regulators find it “safe and effective” and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) agrees, the inoculation of the young Americans could begin within a month.