Montanna Enacts Nation’s First Vaccine Antidiscrimination Law
In the face of mandates and digital passport rollouts across the globe, it just makes sense for Americans to make medical and vaccine status a protected class to protect our fundamental rights. Americans are being segregated and subject to loss of freedoms based on their personal health decisions. “To create a two-class society based on the use of a pharmaceutical product is unethical and unnecessary.”
Representative Tschida talks about how the Montana government met this discrimination head on. It became the first state to make vaccination status a protected class and limit inquiries into immunization status. Montana’s law is protecting citizens and business-owners alike.
Tell your legislators you are not interested in a two-class society here: https://standforhealthfreedom.com/action/covid-vaccines-must-be-voluntary/
video also found here: https://odysee.com/@standforhealthfreedom:0/SHF-Interviews-Montana-Rep-Brad-Tschida:8
Montana made history by becoming the first state in the nation to enact a vaccine antidiscrimination law in August 2021. Representative Brad Tschida sat with with Leah Wilson, Executive Director and co-founder of Stand for Health Freedom to discuss the motivation and mindset behind passing the law.
Watching this steadfast lawmaker state matter-of-factly that antidiscrimination laws and health privacy are just common sense will recharge your advocacy. It will remind you there are lawmakers out there standing up for our Constitution and health rights.
In discussing the mindset behind the law, Representative Tschida explains, “Our medical records are private. There is no reason the government should have access to them, and we shouldn’t be required to give them up.”
In the face of mandates and digital passport rollouts across the lobe, it just makes sense for Americans to make medical and vaccine tatus a protected class to protect our fundamental rights. Americans re being segregated and subject to loss of freedoms based on their ersonal health decisions. “To create a two-class society based on the se of a pharmaceutical product is unethical and unnecessary.”
Representative Tschida talks about how the Montana government met this discrimination head on. It became the first state to make vaccination status a protected class and limit inquiries into immunization status. Montana’s law is protecting citizens and business-owners alike.
And the reaction? At the time of writing the law is facing one limited challenge in court: health professionals and some patients claim that portions of the law as applied to them are in violation of the ADA, and constitutional rights. However, the lawsuit does not call for the entire bill to be revoked, only that plaintiffs in the health field are exempt from some of its provisions. In this age of unprecedented litigation in the face of covid policies, the limited legal challenges thus far to this law reflect the will of the people to protect medical decision-making.
Representative Tschida reports, “The majority of people we hear from are saying ‘Thanks’ for protecting our informed choice.”