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originally posted by: MazMaric
This was always going to be the case.
Claim the vaccination isn’t mandatory but then force businesses to only accept the vaccinated in.
Free McDonald’s if you get the jab.
Free beer if you get the jab.
Money if you get the jab.
You can go on holiday if you get the jab.
Sadly a lot of people will go for it. A lot of people see beer and clubs as their social right. It’s part of who they are.
If you break it down you have to question the majority of people who have had the jab.
“Hey, this untried vaccaintion, the one where we don’t know the long term side effects, you know, for the virus that 99.995% will survive. Do you want it? I’ll chuck in a beer and fries?”
“Count me in!”
originally posted by: AaarghZombies
originally posted by: MazMaric
This was always going to be the case.
Claim the vaccination isn’t mandatory but then force businesses to only accept the vaccinated in.
Free McDonald’s if you get the jab.
Free beer if you get the jab.
Money if you get the jab.
You can go on holiday if you get the jab.
Sadly a lot of people will go for it. A lot of people see beer and clubs as their social right. It’s part of who they are.
If you break it down you have to question the majority of people who have had the jab.
“Hey, this untried vaccaintion, the one where we don’t know the long term side effects, you know, for the virus that 99.995% will survive. Do you want it? I’ll chuck in a beer and fries?”
“Count me in!”
That sounds all well and good until you realize that in the UK it's the people who are demanding it and the government that is resisting.
The UK is a very different place form the US. People see the government as being their servant rather than their master. They expect initiatives to come from the grass roots and then be put in place by the government, rather than being pushed through from the top by the state.
The current UK government, the tories, are the UK's part of small government and personal responsibility. They'd rather not enforce any of this, but the voters are demanding that they do something.
originally posted by: AaarghZombies
originally posted by: MazMaric
This was always going to be the case.
Claim the vaccination isn’t mandatory but then force businesses to only accept the vaccinated in.
Free McDonald’s if you get the jab.
Free beer if you get the jab.
Money if you get the jab.
You can go on holiday if you get the jab.
Sadly a lot of people will go for it. A lot of people see beer and clubs as their social right. It’s part of who they are.
If you break it down you have to question the majority of people who have had the jab.
“Hey, this untried vaccaintion, the one where we don’t know the long term side effects, you know, for the virus that 99.995% will survive. Do you want it? I’ll chuck in a beer and fries?”
“Count me in!”
That sounds all well and good until you realize that in the UK it's the people who are demanding it and the government that is resisting.
The UK is a very different place form the US. People see the government as being their servant rather than their master. They expect initiatives to come from the grass roots and then be put in place by the government, rather than being pushed through from the top by the state.
The current UK government, the tories, are the UK's part of small government and personal responsibility. They'd rather not enforce any of this, but the voters are demanding that they do something.
• Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country (Article 13).
• Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each state (Article 13).
• Everyone has the right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its benefits (Article 27).
• Everyone has the right of equal access to public service in his country (Article 21).
• Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person (Article 3).
Nowhere in the articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights does it say that these rights depend upon whether or not someone gets injected with a vaccine.
originally posted by: AaarghZombies
a reply to: HawkEyi
The Conservatives have are the UK's more libertarian party. They've fought long and hard to resist any kind of ID card. They were against vaccine passports for international travel, I can't honestly see them wanting them for pubbar access.
You might as well accuse Republicans of trying to bring in mandatory gun registration, or Democrats of wanting a mandatory gender verification card.
It's often the young who are demanding these things, so it's unlikely to be used as a way of getting them to be vaccinated as they're demanding to be vaccinated anyway.
originally posted by: AaarghZombies
originally posted by: MazMaric
This was always going to be the case.
Claim the vaccination isn’t mandatory but then force businesses to only accept the vaccinated in.
Free McDonald’s if you get the jab.
Free beer if you get the jab.
Money if you get the jab.
You can go on holiday if you get the jab.
Sadly a lot of people will go for it. A lot of people see beer and clubs as their social right. It’s part of who they are.
If you break it down you have to question the majority of people who have had the jab.
“Hey, this untried vaccaintion, the one where we don’t know the long term side effects, you know, for the virus that 99.995% will survive. Do you want it? I’ll chuck in a beer and fries?”
“Count me in!”
That sounds all well and good until you realize that in the UK it's the people who are demanding it and the government that is resisting.
The UK is a very different place form the US. People see the government as being their servant rather than their master. They expect initiatives to come from the grass roots and then be put in place by the government, rather than being pushed through from the top by the state.
The current UK government, the tories, are the UK's part of small government and personal responsibility. They'd rather not enforce any of this, but the voters are demanding that they do something.