Coronavirus: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Fri Oct 22 10:24:10 PDT 2021


The New Dystopia... Corona Treachery...
Your right to represent and fight oppression... is canceled...


https://www.kiro7.com/news/local/washington-lawmaker-is-locked-out-capitol-over-covid-vaccine-mandate/XRU3SZID2JFTBOUA4JK2SJDP34/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/06/30/jim-walsh-star-of-david/

“The Chief Clerk of the House, Bernard Dean, confirmed that the card
was, indeed, shut off because Walsh has not provided proof that he’s
vaccinated against COVID-19.

All members who have not submitted any vaccination information, and
staff, their cards we deactivated on Monday,” Dean explained. The
House Rules Committee passed the requirement. It took effect on the
same day that state employees had to prove they were fully vaccinated
or had a valid religious or medical exemption. If not, they faced
being fired. Over 1,800 state employees have been terminated due to
the mandate. Dean says lawmakers were warned, several times.”



Meanwhile, asshole Biden's still as yet unwritten mandate "mandate"
based on marginal stats that aren't worth it... fires half of LANL
Los Alamos National Lab scientists, basic science researchers,
astronomy, math, computing, arts, police, fire... and millions of
people from their jobs in USA and World... all walking away
to freedom.





Wearing a Star of David, another lawmaker compares coronavirus
measures to the Holocaust
In video streamed on Facebook, Washington state Rep. Jim Walsh
(R-Aberdeen) is seen in Lacey, Wash., on June 26, speaking while
wearing a yellow Star of David. (Jim Walsh/Facebook)
By Hannah Knowles
June 30, 2021 at 11:20 p.m. EDT

Washington state Rep. Jim Walsh has decried “vaccine segregation” and
likened his state’s lottery encouraging immunization against the
coronavirus to the “The Hunger Games.” Then, last weekend, the
Republican lawmaker wore a yellow Star of David.

“It’s an echo from history,” Walsh wrote of the star in the comments
below a live stream of his talk Saturday in Lacey, Wash. “ … In the
current context, we’re all Jews.”

In the covid-19 era, he said later, the symbol was meant to convey how
“denying people their rights … can lead to terrible outcomes.”

For some who track extremist rhetoric, it was part of an alarming
escalation — the latest example of how comparing mainstream policies
and public health measures to Nazi atrocities has spread, propelled
not just by fringe groups, but by elected officials. These analogies
invariably sow hurt and draw backlash, sometimes prompting apologies.
Walsh backtracked Wednesday, calling his star “inappropriate and
offensive.” But the comparisons persist.
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“Fear sells politically. And the guardrails have come off with respect
to what is acceptable for elected officials’ political discourse,”
said Brian Levin, a professor at California State University at San
Bernardino who studies extremism.

“There are no guardrails now with respect to offense, ignorance and
downright stupidity,” he said.

Such comparisons have featured in anti-vaccination rhetoric for years,
critics note, but have gained new currency amid resistance to masks
and other coronavirus restrictions. Even as they offend, some experts
said, the Holocaust rhetoric grabs people’s attention and can appeal
to people in various extremist communities.

Imran Ahmed, the head of the nonprofit Center for Countering Digital
Hate, said it is “deeply concerning” to see such language from “a
mainstream party representative.”
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“Frankly, this is a really worrying signal as to the direction that
some people would like to take American politics,” he said Wednesday.

Aside from Walsh, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) has compared
vaccination and mask requirements to Nazi rule during the Holocaust.
Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.) suggested the same about potential
vaccine “passports.” An Alaska state lawmaker last year said covid-19
patients might be “rounded up and taken somewhere,” after comparing
health screening stickers to the badges that once singled out Jewish
people for persecution.

Greene eventually apologized and visited the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum, after congressional leaders from both parties criticized her
and just before a Democratic colleague planned to introduce a
resolution to censure her. “The Holocaust is — there’s nothing
comparable to it. It’s — it happened and, you know, over 6 million
Jewish people were murdered,” said the freshman congresswoman, who in
the past has made comments promoting QAnon, a sprawling set of false
claims that have coalesced into an extremist ideology that has
radicalized its followers.
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“If there are consequences from the leadership … the key to [Greene]
is that she was humiliated by her leadership and that damaged her,”
Ahmed said. “So consequences matter.”

Researchers note that many Americans have little knowledge of how Jews
were persecuted, put in concentration camps and murdered in Nazi
Germany and in other countries invaded by the forces of Nazi Germany.
One recent study found that two-thirds of millennials surveyed could
not identify what Auschwitz was.

Avinoam Patt, director of the Center for Judaic Studies and
Contemporary Jewish Life at the University of Connecticut, wrote in a
Washington Post op-ed in June that “Greene’s glib simile is indicative
of a far more sweeping problem with the way we teach people about the
Holocaust.”

To Brian Hughes, the invoking of the historical atrocity also speaks
to “a pervasive self-image of being victimized” on the far right.
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“They’re invoking this social shorthand for resistance against
absolute evil and oppression,” said Hughes, who co-founded American
University’s Polarization and Extremism Research Innovation Lab
(PERIL).

His group just finished a study that examined popular narratives and
rhetorical styles deployed online against vaccines and the realities
of covid-19. One common theme was a fight against dystopian tyranny,
Hughes said. Researchers also noticed messages targeting people of
color, using the language of social justice and oppression of
minorities.

The study did not track Holocaust references specifically. He said he
believes they have grown more common since data-gathering finished
several months ago.

Walsh, the Washington state lawmaker, was recorded wearing the star at
a meeting of Washingtonians for Change, an event he said drew more
than 100 people. The conservative group, founded in 2020, did not
respond Wednesday to requests for comment.
Advertisement

The live stream posted to his Facebook page captured him speaking
broadly about values such as personal liberty and privacy, while
denouncing a wide range of policies and ideas, including “lockdowns,”
“the closing of churches” and critical race theory, an intellectual
movement that examines the way policies and laws perpetuate systemic
racism.

The lawmaker told the Seattle Times that the event’s organizers were
“deeply concerned about vaccine passports and vaccine segregation.”
Walsh told the Times that he got the star from someone there and that
most people in attendance were wearing it. He also compared differing
treatment for vaccinated and unvaccinated people to racial segregation
upheld in the Supreme Court’s infamous 1896 endorsement of “separate
but equal,” echoing other criticisms of coronavirus rules that have
evoked racist discrimination as well as slavery.

Criticism built as the video of Walsh circulated and received news
coverage. At first Walsh seemed to dig in.
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“Orwellian,” he wrote in a Facebook post Wednesday afternoon, sharing
the Seattle Times article. “Hyper partisans are trying to make a sign
of solidarity into … something bad.”

But later in the day, Walsh joined a friend and radio host, Jason
Rantz, to apologize. “This was a mistake. … I wouldn’t do it again,”
he said.

“It was a huge mistake,” Rantz agreed. Walsh said he would find better
ways to convey people’s concerns about their “rights being eroded.”

Miri Cypers, the Pacific Northwest regional director for the
Anti-Defamation League, had earlier welcomed an educational “dialogue”
with Walsh in a statement seeking an apology.

She acknowledged the fallout was not new.

“During these challenging times of rising antisemitism, elected
officials continue to deepen the pain,” she said.


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