Raw Story: “Acknowledging that what happened was a product of Mom’s choice kind of throws a strange wrinkle in the grieving process,” state Rep. Greg Chaney told the Idaho Statesman. “Because she didn’t exactly choose to die. But she chose, based on her age and physical condition, that she was highly likely to end up there if she got COVID. It’s a hard thing to wrap your brain around.
Condolences to @gregchaneyidaho on the loss of your extraordinary mother. And thank you for speaking out against the misinformation that cost her life and so many others. Your courage may save other lives. #idleg #idpol https://t.co/biK3zEseMv
— Ilana Rubel (@IlanaRubel) September 29, 2021
“Mom had worked at the Old Mercy Medical Center as a chaplain,” Chaney added. “She worked in a doctor’s office. She wasn’t anti-medicine. She wasn’t gullible. She had two post-secondary degrees. She was an intelligent person. She was, however, a very skeptical person.”
Idaho is very scary and the lunatics are running the asylum. Imagine how the healthcare workers feel. God forbid a regular citizen stand up to them. Things are only getting scarier here. #SOSfromIdaho
Greg Chaney is saying this as one of our REPUBLICAN state lawmakers: https://t.co/RCeg3SFIIj— Phurr 🇺🇸 (@Phurrlosophy) September 29, 2021
Chaney’s mother, 74-year-old Judy Teter-Page, reportedly refused to go to a hospital for two days because she was afraid of Idaho’s newly enacted health-care rationing standards, which came in response to an influx of COVID-19 patients. Teter-Page had heard rumors that Idaho hospitals weren’t resuscitating anyone — even though that portion of the standards only becomes a factor if ventilators are scarce.
I am so, so sorry to hear this, Rep. Chaney.
— Audrey Dutton (@audreydutton) September 27, 2021
Chaney’s mother, 74-year-old Judy Teter-Page, reportedly refused to go to a hospital for two days because she was afraid of Idaho’s newly enacted health-care rationing standards, which came in response to an influx of COVID-19 patients. Teter-Page had heard rumors that Idaho hospitals weren’t resuscitating anyone — even though that portion of the standards only becomes a factor if ventilators are scarce.
She died at West Valley hospital on Sept. 20 — 15 minutes after Chaney arrived to visit her.
“He blames misinformation for convincing his mother that the side effects of the vaccine would be a greater risk to her health than COVID-19,” the Statesman reports.
“Frankly, there’s some anger,” Chaney said. “I think there are people in our political realm … who are essentially killing people with misinformation.
“But they’ll get away with it, because you can never really tell at what point somebody was convinced of a lie. Was it the fifth time it was repeated? Was it the 50th time? Was it the 500th time? Nobody really knows. But this politically motivated misinformation campaign that’s out there is deadly.”
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