House Republicans file legislation to end COVID-19 vaccination requirement for international air travelers
Tuesday, January 17, 2023 |
by Karen Faulkner, Worthy News Correspondent
(Worthy News) – A group of eight House Republicans have introduced legislation to end a federal mandate requiring foreign air travelers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 before entering the United States. House bill HR 185 was filed by Representative Thomas Massie and seven GOP co-sponsors on January 9.
While COVID-19 vaccination requirements have been dropped in much of the world, America’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) ordered on April 7, 2022, that foreign travelers entering the US must be vaccinated. “The CDC order prohibits international travelers from entering the country unless they first show proof of COVID-19 vaccination,” a press release on Massie’s website reads.
Under the terms of HR 185, no federal funds may be used to “administer, implement, or enforce the air travel vaccination requirement for foreign travelers.”
In a statement explaining the need for the bill, Massie said: “If you watched C-SPAN last week, you saw 434 Members of Congress gathered in the Capitol screaming, yelling, cheering, and speaking. Many of these members are unvaccinated, and many haven’t taken boosters.”
“So, why do we subject visitors who want to see their families to this COVID-19 double standard? The CDC’s unscientific mandate is separating too many people from their families and has been doing so for far too long. It needs to end,” Massie said.
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Dem Congresswoman introduces bill to prosecute ‘white supremacist inspired hate crimes’ and publishing ‘hate speech’ such as ‘replacement theory’
January 17, 2023
Democratic Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) has introduced a bill that seeks to criminalize and prosecute any “white supremacist inspired hate crimes.”
Texas bill H.R. 61 says it is “to prevent and prosecute white supremacy inspired hate crime and conspiracy to commit white supremacy inspired hate crime and to amend title 18, United States Code, to expand the scope of hate crimes.”
The bill’s short title is the “Leading Against White Supremacy Act of 2023.”
The bill states that a person is engaging in white supremacist-inspired hate crimes when white supremacist ideology is involved in the planning or is a precursor to the act itself. This is where the bill seeks to criminalize hate speech and social media posts pertaining to “vilifying” non-white people or groups.
“A conspiracy to engage in white supremacy inspired hate crime shall be determined to exist—” the text reads, “(2) between two or more persons,” when “at least one of whom published material advancing white supremacy, white supremacist ideology, antagonism based on ‘replacement theory’, or hate speech that vilifies or is otherwise directed against any non-White person or group, and such published material” the bill explains.
The text also says that a person who publishes content that could be viewed by a person who is “predisposed” to committing hate crimes could also be committing conspiracy.
The bill defines this as material “published on a social media platform or by other means of publication with the likelihood that it would be viewed by persons who are predisposed to engaging in any action in furtherance of a white supremacy inspired hate crime, or who are susceptible to being encouraged to engage in actions in furtherance of a white supremacy inspired hate crime.”
The Department of Justice would also be directed to maintain a database of “white supremacy inspired hate crimes and related actions.”
Amendments to the Hate Crime Prevention Act would include adding the following text:
“Mass shootings and other hate crimes motivated by white supremacy have been increasing in frequency and intensity. These heinous and virulent crimes are inspired by conspiracy theories, blatant bigotry, and mythical falsehoods such as ‘replacement theory’. All instances must be prevented and severe criminal penalties must be applied to their perpetrators.”https://www.theblaze.com/news/sheilajacksonlee-antiwhitesupremacy-bill