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Lil Nas X Charged With Four Felonies, Including Assaulting an Officer

Rapper Lil Nas X has been charged with four felonies following his arrest last Thursday after he was spotted wandering Ventura Boulevard in Los Angeles in his underwear and cowboy boots.
The artist, whose real name is Montero Hill, was charged with three counts of battery against a police officer and one count of resisting an executive officer, according to LA Superior Court records. He is currently being held without bail and is scheduled to be arraigned in front of Judge Sarah Ellenberg in Van Nuys today, when bail may be determined.
Following reports of his arrest, the Los Angeles Police Department initially did not name him directly, but confirmed to Variety that an incoherent, nude man was taken into custody and hospitalized around 5:50 a.m. TMZ released footage showing Lil Nas X walking the street in the middle of the night, and later published footage of him fully nude while rapping Nicki Minaj’s verse from “Monster.”
LAPD had responded to calls and complaints early Thursday morning of a nude man acting erratically on the street. He was arrested for battery of an officer and was transferred to a hospital on the suspicion of a potential overdose.
Prior to his arrest, Lil Nas X made several random Instagram posts after erasing content from his page. On Wednesday, he posted several song snippets as well as pictures of the inside of his home. One of the posts featured him in the same white cowboy boots he was wearing in Thursday’s video.
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Florida surgeon general says state will eliminate all vaccine mandates

Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo said Wednesday that the state will work to eliminate all vaccine mandates.
“All of them. All of them,” he said during a news conference as the crowd stood and erupted in applause. “Every last one of them is wrong and drips with disdain and slavery.” He said the Florida Department of Health will work in partnership with the governor.
He said forcing vaccine mandates is “wrong” and “immoral.”
“Who am I as a government or anyone else, who am I as a man standing here now, to tell you what you should put in your body? Lapado said. “Who am I to tell you what your child should put in [their] body? I don’t have that right.”
Florida requires current vaccinations for students going to public school. Those requirements are outlined on the Florida Health website.
The state is not banning vaccinations.
“You want to put whatever different vaccines in your body, God bless you. I hope you make an informed decision,” Ladapo said. “You don’t want to put whatever vaccines in your body, God bless you. I hope you make an informed decision. That’s how it should be.”
Dr. Robert Malone, whom Kennedy recently appointed to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s independent vaccine advisory committee, wrote on X that he had spoken with Ladapo on Tuesday, calling him “a measured scientist who is on fire to change the system for the better.” As a member of the advisory committee, Malone is instrumental in making recommendations to the CDC about who should get certain vaccines. He has been vocally critical of vaccines.
Ladapo has railed against vaccines in Florida in the past, saying that people under 65 shouldn’t get an mRNA Covid vaccine, at the time contradicting guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And during a 2024 measles outbreak in the state, he said that parents should watch for measles symptoms but could make their own decision about whether to send children to school. He did not encourage vaccination.
Ladapo’s announcement came as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis revealed the establishment of the Florida Make America Healthy Again commission, which will recommend state-level integration of President Donald Trump and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again effort.
The commission will be chaired by first lady Casey DeSantis and Lt. Gov. Jay Collins. Ladapo, Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Shevaun Harris and Department of Children and Families Secretary Taylor Hatch will also be members of the commission.
“The Florida MAHA commission will prioritize reforms that empower Floridians, reduce regulatory burdens and hold actors accountable for their conduct, while fostering incentives for healthy living and innovation,” the governor said.
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Florida to end vaccine mandates for children as state’s surgeon general likens them to ‘slavery’ | Florida

Children in Florida will no longer be required to receive vaccines against preventable diseases including measles, mumps, chicken pox, polio and hepatitis said Joseph Ladapo, the state’s surgeon general, on Wednesday in a speech during which he likened vaccine mandates to “slavery”.
Ladapo, hand-picked for the role by Ron DeSantis, Florida’s Republican governor, is a long-time skeptic of the benefit of vaccines, and has previously been accused of peddling “scientific nonsense” by public health advocates.
In his announcement on Wednesday, at a press conference in Tampa hosted by DeSantis, he said that every state vaccine requirement would be repealed, and that he expected the move would receive the blessing “of God”.
“Every last one of them is wrong and drips with disdain and slavery,” said Ladapo, who altered data in a 2022 study about Covid-19 vaccines in an attempt to exaggerate the risk to young men who took one.
“People have a right to make their own decisions. Who am I, as a government or anyone else, to tell you what you should put in your body? Our body is a gift from God. What you put into your body is because of your relationship with your body and your God.”
Ladapo condemned lockdowns and vaccination requirements during the coronavirus pandemic as a time “when crazy things did happen”, and said that growing skepticism of vaccines were “reflections of God’s light against the darkness of tyranny and oppression”.
Florida’s department of health currently has strict requirements for immunizations that must be given during childhood, which are posted to its website. No child can be enrolled in a Florida public school unless they have received a series of shots against a number of diseases.
Routine childhood vaccinations will have prevented approximately 508 million cases of illness, 32 million hospitalizations, and 1.13m deaths among children born in the US between 1994 and 2023, according to a federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report published last year.
It estimated that the vaccine program nationally resulted in direct savings of $540bn and societal savings of $2.7tn.
Ladapo gave no details or timeline for the proposed repeal, but said his department would work with lawmakers and the DeSantis administration to make it happen.
“I love our lawmakers. They’re going to have to make decisions… people are going to have to make a decision,” he said. “People are going to have to choose a side. And I am telling you right now that the moral side is so simple.”
Ladapo also said that “it’ll be wonderful for Florida to be the first state to do it”.
“Since the 1980s, all states had school vaccines mandates. If Florida abolishes, it would be the first in recent times to do so,” said Dorit Reiss, professor of law at the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco, who specializes in vaccines law and policy.
But she pointed out that there doesn’t seem to be a law introduced yet, which is a big if. She noted that Idaho attempted to end school mandates in April, but ended up carving out exceptions for existing mandates – effectively rendering that part of the law moot – after pushback from advocates.
“I would also add that one reason all states adopted them is that evidence showed school mandates reduce and prevent outbreaks. If Florida does this, it’s creating an unfortunate natural experiment with its children as guinea pigs,” Reiss said. “Children deserve better.”
The Florida department of health has been contacted for comment.
Melody Schreiber contributed reporting
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