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Vaccine mandates

New York City to Unvaxxed NBA Star Kyrie Irving: You Can Come to the Arena, but You Can't Play

The city's private employer vaccine mandate is not just an overreaching policy; it's now a completely nonsensical and ineffective one.

Eric Boehm | 3.14.2022 11:45 AM

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iconphotosfive989258 | Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire CGV/Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire/Newscom
Brooklyn Nets star player Kyrie Irving is allowed to attend games despite being unvaccinated, but New York City regards him as a public health threat if he steps on the court. (Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire CGV/Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire/Newscom)

A week after New York City supposedly lifted its vaccine mandate, unvaccinated basketball superstar Kyrie Irving is still not allowed to take the court for the Brooklyn Nets.

He's allowed to be in the arena with thousands of other people, to join his teammates in the locker room, and to visit bars, restaurants, and clubs in the city. None of those activities require showing proof of vaccination anymore. But the city regards him as a COVID risk if he sets foot on the court, thanks to an ongoing mandate that all employees for private businesses must be vaccinated.

The rule doesn't make much sense to Irving's teammates.

"It's ridiculous. I don't understand it at all," Nets star forward Kevin Durant told reporters Sunday after dropping 53 points against their crosstown rival, the New York Knicks. "It just didn't make any sense. Like, there's unvaxxed people in this building already. We got a guy who can come into the building—I guess, are there fearing our safety? I don't get it."

"It's just stupid," Durant added, before telling Mayor Eric Adams to "figure this out."

Kevin Durant on Kyrie Irving not being able to play at home:

"We're all confused. Pretty much everybody in the world is confused at this point. Early on in the season, people didn't understand what was going on but now, it just looks stupid. Eric, you gotta figure this out." pic.twitter.com/t8aBEBEZEA

— Nets Videos (@SNYNets) March 13, 2022

It's hard to argue with that assessment.

There always were some big loopholes in New York City's vaccine mandate. Irving wasn't allowed to play when the Nets hosted the Sacramento Kings on February 14, but the Kings' Justin Holliday, who is also unvaccinated, was allowed to play because the rules contained an exemption for visiting players. "I think if ultimately that rule is about protecting people who are in the arena, it just doesn't quite make sense to me that an away player who's unvaccinated can play in Barclays but the home player can't," NBA commissioner Adam Silver told ESPN at the time.

The situation got more absurd on March 7, when Adams rolled back the city's indoor mask and vaccine mandates but did not lift the private employer vaccine mandate, which requires that anyone working in person for a New York City–based company be vaccinated.

As a result, Irving is still being kept off the court—even though, as Durant pointed out on Sunday, unvaccinated New Yorkers are free to attend Nets games.

Regardless of how you feel about vaccine mandates, it should be obvious that this arrangement is just plain dumb. For the mandate to be at all effective as a public health measure, it would have to exclude Irving from the arena entirely. As it currently stands, the city's policy says that unvaccinated people can crowd into the arena to watch unvaccinated players on visiting teams play. It allows an unvaccinated Irving to sit on the bench, breathing the same air as the spectators and other players. But if he steps on the court, the public would be at risk?

Los Angeles Lakers superstar Lebron James chimed in on Twitter to highlight the absurdity.

FACTS FACTS FACTS!! It literally makes ABSOLUTELY ZERO SENSE!!! They say if common sense was common then we'd all have it. Ain't that the truth. ????????‍♂️????????‍♂️????????‍♂️????????‍♂️ #FreeKyrie https://t.co/EhAcjuMrsL

— LeBron James (@KingJames) March 13, 2022

Irvine is hardly the only worker negatively affected by these confusing and contradictory rules. An unvaccinated New Yorker, under the current rules, could legally visit any bar in the city that would have him—but would be banned from mixing cocktails or pouring beer in the same venue. A performer could watch any show on Broadway, sitting amid hundreds of other people, but would not be allowed to sing, dance, act, or even get paid to clean up an empty theater after everyone has gone home. Because that's a public health risk, obviously.

New York City's private employer mandate—like the similar one that the Supreme Court blocked at the federal level—should never have been imposed in the first place. It was and is an unjustified intrusion of government power into the private working arrangements made by employers and employees.

