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Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Doctors Ask Supreme Court To Block California Board From Penalizing Certain COVID-19 Views

 by Matthew Vadum via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Three doctors are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to prevent a California agency from investigating them over their opposition to state-approved COVID-19 policies.

The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on Aug. 14, 2024. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times

The California Medical Board considers the expression of the doctors’ dissenting views on the disease as potentially dangerous misinformation that should be suppressed. The board argues it has legal authority to discipline the doctors for speech it deems to be medical misconduct. The physicians counter that the fact that they have medical licenses doesn’t mean they forfeit their free speech rights under the First Amendment.

The emergency application in Kory v. Bonta was docketed by the high court on Jan. 8, one of the applicants’ attorneys, Richard Jaffe of Sacramento, California, told The Epoch Times.

The application for an injunction was submitted to Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan, who oversees urgent appeals from California.

It is unclear when the Supreme Court will act on the application.

The justices could grant an injunction against the state, deny the injunction, or schedule the case for oral argument.

The application was brought by medical doctors Pierre Kory and Brian Tyson, osteopathic physician Le Trinh Hoag, Physicians for Informed Consent, and Children’s Health Defense, a nonprofit founded by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

President-elect Donald Trump, who will be inaugurated on Jan. 20, has nominated Kennedy to be secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Kennedy, an attorney, is also listed as co-counsel on the application.

California’s executive and legislative branches are “threatening California physicians with professional discipline for their viewpoint speech contrary to the mainstream COVID narrative,” according to the application.

After the Federation of State Medical Boards in July 2021 encouraged its member medical boards in the United States to punish physicians for advancing perceived “COVID misinformation” and “disinformation” among patients and the public, California Medical Board President Kristina Lawson announced in February 2022 that the board planned to sanction physicians for what it called “COVID misinformation.”

The California Legislature passed AB 2098, which took effect in January 2023, making the dissemination of “misinformation” about the disease an offense for which doctors could be disciplined, the application said.

After a federal district judge blocked the law in January 2023, the Legislature repealed the misinformation provision effective January 2024. The application said the board continued to probe physicians for violating its COVID-19 policy after the repeal.

The applicants are challenging “the practice and policy of threatening and targeting physicians with discipline for providing information and recommendations contrary to the mainstream COVID narrative,” according to the application.

On April 23, 2024, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California turned down a request to preliminarily block the state’s enforcement program, finding that the applicants lacked legal standing.

The ruling was affirmed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on Nov. 27, 2024.

The California Business and Professions Code, under which the California Medical Board claims its disciplinary authority, “regulates conduct, not speech,” the circuit court said.

“It provides for enforcement of the standard of care, which is the standard for physicians’ treatment of patients,” it stated.

To demonstrate standing, the applicants had to demonstrate that there was “a credible threat that the [board] will prosecute them under the statute” but they did not do so, the appeals court said.

The Ninth Circuit said the court record showed that the only disciplinary action taken against a doctor “involved a physician encouraging her patient to use veterinary ivermectin and resulted in the stipulated surrender of her license.”

The applicants are asking the Supreme Court for an injunction stopping the state from “continuing their enforcement program targeting the information, opinions, and recommendations on COVID-19 which California licensed physicians may provide to patients.”

Jaffe and Kennedy previously filed a related challenge with the Supreme Court that remains pending. In Stockton v. Ferguson, they asked the justices to block the Washington Medical Commission from investigating licensed physicians in the state over their criticism of COVID-19 policies.

The application was scheduled to be considered by the justices at the court’s private judicial conference on Jan. 10. The court may announce a decision on the case on Jan. 13.

The Epoch Times reached out to the California Medical Board and to California Attorney General Rob Bonta, who represents the board, for comment but received no response by publication time.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/doctors-ask-supreme-court-block-california-board-penalizing-certain-covid-19-views

'Altman, Zuckerberg and biz leaders choose Trump inauguration over Davos'

 Billionaire business leaders who want bragging rights usually flock to the World Economic Forum summit in Davos, Switzerland — but this year it’s being overshadowed by Donald Trump’s inauguration.

The Swiss forum kicks off on the same day the 47th president will be sworn in, Jan. 20, and regulars including Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, OpenAI’s Sam Altman, and Uber’s Dara Khosrowshahi will all be in Washington, DC for Trump, according to insiders.

Sources close to the new administration say it’s an indication political events — and President Trump’s actions — are far more significant to US businesses and leaders than anything in the Swiss Alps could be.

