Monday, December 15, 2025
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Monday, December 15, 2025

Milwaukee Press Club 'Excellence in Wisconsin Journalism' 2020 & 2021 Award Winners

Steve Wenger: A Former Firefighter’s COVID-19 Vaccine Horror Story

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“I consider myself collateral damage…I’m the vaccine’s dirty little secret, and nobody wants to hear about the dirty little secret,” – Steve Wenger.

Steve Wenger is 55 and never had any kind of health problems until he got the COVID-19 vaccine. He loved hiking and pickleball, rode a Harley, and worked job sites.

“I was healthy as a horse prior to getting this. It literally hit me like a freight train. It came out of nowhere. I’ve never been dependent on anybody for anything. Now I was dependent on someone for everything,” he says.

Steve Wenger is a former Slinger, Wisconsin, firefighter, who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine shot for COVID-19 on May 18, 2021, and, on May 25, he started having issues with walking.

But that was only the beginning. He ended up paralyzed from the neck down, completely dependent, and almost put on a ventilator. He needed nurses to feed him, bathe him, and dress him. “For a month, I was helpless,” he said, calling it “horrific.”

In November 2021, he spoke publicly about vaccine side effects – and was still in a wheelchair. He said he tried to get the media to tell his story, but they wouldn’t.

He agreed to speak to Wisconsin Right Now about his journey.

“I had really heavy legs; I was having difficulty walking and going up a hill,” he told Wisconsin Right Now in an interview.

Wenger’s story is statistically rare, but he’s speaking out because he believes the media falsely paints vaccine side effects as a “conspiracy theory.” He’s living vaccine side effects. And it’s a horror story. Although his experience is not common, it’s real.

It got steadily worse.

“The next day, I was in a restaurant, got out of the booth and turned. I lost balance and almost fell on another table, and from there is just progressed,” he told Wisconsin Right Now.

“My legs got heavier and heavier. It was similar to if you have a nightmare and you’re trying to run from the nightmare and your legs don’t move. That’s how it felt.”

He was able to walk shorter and shorter distances as it progressed. He fell several times, and his fatigue levels were “astronomically high.”

He went to the hospital when he fell on his face at a job site. He was walking across the driveway when his knees collapsed.

“I had been doing a lot of research on the symptoms,” he said. “Guillain-Barré Syndrome kept coming up.”


What is Guillain-Barré Syndrome?

According to the CDC, it’s “a rare, autoimmune disorder in which a person’s own immune system damages the nerves, causing muscle weakness and sometimes paralysis. GBS can cause symptoms that last for a few weeks to several years.  Most people recover fully, but some have permanent nerve damage. Some people have died of GBS.”

It’s a recognized side effect of COVID-19 vaccines, but it’s a rare one. A research study published on Lancet says, “Guillain-Barré syndrome after vaccination against COVID-19 has been reported worldwide. Albeit rare, Guillain-Barré syndrome after vaccination is of great public concern given that it could potentially result in life-threatening paralysis.”

According to CDC, studies found a slight risk in increased GBS in people who got the swine flu vaccine in the 1970s.

In July 2021, after Steve Wenger got the vaccine, the FDA released a warning that there was an increased risk of GBS from the Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine. “Based on an analysis of Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting (VAERS) data, there have been 100 preliminary reports of GBS following vaccination with the Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) vaccine after approximately 12.5 million doses administered. Of these reports, 95 of them were serious and required hospitalization. There was one reported death.”

Thus, the risk is small. But if you’re one of those people, the effects are absolutely devastating, and that’s where Steve Wenger comes in. He has a right to tell his story. He has a right to be heard.


Steve Wenger’s Journey

Steve Wenger went to the hospital and was tested for all kinds of things, including MS. He was given treatments for GBS, and he was sent to rehab. He ended up going back-and-forth between the hospital and rehab.

“After that, I was for the most part stuck in the wheelchair. That was around the 23rd or 24th of June,” he says. “I went into the hospital on June 15, on the 25th I lost my ability to walk and became wheelchair bound.”

It kept progressing.

Exercises got harder until he couldn’t even do them.

Numbness spread back up his leg. “My legs were completely useless from the waist down. I was essentially paralyzed.”

