Florida is one of the few states that has stepped up to protect employees from vaccine discrimination. These rules prevent employers from arbitrarily mandating the Jab and dumping workers who object or refuse.
And now workers can rat them out.
Florida’s Attorney General Ashley Moody unveiled online tools on Dec. 3 that workers can use to easily report violations of a new law requiring employers to accept exemptions to vaccine mandates.
The new online documents clearly explain the rules, and the process, for employees wanting to opt-out of getting COVID-19 vaccines, and describe the way violations will be handled. COVID-19 is the illness caused by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) virus.
Florida has stepped up to do what the Founders intended. A nation where elected representatives protect citizens from attacks on their natural rights regardless of who infringes them.
DeSantis called a special session to bring the Legislature back into session. The result? You’ll have heard about how Schools in Florida can no longer mandate masks. Only parents can make that decision.
They also set clear rules for exemptions from vaccine mandates that employers cannot violate.
The latest move provides a digital portal with forms to report employers.
According to Annette Holt at the Epoch Times, the complaints are rolling in and piling up, and the fines are not pocket change. Each violation could result in up to $10,000.00 in penalties. Larger companies could see 50,000 dollar penalties per incident. And “The state considers an employee “fired” even if the person quits after the employer makes working conditions difficult, or intolerable.”
Public employees are also protected.
The Left loves snitches, but they probably hate this.
Good.
And governor Sununu should be paying attention. Governments are formed to protect natural rights, not just from government abuses but all infringements. A distinction you’ve been willing to ignore when you’re not doing the infringing yourself.
That needs to stop, or you need to stop calling yourself a Republican.