And now that the city's public officials have decided vaccine mandates are no longer necessary to protect the public, it's not just an overreaching policy—it's a completely nonsensical and ineffective one.

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NEXT: How an Academic Grudge Turned Into a #MeToo Panic

Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason.

Vaccine mandatesNew York CitySportsNBA
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  1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

    It’s because he’s black.

    1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

      Naw, if he's unvaxxed, he must be one of them racist whites.

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      2. The Team Struggling   3 years ago

        He's a heretic, not following The Science.

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    2. CE   3 years ago

      It's because they're Knicks fans, and they can't stand Brooklyn being better.

  2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    They are just fucking with us.

    It has always been so, but now they either don't care to hide it, or they have contests to see how bizarre the can make the rules.

  3. mad.casual   3 years ago

    Just to be clear, there's more than one common sense issue at play. The whole narrative about Irving on the court vs. in the stands as a public health threat assumes a *complete* inversion of the vaccine logic as a stolen base.

    Yes, if Irving is a public health threat on the court he would be a bigger threat in the audience, but that's predicated on the assumption that an unvaccinated person is somehow a threat to people who are, by and large, vaccinated.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      The officials know this. It's a symbolic tool of compliance. It's an assertion of control. They're having him dig a hole and fill it back in because they're attempting to impart a lesson to anyone else who steps out of line. There's no practical use for the hole in the ground he digs, just so long as he digs it.

      1. mad.casual   3 years ago

        The officials know this.

        The officials know this but, as the article and my personal experience illustrates, the useful idiots do not.

        Also, as near as I can tell, Irving's getting paid not to get vaccinated, play ball, or dig holes in the first place and it's the idiots are finally asking, "Wait, why are we digging these holes?"

  4. Dillinger   3 years ago

    covid?

  5. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    Loads of support to Irving for continuing to take a stance. It's good to be in a position to stand up for how stupid and nonsensical this all is. It's not about actually protecting people, it's about trying inflicting punishment for people who aren't 100% on board with their agenda.

  6. CE   3 years ago

    The NFL has repealed all of its COVID protocols. No players had any serious ill health effects from COVID in 2 years, but many players missed games, some of them with no symptoms at all.

    1. raspberrydinners   3 years ago

      Yes but who else might they have infected had they played who then would've spread it to other people who might not have lived or had ill health effects?

      Surprise surprise- it was never about ONLY protecting a player. It's about realizing you're in a society. Hard for a lot of people to grasp that though huh? Same people who think they should be free to drive drunk all over and everyone else should stay home.

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        Surprise surprise- it was never about ONLY protecting a player.

        Even though the vaccine doesn't prevent transmission.

        1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

          All Hail Fauci, Praise Be to Science!

      2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

        My mask protects you, your mask protects me, but my mask doesn't protect me and your mask doesn't protect you. Science.

      3. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

        The virus is going through the population no matter how many people are jabbed, and this has been obvious for like 16 months.

      4. Rossami   3 years ago

        In all the posts you've made since coming to Reason, have you gotten one fact right yet?

      5. CE   3 years ago

        Yes, the 50-something coaches were the ones at risk. Which is why they were vaccinated. And it's not as if they weren't exposed elsewhere anyway.

        1. MT-Man   3 years ago

          Andy Reid could just eat less.

      6. Ajsloss   3 years ago

        How many degrees of separation is a person guilty for?

      7. Joe Brandon   3 years ago

        piss off, you fucking wanker

      8. the phucko   3 years ago

        Wow... What an ignorant dumbass u have CHOSEN to be. U idiots wouldn't recognize ACTUALLY science if it smacked u upside your head 24/7. Two years of this nonsense. Yet there u be still standing at the front of the line. The asymptotic HERD does not spread a virus u idiot. NEVER has your ridiculous thoughts been expressed in ACTUAL science. U belong to but a religion of hocus pocus nonsense.
        The Phucko Knows

  7. Eeyore   3 years ago

    I see he is still wearing a muzzle like a slave.

  8. Think It Through   3 years ago

    I'm in agreement with the general tone of the article, but quoting Lebron in support is a big misstep. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day, but that guy is barely right twice a year.

    1. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

      When even Lebron knows something is stupid........