The inauguration of Donald Trump — shown here being sworn in the last time he was president in 2017 — is overshadowing this year’s World Economic Forum, where global elites meet each year.AFP via Getty Images

“It’s unfortunate timing for Davos,” one source said of the event, which runs until Jan. 24. “If you’re a business leader, your time is better spent at the receptions meeting the people who will drive policy in the US, where you are talking about business and trade and ripple effects across the pond.”

A well-placed venture capitalist helping craft Trump’s tech policy told NYNext that for the first time in years, “I don’t know anyone going to Davos.”

Davos attracts important businesspeople, lawmakers, presidents and policy makers from around the globe to debate the largest problems humanity faces, but it is often labelled elitist, too woke and a place where there is much talk but little action.

“Davos is an irrelevant, elitist money grab,” angel investor and co-host of the All-In podcast Jason Calacanis told NYNext. “Builders don’t waste time and money on virtual signaling nonsense like that.”

CEOs are instead betting time with Trump, 78, at the inauguration will be better for business.

On January 20, some of the world’s most powerful leaders and wealthiest CEOs will descend on the small ski village of Davos, Switzerland, pictured Jan. 3.GIAN EHRENZELLER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Tech billionaires like Mark Zuckerberg are donating to President Trump’s inaugural fund and attending his swearing in ceremony.Bloomberg via Getty Images

Since Trump’s election last November, CEOs have been falling over themselves to win him over — some even after years of antagonizing the Republican leader.

Apple CEO Tim Cook, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, and Google CEO Sundar Pichai have each donated $1 million to the Inaugural fund in an effort to show new support for Trump and to get themselves plugged into the new administration.

So many people are eager to donate the incoming president has raised a record $170 million — almost triple the $62 million Joe Biden raised for his inaugural fund.

Many of these companies, including Amazon and Uber, are also hosting parties around Jan. 20th in an effort to reach the rank-and-file staffers on Trump’s team as well. (Tech sources note the most important party for them is Peter Thiel’s party on Saturday night).

The split in attendance underscores the larger trend of Silicon Valley embracing Donald Trump, while Wall Street has remained largely quiet.

President Trump has received a record $170 million in donations for his inaugural fund to pay for the events around his inauguration.Bloomberg via Getty Images
Visitors checking in for the Davos World Economic Forum summit in 2024.China News Service via Getty Images

On Wall Street, which has remained a stronghold for Democrats, most bank executives are expected to stick to their usually scheduled programming and spend the entire week in Davos, with world leaders. 

“They need international friends because they don’t have friends in this government,” a regular at Davos, who is instead attending the Inauguration this year, joked of the Wall Street CEOs headed to Davos.

Jamie Dimon — who had been secretly communicating with Trump about economic policy during the campaign and, at one point, was even floated as a possible Treasury Secretary  — is headed straight to Davos, NYNext has learned. Other bank CEOs, like Goldman Sachs’ David Solomon, are expected to make a pit stop in DC over the weekend before arriving in Davos by the 20th, sources told NYNext.

BlackRock, which has recently moved away from its emphasis on ESG over and even exited a climate initiative with the United Nation, is sending a senior delegation of top executives to the Inauguration led by BlackRock co-founder Rob Kapito, sources told The Post. CEO Larry Fink has yet to decide if he will attend.

At least one world leader, Argentina’s President Javier Milei, is expected to attend the Inauguration then jet to Davos the next day – which is turning out to be a popular method.

Banking executives like Jamie Dimon — who has been secretly communicating with Trump about economic policy — are expected to spend the week in Davos like normal.Bloomberg via Getty Images
Many Wall Street executives are spending their weeks in Davos as usual — in part because they may need international friends, one source joked.China News Service via Getty Images
Davos is nestled in the Swiss Alps and is usually a ski resort, but every January it holds the World Economic Forum.China News Service via Getty Images
“People are trying to do both,” one Wall Street source explained. “But people can prioritize Inauguration weekend and still get to Davos.”

While Davos remains focused on issues like climate and “amplifying perspectives from indigenous communities,” over the last year its programming has also shifted marginally towards the center of the political spectrum.

Last year, The Post reported climate activist poster woman Greta Thunberg — a notable fixture at the conference in recent years — did not make an appearance at the event. Instead, panels focused more on technology and the impact of artificial intelligence.

This year’s theme is “Collaboration for the Intelligent Age,” working together to address global challenges.

But despite its evolution, some sources are skeptical Davos will retain its prominence among the world’s moguls.

The source close to Trump adds, “The election showed the Davos way of thinking about the world is dead… there is a return to populism on trade, immigration and economic and security policies.”

https://nypost.com/2025/01/14/business/mark-zuckerberg-sam-altman-choose-trump-inauguration-over-davos-switzerland/