Unvaccinated 'have been the most discriminated against group that I've ever witnessed in my lifetime,' Alberta premier says



In the nation of Canada, Alberta's new premier Danielle Smith called out the extreme discrimination that people have experienced for choosing to forego COVID-19 vaccination, noting that it represents the worst discrimination she has ever seen during her life.

Those who opted not to get the jabs had "the most restrictions on their freedoms in the last year," Smith said, noting that she does not think she had ever in her life experienced a scenario where an individual was fired from work, blocked from watching their children play hockey, prevented from visiting people in long-term care or the hospital, or barred from taking a flight. Smith said that the unvaccinated "have been the most discriminated against group that I've ever witnessed in my lifetime. That's a pretty extreme level of discrimination that we have seen."

She said that she considers it "unacceptable," and noted, "we are not going to create a segregated society" based on a medical decision.

The Toronto Star reported that during her campaign, Smith pledged to protect the unvaccinated under the Alberta Human Rights Act.

During her remarks on Tuesday, Smith said that "we have to stop trying to victimize" those in a group who have made a different decision, and that the best avenue to make clear that such discrimination is unacceptable is to alter the Human Rights Act.

Premier Danielle Smith to address media - October 11, 2022 youtu.be

Smith issued a statement on Wednesday about her remarks.

"My intention was to underline the mistreatment of individuals who chose not to be vaccinated and were punished by not being able to work, travel, or, in some cases, see loved ones," she noted in the statement. "I want to be clear that I did not intend to trivialize in any way the discrimination faced by minority communities and other persecuted groups both here in Canada and around the world or to create any false equivalencies to the terrible historical discrimination and persecution suffered by so many minority groups over the last decades and centuries. We need to actively work together as Albertans and Canadians to end all discrimination against all minority communities."

\u201cI wanted to clarify my comments at yesterday's press conference. Here is my full statement:\u201d
— Danielle Smith (@Danielle Smith) 1665597617

People in the U.S. who opted against getting vaccinated for COVID-19 also faced draconian restrictions. And it ultimately turned out that some of the vaccine-pushers, who themselves had been both vaccinated and boosted, ended up testing positive for the illness.

Democratic state lawmaker backs bill that would nix West Virginia abortion restrictions, says 'abortion can be for the following pronouns: She/her, he/him, they and them'



Democratic state legislators are backing a bill to eliminate abortion restrictions in West Virginia.

The Associated Press reported that at a news conference on Monday, co-sponsor Del. Danielle Walker called restrictions on abortions "a barrier to safe, affordable, accessible health care."

"It is racist. Sit in that uncomfortable moment," she said, according to the outlet. "It affects people of color tremendously. It affects our neighbors in rural communities. It affects low-income wage-earning West Virginians, and it upsets me to my core."

Walker, a woman who has personally had an abortion, also peddled transgender ideology, declaring that "abortion can be for the following pronouns: She/her, he/him, they and them."

I said what I said!https://twitter.com/therecount/status/1488181290897711111\u00a0\u2026
— Danielle Walker (@Danielle Walker) 1643646596

Del. Evan Hansen is the lead sponsor for the bill, according to the AP.

State Sen. Bob Beach said that he is putting forward a Senate version of the same proposal, according to wvnews.com.

While the bill will almost certainly be unable to make it through the state's Republican-controlled legislature, it does showcase the kinds of policies Democrats aspire to enact.

The AP listed various measures that would be repealed under the proposal: "House Bill 4382 would repeal the mandatory 24-hour waiting period and counseling for abortion patients; West Virginia’s 20-week abortion ban; restrictions on dilation and evacuation — the most commonly used abortion method in the second trimester of abortion; the 'born-alive' bill, which penalizes physicians who don’t provide medical care to a baby born after an abortion attempt; the state’s telehealth ban on medication abortion and criminal penalties for abortion," the outlet reported.

The proposal provides a stark contrast between pro-choice liberals and pro-life conservatives who have been pushing for pro-life policies and are hoping to see Roe v. Wade overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court.