WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2024 Poal.co

921

My wife received an "official email" from her employer stating that vaccinated employees no longer have to do all the Covid theatre with the masks, temp checks, questionnaires, etc. Non-vaccinated employees, such as my wife, however, are still treated as "unclean ones", and must continue to do all of the above. Which has the result of her being singled out by her coworkers as an "anti-vaxxer", etc. It's also, I'm quite sure, a precursor into their next step; making the jab mandatory for employment.
I'm not trying to get multiple posts about how she needs to "stop being a cuck" and throw away her mask, etc; I'm wanting to know just how actually legal/illegal it is for an employer to incentivize getting a non-FDA medical treatment like this, and what, if anything, she can do, legally speaking, to fight back without losing her job in the process.

Edit for clarification, because some of these answers are for a slightly different question: She is technically not being required to get the jab (yet); she's just being forced to wear an article of clothing, etc, that other employees are not, based solely on her personal health decisions. Someone below even said their employer offered $1K to incentivize employees to get [this still very much non-FDA approved, "emergency use only" treatment]. Wow, that's a bad thing to be in any way legal.

My wife received an "official email" from her employer stating that vaccinated employees no longer have to do all the Covid theatre with the masks, temp checks, questionnaires, etc. Non-vaccinated employees, such as my wife, however, are still treated as "unclean ones", and must continue to do all of the above. Which has the result of her being singled out by her coworkers as an "anti-vaxxer", etc. It's also, I'm quite sure, a precursor into their next step; making the jab mandatory for employment. I'm not trying to get multiple posts about how she needs to "stop being a cuck" and throw away her mask, etc; I'm wanting to know just how *actually* legal/illegal it is for an employer to incentivize getting a non-FDA medical treatment like this, and what, if anything, she can do, legally speaking, to fight back without losing her job in the process. Edit for clarification, because some of these answers are for a slightly different question: She is technically not being *required* to get the jab (yet); she's just being forced to wear an article of clothing, etc, that other employees are not, based solely on her personal health decisions. Someone below even said *their* employer offered $1K to incentivize employees to get [this still very much non-FDA approved, "emergency use only" treatment]. Wow, that's a bad thing to be in any way legal.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

Better hope you win enough to retire, because you'll have a hard time finding work again. Not unless you specifically find a small business owner who shares your political beliefs so you can tell them frankly, "I was terminated for refusing the vaccine, though they gave a different reason, and I filed a wrong termination lawsuit."

[–] 3 pts

Most employers don't even call your contacts, much less do in depth research into why you left a previous job.

[–] 0 pt

Yeah, for entry level work. If you're upper management, you better believe they're going to vet you.

[–] 0 pt

I haven't done entry level work in 20 years and basically no employer ever called my references. Probably different depending on the field but in software engineering no one bothers that I can tell.

[–] 0 pt

I had so much proof of harrassment from getting custody of my kids but knew I would need another job and all the options I had talk to one another and employees bounce around and talk. I decided to bite my tongue and move on.