I know most people here don't live in The Great State™ but there's a pretty comprehensive set of initiatives moving through our legislature aimed at protecting vaccine hold-outs.
Right now there at are at least six bills targeting this problem from different angles. At least one forbids the state (not private entities) from requiring vaccination as a condition of employment, others prohibit the government from coercing citizens by any means to get vaccinated. A couple provide unemployment benefits to those whose jobs were lost because of their vaccine status. There's one preventing school districts from taking adverse actions against students who refused vaccinations. And a couple attempt to prohibit private entities from discriminating on vaccine status, one of which would institute a civil cause of action against any discriminatory actor.
I don't know what will pass and what won't. The legislators I've talked to were broadly supportive of these initiatives, and the bills have diverse sponsorship which bodes well. I'm gonna keep track of the bills as they move along, so we'll see what happens. I'm hoping we join Texas and Florida as the holy trinity of based states.
Edit: Now that I look, some of these bills got introduced as early as last November. Nice to see some folks were ahead of the game.
Second Edit: A couple of these are stuck in committee, one is dead, some encouraging movement on others. I'm pretty confident we will see several of these pass.
Third Edit: I may start tracking legislation that pertains to resisting Biden's recent "ghost gun" bans and other gun control executive orders. EOs are overridden by legislation, and several states are already working on new laws to harden their 2nd amendment rights. Will have to check on this in the future.
There are tons of HIPPA and medical privacy issues for private employers trying to force vaccines on employees in the US. The only places I can see that being different is for those who actually work in the medical professions and certain government jobs like the military.
I've gone through my fair share of experimental vaccines as I was in the military but don't plan on doing this Covid vaccine until they do the full FDA testing that is required for normal vaccines. Besides it is best to let those who need or want it to get it first.
YO, I talked to a friend of mine who was in the infantry during 2009.
I learned that this was the time during the swine flu virus. Apparently his unit had "a" vaccine deployed to them, and it wasn't even done the way civilians are - going to a pharmacy or doctor. They said they gave the vaccine to the medic for the unit, and the medic was required to administer it.
Apparently that unit was told that they were required to take a vaccine for the swine flu, but nobody told them it was an experimental vaccine. It was taken as a nasal spray and it was also supposed to protect against the flu.
He said after he took it he was pretty much out of duty for a week because his reactions to it were severe. He said nobody above or below his rank informed him that they were being used as guinea pigs for the nasal spray variant of the vaccine.
I only learned about this a week ago after doing some digging. That was mind blowing that our soldiers are used as guinea pigs for that shit.
Strange, they usually don't go around applying experimental vaccines unless they get permission from the soldiers to apply it or there is a critical mission situation that has a high chance of exposing soldiers to that virus.
I was actually part of an experimental vaccine trial that tossed me a few extra bucks against some virus that got really nasty and like barracks situations. I don't remember the name but I remember the virus as one of my old air force buddies actually had an outbreak when he was going through training and it killed one of the guys in the barracks and knocked about ten other guys down for a little while.