“I started having numbness in my fingers, right in the tips of the fingers. It was getting into my hands and arms now.”

He was losing grip strength. He was losing feeling in his hands.

He was sent to the Mayo Clinic. If another person gave him three fingers, he couldn’t even squeeze them. He eventually became paralyzed from the neck down for almost a month. They gave him a chemo drug and said he had the worst form of GPS. The chemo drug eventually turned the corner for him in September. But at first, he struggled.

“I couldn’t even pick up the phone,” he said.  “Feeding myself has gotten to be a major ordeal. I wouldn’t wish it on anybody. It’s crazy. I’m dependent. The neurologists say the vaccine absolutely caused this; it activated it.”

He said his antibodies started attacking his own nervous system and eating away at the covering of the nerve.

“It can be caused by a flu shot, by a pneumonia shot,” he noted.

He said that some versions of GBS run their course in 30 days. But by day 81, he was still struggling, although he felt it was slowly starting to recede.

“When the vaccine kicked it off, the way it kicked off my immune system, it did something unique, different. It messed up my life.”

Typically, people have a full recovery from GBS. But a neurologist voiced concern that because it was going on for so long, he might not get everything back.

“Likely I will have residual side effects from this, whether that be a limp, inability to run, fatigue when I walk, hopefully, I’ll get to walk,” he said.

He’s 55 and never had any kind of health problems. “I was healthy as a horse prior to getting this. It literally hit me like a freight train. It came out of nowhere. I’ve never been dependent on anybody for anything. Now I was dependent on someone for everything.”

He worked as a project member in telecom, going to job sites to monitor work crews. He is from Wisconsin but moved to Phoenix a couple of years ago. He has asthma so his pulmonologist recommended he get the COVID vaccine. He said the air quality in Arizona due to wildfires was making it hard to breathe.

He was born in Madison and grew up in Grafton and lived in Slinger for 25 years. He was on the Slinger Fire Department for 15 years. He lives in Surprise, Arizona with his wife.

He believed more warnings of side effects should be given.

“They shoot you in the arm and away you go; there’s no disclosure that it might harm you, even if it might be rare,” he said.

He mentioned that U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson had a town hall with people who had “horrific reactions to these COVID vaccines. It can be life-altering.”

The media painted it like a “conspiracy theory.” But for Steve Wenger, it is incredibly real. He believes the government and media are “trying to ram this (vaccine) down everybody’s throats.”

He praised the nurses and the RNs for helping him. When he got out of the hospital, he had lost all of his muscle mass. He was sent to rehab. Eventually, he was sent home. It was the beginning of October. He works out at the gym five days a week to get his strength back. He’s built back his legs, and on Oct. 18, he was able to stand again, holding onto a wall at the gym. He was able to walk his first steps.

In January 2022, he got COVID-19 on top of all of it. He started blogging and writing about his story on Facebook.

“So glad I got the Corona vaccine! Not only did I get a 3-1/2 month stay in the hospital, I got to relearn how to eat, dress myself, walk, and everything else you do in an average day, now I got the F*CKING Corona virus,” he wrote in a January post.

But he’s getting stronger. By November, he was stable but still lacked enough strength in his feet to walk.

“I’ve worked up from there. I keep getting stronger….I spent a lot of nights where I was terrified.”

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Thousands of Afghan Refugees Qualified For Slew of Costly Benefits

Tens of thousands of Afghan evacuees, including the gunman charged in the shootings of two National Guard members, killing one just blocks from the White House, were eligible for a slew of benefits, including housing and medical at the expense of the American taxpayer.

Following the pullout of American forces from Afghanistan in 2021, the Biden administration admitted nearly 200,000 evacuees between 2021 and 2023, including two recently arrested on terrorism charges. Through various reports and testimony by government officials, it was revealed that many of the Afghan nationals couldn’t be properly vetted.

Afghans who entered the U.S. on a Special Immigrant Visa (SIV), under a special immigrant parole (SQ/SI), and were granted humanitarian parole as part of the Biden Administration’s Operation Allies Welcome were eligible for over a dozen taxpayer benefits, many continuing four years later.

