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Oklahoma Republicans: vaccine mandates like Nazi persecution of Jewish people

Republicans

Oklahoma Republicans: vaccine mandates like Nazi persecution of Jewish people

  • Post on Facebook page features yellow Star of David
  • Vice-chairman calls post ‘beyond abhorrent’

Associated Press in Oklahoma City
Sat 31 Jul 2021 07.52 EDT

The Oklahoma Republican party faced fierce criticism on Friday for a Facebook post likening Covid-19 vaccine mandates to the persecution of Jewish people in Nazi Germany.

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The post on the party’s official Facebook page urged people to call the lieutenant governor and ask him to call a special session to prohibit employers from requiring employees to get vaccinated.

It featured a picture of a yellow Star of David with the word “unvaccinated” on it and said: “Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.”

Roberta Clark, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Greater Oklahoma City, called the post “highly inappropriate” and urged party officials to apologize.

“To compare the actions taken by Nazi Germany to a public health discussion is ill-informed and inappropriate,“ Clark said. “An apology is really appropriate, and it shows leadership and sensitivity to the harmful impact this has made.”

John Bennett, the party’s new chairman, didn’t immediately respond to a phone message. The party’s vice chairman, Shane Jemison, said he wasn’t certain who created the post, but called it “beyond abhorrent”.

“Equating the possibility of private entities requiring their employees to receive the Covid-19 vaccine to the Holocaust is beyond abhorrent, disgraceful and a gross misrepresentation of the Republican party and its values here in Oklahoma and nationally,” he said in a statement.

Last month, Republican US representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, of Georgia, apologized for comments she made comparing the required wearing of safety masks in the House to the horrors of the Holocaust.

It’s not the first time the Oklahoma party, or Bennett, has faced criticism for posts on Facebook. In 2015, then-Oklahoma Republican chairman Randy Brogdon apologized for a post that likened food stamps to feeding wild animals.

The following year, Bennett, then a state lawmaker, posted a news story on Facebook critical of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton and added the comment, “2 words … firing squad.”

At the time, Bennett defended the comments as “sarcasm”, and said he wouldn’t wish death upon anyone or encourage violence toward any candidate.

Topics

  • Republicans
  • Vaccines and immunisation
  • US healthcare
  • Coronavirus
  • US domestic policy
  • US politics
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Source: US Politics - theguardian.com


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