      1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

        LeBron isn't right, he's just speaking up for his buddy. There's no principled stance, he just has a personal interest because Irving is a former teammate.

  9. raspberrydinners   3 years ago

    Maybe it doesn't make sense but it's still hilarious that these people make their choice then get all offended when they have to face the consequences of it.

    If he really was so dead set on playing just get the shot you big baby. Sheesh.

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

      JOIN THE GREAT UNPERSONING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

      Idiot.

    2. Enjoy Every Sandwich   3 years ago

      Maybe it doesn't make sense? How do you make it make sense without a lot of hysterical emotionalism?

    3. CE   3 years ago

      Kyrie said he wasn't anti-vaxx. He was standing up for all the oppressed people who were threatened with losing their jobs if they didn't comply.

      1. Nardz   3 years ago

        ^bingo

        Unlike the kneelers, Kyrie had to actually sacrifice playing and deal with the entire sports media complex talking shit about him.
        For once a player went against the popular/mass/institutional narrative, and actually stood for powerless people dealt injustice.
        Don't expect to see him get any awards or praise though. That's reserved for people like Biles and Osaka (and, somehow, still Kaepernick) who cry "mental health" and expect to be excused from their responsibilities while their self-absorbtion is celebrated.

        1. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

          Kaepernick sucked before he ever took a knee and Simone Biles will forever be known for giving up when the going got tough.

          Naomi Osaka actually bowed out pretty decently, as I recall. I think Serena's bitch fits and the publicity blew her mind.

          1. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

            I don't blame Biles for stepping out, I just don't think it's praiseworthy. She lost it, got the yips, and couldn't risk actually severely injuring herself. That's fine.

            What was weird were the people claiming it was heroic. It wasn't. It was the smart thing to do but the heroic thing to do would be to overcome. I don't think she's a failure or anything for not doing the heroic thing-lots of people mess up. I just didn't get the people who were trying to spin it as some kind of great moment in sports history.

            1. R Mac   3 years ago

              Agreed. Also remember she was sexually assaulted by her Dr. But yeah, not brave to quit.

            2. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

              To be clear, Biles is not a failure. She was an intensely talented and accomplished athlete.

              But she is a quitter. The going got tough and she gave up.

              Got the yips? Slap yourself, take a shot of something fortifying and go fucking do it.

    4. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

      Fuck off, slaver.

    5. the phucko   3 years ago

      It is u who's the big baby. As u r just another scared little human who does as told. No matter how harmful it may be. It must suck to be someone with not a single shred of self worth. Thank GOD all u morons out there r getting the shots. The whole thing has been but an IQ test that you've failed miserably at.
      The Phucko Knows

  10. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

    According to Schmoe Thursday, people like Irving need to be ostracised from society and shipped off to labor camps.

    1. MT-Man   3 years ago

      He's probably angling for them to work for his contracting business for free.

    2. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

      I notice that Joe Friday has completely shut up about Covid.

      I think that is the closest any progressive will ever get to admitting they were completely wrong.

      1. the phucko   3 years ago

        What a human piece of shit Friday is. He is everything that is wrong in today's world. Nothing but a lying piece shit out for nothing but setting up division umongest the public. Truth be damn.
        The Phucko Knows

  11. Truthteller1   3 years ago

    It's science.

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

      Kyrie Irving isn't a doctor. That was Julius Irving.

      1. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

        Dr. K does sound good, though.

  12. Ragnarredbeard   3 years ago

    Why hasn't he sued? You can sue over too much ketchup on a burger, he should be able to sue the city.

  13. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

    Meanwhile...

    Rand Paul has introduced a bill to fire Faucu and break his position up into three different roles. Another symbolic lead canary.

    Another interesting bill worth discussing is looking at compensating victims of the Covid jab for damages by an amendment to the current injuries claim setup.

    ...to bail out big pharma with more taxpayer money. But at least they admit the gorilla exists.

    https://clarion.causeaction.com/2022/03/13/republicans-introduce-bill-to-help-victims-of-covid-19-vaccine-adverse-reactions/

  14. Thoritsu   3 years ago

    This is about power. Nothing more. Nothing less. We are in charge, and you will comply.

  15. freedomwriter   3 years ago

    Virtually nothing in the world makes any sense because of human hypocrisy.

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