The benefits include: Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Women, Infants and Children (WIC), HUD Public Housing and Section 8 housing vouchers, emergency Medicaid, Affordable Care Act health plans and subsidies, full-scope Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), federal student aid and Pell grants, REAL ID, Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act services, refugee resettlement programs through the Office of Refugee Resettlement and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), according to the National Immigration Law Center.

For those who didn’t qualify for SSI or TANF, refugees were eligible for up to 12 months of Refugee Cash Assistance (RCA) through the ORR.

In addition, many refugees qualified for employment assistance through Refugee Support Services, which included: childcare, transportation, “employability services,” job training and preparation, job search assistance, placement and retention, English language training, translation and interpreter services and case management, according to the Administration for Children and Families Office of Refugee Resettlement.

The ORR also noted that “some clients may be eligible for specialized programs such as health services, technical assistance for small business start-ups and financial savings.”

Many refugees also qualified for “immigration-related legal assistance” to assist them “on their pathway to obtaining a permanent status.”

Despite the multitude of services provided to Afghan refugees, “they are less likely to be proficient in English, have lower educational attainment, and lower labor force participation” compared to other immigrants in the U.S., according to the Migration Policy Institute. Additionally, “compared to both the native born and the overall foreign-born population, they are much more likely to be living in poverty.”

The institute noted that Afghans “tend to have lower educational attainment” compared to American and foreign-born populations, citing a 2022 statistic showing 28% of Afghan immigrants age 25 and older “reported having at least a bachelor’s degree” as compared to 36% of Americans and 35% of all foreign-born populations.

While 29% of Afghan adults reported having less than a high school diploma, compared to 25% of other immigrant populations, there were some slight improvements among those who arrived in the U.S. between 2020 and 2022, with 36% having at least a four-year degree. However, that figure is 12 points less than other immigrant populations arriving during the same period.

The institute highlighted the “relatively low labor force participation rate” of Afghan immigrants ages 16 and older, showing that in 2022, 61% were in the civilian labor market, compared to 67% of other immigrant populations and 63% of U.S.-born individuals.

Afghan immigrants have a higher poverty rate compared to the American and foreign-born populations. As of 2022, 39% of Afghan nationals were living in poverty, compared to 12% of Americans and 14% of other immigrant populations.

Among the many benefits Afghan refugees are eligible to receive, one of the most costly may be housing in the form of public housing and the Section 8 program.

The institute showed that a majority of immigrants from Afghanistan are concentrated in some of the regions with the highest housing costs in the nation, including the metro areas of Washington, D.C., Sacramento, San Fransico, Los Angeles, New York City, Seattle and San Diego.

When asked if Afghan refugees are still receiving housing benefits, a HUD official told The Center Square that the department “is working in coordination with appropriate agencies to align the Department’s guidance related to immigration status to ensure taxpayer-funded benefits are not used for any unintended purpose.”

Adding to housing benefits, The Center Square reported Tuesday exclusively that amid a national housing crisis, the Biden administration’s Department of Housing and Urban Development produced guidelines encouraging property owners to forgo some fair housing practices to favor Afghan refugees, which the Trump administration directed to be terminated.

The Center Square obtained a HUD directive from the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity rescinding the Biden-era guidance document, “Operation Allies Welcome: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on Fair Housing Issues,” and withdrawing from a FHEO guidance document “Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Renting to Refugees and Eligible Newcomers,” which the agency claims violates the Fair Housing Act.

HUD Secretary Scott Turner argues the Biden-era guidelines prioritized nearly 200,000 Afghan refugees who were admitted following the 2021 pullout of American forces from Afghanistan by encouraging landlords and property owners to forgo credit checks, occupancy limitations, and engage in targeted marketing toward Afghans.

“After President Biden’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, his administration made a bad situation worse by prioritizing housing assistance for Afghan refugees, who we now know were unvetted and unchecked,” Turner told The Center Square. “Since day one, our mission has been clear: to serve the American people and end the misuse and abuse of American taxpayer-funded resources. That is why we rescinded this Operation Allies Welcome guidance, which encouraged landlords and property owners to violate federal civil rights law to protect Afghan refugees. Under President Trump’s leadership, the days of putting Americans last is over.”

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