Discrimination Against the Unvaccinated
Fighting Discrimination Against the Unvaccinated
CHD-Minnesota pledges to defend the civil rights of unvaccinated citizens. Significant numbers of American children and adults suffer medical contraindications to vaccines; others may hold religious beliefs that prohibit the invasive physical act of vaccination. CHD-Minnesota will work to enact laws to protect against coerced submission to medical procedures that could endanger one’s health or life, or violate one’s religious beliefs.
Currently a legal definition of “unvaccinated” is unclear. Since the pandemic, partially vaccinated children and adults might be considered unvaccinated if they did not receive each COVID-19 vaccine and booster recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. However, people’s hesitancy is warranted — those fast-tracked coronavirus vaccines went through questionable clinical trials, and did not prevent infection or transmission.
Vaccines are frequently added to CDC’s schedule for infants and children without any plan for managing vulnerable recipients’ adverse reactions. CDC does not research medical treatments for mitigating vaccine injuries. Nor does CDC devise methods to prevent the chronic illnesses, disabilities, and deaths that these injections are known to cause — as all-too-infrequently documented in peer-reviewed scientific journals.
Discrimination is morally reprehensible. U.S. law bans discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability, genetic information, or age. Yet unvaccinated people are being bullied, stigmatized, and dehumanized by captured government agencies, profiteering corporations, Pharma-funded consumer groups, and biased media — amoral colluders threatening fellow Americans with:
- vaccine mandates that lead to job loss, or block access to public spaces such as schools, libraries, hospitals, and agencies;
- vaccine passports that create travel restrictions for non-vaccinated persons;
- censorship of people reporting true incidents of adverse reactions to vaccines;
- threats that families will lose state and federal social services if they do not vaccinate;
- threats of investigation by Child Protection Services due to parents’ medical or religious decision not to vaccinate a child — possibly resulting in the trauma of custody loss.
Minnesota law requires childcare providers and schools to provide educational services to children who have notarized vaccine exemption forms. However a Trojan horse bill in the Minnesota Legislature threatens to legalize discrimination against medical and religious minorities. HF367 would let childcare facilities ignore medical and religious vaccine exemption forms of partly vaccinated or unvaccinated infants and children, and deny them services:
“A child care center or family child care provider may adopt a policy prohibiting a child over the age of two months who has not been immunized in accordance with subdivision 1 and Minnesota Rules, chapter 4604, from enrolling or remaining enrolled in the child care center or the family child care program.”
CHD-Minnesota will hold legislators accountable to the civil rights laws obligating them to protect unvaccinated infants and children. We will educate legislators and the medical community about the devastating effects of vaccine injuries, and their true extent in the population. Furthermore, CHD-Minnesota will work to block oppressive bills such as HF367 and instead promote legislation that protects citizens against discrimination based on one’s immunological status, or based on one’s religious beliefs about compulsory injection with biologic materials.
“Fear is the tool for orchestrating compliance and blind obedience.”
— Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.