Trees don't grow on money
2 of my sons vacationed in India and said while it’s a beautiful country the poverty is unimaginable. The water and air are very polluted. I have no desire to visit.
I believe his executive order simply cancels all existing covid orders and bans businesses from requiring a covid passport to enter. So, it essentially opens Florida up effective July 1st, which I believe is the same time New York plans to open. Is New York pro covid?
Here in Ohio the plan is to re-open the state once covid cases reach a 50 per 100,000 person mark. We're currently at just under 150 per 100,000 so we may possibly open even earlier than Florida. Yahoo!
"Things should be made as simple as possible, but not one bit simpler." ~ Albert Einstein
The difference between Florida and New York are that the Florida law states July 1st but the desantis exec order states open everything today. Secondly I’m not aware that New York forbids businesses requiring vaccination of either employees or customers. The devil is in the details, as is often the case. And in this case the devil is in Tallahassee not Albany.
Probably the most significant difference is that NY is creating a vaccine passport so that businesses who choose to will have the freedom to keep their employees and other customers safer while Florida has outlawed vaccine passports because they believe the freedom to risk other people’s health is more important. I haven’t looked but would be surprised to learn that CT and/or NJ were planning to follow the Florida model.
I wonder when Florida is going to make it illegal for businesses to require that people where shoes and shirts when entering their establishment?
2 weeks also of course matters as vaccines have not been widely available for long, so until everyone who wants a vaccine has had a second shot more or less and that is a matter of timing.
Trees don't grow on money
So NY is creating a passport but not requiring its usage. I wonder how many businesses will refuse to sell products or provide services to anyone without one? I'm betting none outside of perhaps school districts.
Do you think we should have a nationwide law requiring vaccine passports in order to do civic things, like perhaps voting?
"Things should be made as simple as possible, but not one bit simpler." ~ Albert Einstein
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