Added by PressForward
Ohio Judge Orders Man to Obtain COVID-19 Vaccine
On Wednesday, an Ohio judge ordered a man to get the COVID-19 vaccine as a condition of his probation.
Added by PressForward
On Wednesday, an Ohio judge ordered a man to get the COVID-19 vaccine as a condition of his probation.
They can’t arrest us all. They can’t keep all your kids home from school. They can’t keep every government building closed – although I’ve got a long list of ones they should. We don’t have to accept the mandates, lockdowns, and harmful policies of the petty tyrants and feckless bureaucrats. We can simply say no, not again.
Lori discusses threats to the U.S. Constitution resulting from government overreach, unconstitutional crisis responses to the COVID pandemic, vaccine passports and other threats to freedom.
More than 100 attended a protest in front of Houston Methodist Hospital over vaccine mandates, while counter-protestors from the Houston Socialist Movement decried anti-vaxxers as “fascists.”
Writing to Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) and FSU President John Thrasher, Sabatini said students in the College of Music “are being forced to show proof of vaccination before the Fall semester begins in violation of Florida law.” DeSantis recently signed legislation barring corporations or government entities from requiring a vaccination as a condition to receive a service or do business.
Governor Kim Reynolds has signed a bill into law that will prevent the use of "vaccine passports" as proof of COVID-19 vaccination, a ban she has pushed for since April.
House Health Committee Enact Vaccine Choice and Anti-Discrimination Act A Bill to enact section 3792.02 of the Revised Code to authorize an individual to decline a vaccination and to name this act the Vaccine Choice and Anti-Discrimination Act.
The Oklahoma House has passed a bill banning mask mandates in public schools and requirements for students to be vaccinated against COVID-19. The bill, SB 658, passed the state House by 76–18 and was sent to Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt on May 26. The state Senate had passed the bill by 38–8 a day earlier.