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One Year ago today, 06/01/2020
Our POTUS
For God & Country
WWG1WGA
117 Employees File Lawsuit Against Texas Hospital For Mandating COVID-19 Vaccine
Saying the COVID-19 vaccines are experimental and they donât want to be âguinea pigs,â the 117 employees argued in court that itâs unlawful for their employers to require them to take the shots.
âMethodist Hospital is forcing its employees to be human âguinea pigsâ as a condition for continued employment,â their lawsuit (pdf) states. They wrote that the hospitalâs COVID-19 vaccination mandate ârequires the employee to subject themselves to medical experimentation as a prerequisite to feeding their families.â
They took issue receiving âexperimental COVID-19 mRNAâ vaccines such as ones made by Pfizer and Moderna.
âFor the first time in the history of the United States, an employer is forcing an employee to participate in an experimental vaccine trial as a condition for continued employment,â the lawsuit states.
The plaintiffs cited a letterâincluded in the lawsuitâfrom the CEO and president of Houston Methodist, Marc Boom, who allegedly directed employees to âplease see the HR policy that outlines the consequences of not being compliant by June 7, which include suspension and eventually termination.â
Meanwhile, at the top of the lawsuit, an alleged quote from David Bernard, a CEO of a Houston Methodist branch, was included. Bernard purportedly told an employee that â100 percent vaccination is more important than your individual freedom. ⌠Everyone [sic] of you is replaceable. If you donât like what your [sic] doing you can leave and we will replace your spot.â
A spokesperson for Houston Methodist disputed the quote in a statement to The Epoch Times, saying on May 30 that Bernard âdid NOT say that to this disgruntled employee,â and he âhas respect for all his employeesâwe are a values-based organization with respect as one of our core values.â The spokesperson did not comment on the letter from Boom.
The lawsuit also asserted that employersâ mandating COVID-19 vaccines is problematic because âthere is muchâ the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) âdoes not know about these products even as it authorizes them for emergency use, including their effectiveness against infection, death, and transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that is allegedly the cause of the COVID disease.â The FDA approved an emergency use authorization for the vaccines made by Moderna and Pfizer in December 2020 and gave the emergency authorization for Johnson & Johnsonâs vaccine in early 2021.
The lawsuit was filed by Jared Woodfill, a Houston-area attorney, who told ABC News that the Houston Methodist mandate violates the Nuremberg Code of 1947, written after the fall of the Nazi regime in Germany.
âTo promote its business and increase profits at the expense of other health care providers and their employeesâ health, defendants advertise to the public that they ârequire all employees and employed physicians to get a COVID-19 vaccine.â More clearly, defendantsâ employees are being forced to serve as human âguinea pigsâ to increase defendantsâ profits,â Woodfill said, adding that it is a âsevere and blatantâ violation of Texas law and the Nuremberg Codeâa set of research ethics principles relating to human experimentation.
Houston Methodist, the attorney claimed, forced employees to get the shot to âpromote its businessâ over its âemployeesâ health.â He noted that most of the plaintiffs in the suit arenât health care providers.
Boom issued a statement after the lawsuit was filed, saying that 99 percent of the hospitalâs nearly 30,000 employees have received a COVID-19 vaccine.
âWe proudly stand by our employees and our mission to protect our patients.
âIt is unfortunate that the few remaining employees who refuse to get vaccinated and put our patients first are responding in this way,â Boom said, according to a spokesperson for the hospital system. âIt is legal for health care institutions to mandate vaccines, as we have done with the flu vaccine since 2009.â
A full legal response from Houston Methodist has yet to be filed.
The Houston Methodist spokesperson also included a link to the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) on May 28 having posted updated guidelines that suggest employers can make employees be vaccinated.
According to the agencyâs guidance issued on May 28, EEOC laws âdo not prevent an employer from requiring all employees physically entering the workplace to be vaccinated for COVID-19, so long as employers comply with the reasonable accommodation provisions of the ADA and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and other EEO considerations.
zerohedge.com/covid-19/117-employees-file-lawsuit-against-texas-hospital-mandating-covid-19-vaccine
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