Biden’s COVID Vaccination Strategy Triggers Full-Scale Republican Meltdown

Authored by vanityfair.com and submitted by dingo8yobb
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Let’s begin with the obvious: Joe Biden is not a “dictator” for expanding vaccination and testing requirements, nor is he “trampling on civil liberties.” None of the steps outlined Thursday to combat COVID-19, which is still rampaging 18 months into the pandemic despite the widespread availability of safe and free vaccines, amount to “tyranny.” Those seeking to give you a Pfizer shot are nothing at all like the “gestapo,” and Americans should absolutely comply with public health guidelines—regardless of what some hysterical guy standing in a cornfield at night might tell you.

The right-wing backlash to Biden’s new efforts to beat back the pandemic is as predictable as it is aggravating. Republicans, particularly devotees of noted public health expert Donald Trump, have already been standing in the way of the long-sought return to post-COVID normalcy, with some on the right apparently eschewing vaccines in favor of an anti-parasitic commonly used to treat heartworm in animals and state leaders like Ron DeSantis and Greg Abbott warring against common sense precautions as caseloads rise. That this lot, already prone to hyperbole, would go absolutely ballistic over the White House’s more forceful vaccine push was a foregone conclusion.

And yet, the right’s response to the Biden administration’s new six-part plan has somehow been even more unhinged than anticipated. Ted Cruz called the updated guidelines “utterly lawless” and applauded the right-wing Daily Wire for announcing it wouldn’t comply with the administration’s new vaccination requirements—and his was one of the more subdued takes on the matter. Several GOP lawmakers, including Senator Marsha Blackburn and Representative Madison Cawthorn, likened Biden to a “dictator.” Senator Josh Hawley, one of the main instigators of the January 6 riot on Capitol Hill, accused Biden of “threatening” Americans. Steve Scalise, the number two Republican in the House, charged that Biden was “abusing power.”

But all that nonsense was nothing compared with the bile that exploded out of the far-right media after the Biden announcement. A piece on the Federalist called the White House move “fascist.” A Breitbart headline declared that Biden had gone “full authoritarian.” And, as CNN’s Oliver Darcy pointed out, Fox News—which Biden mentioned in his address as a company not quite as opposed to life-saving vaccines as its public-facing propaganda operation would lead viewers to believe—was among the worst offenders, with banner headlines reading: “BIDEN IS AN AUTHORITARIAN,” “BIDEN DECLARES WAR ON MILLIONS OF AMERICANS,” and “FULL TOTALITARIAN.”

What did Biden do to generate this level of outrage from the right? He announced on Thursday that he had instructed the Labor Department to institute an emergency rule requiring that companies with more than 100 employees mandate vaccinations or weekly testing and that they give employees time-off to get their shots. He also broadened his existing mandate on federal workers and healthcare workers, and urged school districts to adopt requirements like the one in Los Angeles. “The time for waiting is over,” he said in his White House remarks. “This summer, we made progress through the combination of vaccine requirements and incentives, as well as the FDA approval...But we need to do more.”

Coleecolee on September 10th, 2021 at 22:26 UTC »

I have told the Republicans on r/conservative that if they don’t like it they can leave, and that went about as well as you would expect

Scubalefty on September 10th, 2021 at 21:39 UTC »

Well, the Supreme Court already ruled that a vax mandate is legal.

Mandatory vaccination laws were first enacted in the early 19th century, beginning with Massachusetts’ smallpox vaccination law in 1809.7

Jacobson v. Massachusetts is the seminal case regarding a state or municipality’s authority to institute a mandatory vaccination program as an exercise of its police powers. In Jacobson, the Supreme Court upheld a Massachusetts law that gave municipal boards of health the authority to require the vaccination of persons over the age of 21 against smallpox, and determined that the vaccination program instituted in the city of Cambridge had “a real and substantial relation to the protection of the public health and safety.”

ArbysKnights on September 10th, 2021 at 21:33 UTC »

Biden's fill in the blank strategy triggers full-scale republican meltdown.