Kyrie Irving Can Finally Play, but New York City's Vaccine Mandate Double Standard Remains
If the rules don't apply to everyone, they ought not apply to anyone.

Professional basketball players, like noted vaccine-holdout Kyrie Irving of the Brooklyn Nets, and Broadway stars will no longer be subject to New York City's private employee vaccine mandate.
But if you're not famous enough to get people to pay to watch you play or perform—or lucky enough to work alongside them—then, sorry, the mandate still applies.
That's the absurd and, frankly, unfair result of New York City Mayor Eric Adams' announcement on Thursday that carves a new loophole in the city's increasingly nonsensical private employer vaccine mandate. In a press conference at Citi Field, home of the New York Mets, Adams announced a new executive order that will exempt workers at the city's stadiums, arenas, concert venues, and theaters from the sweeping mandate that required both private and public employees in New York to get vaccinated or lose their jobs, The New York Post reports.
The mayor had been under pressure to lift or alter the vaccine mandate ever since his office lifted the city's indoor mask and vaccine mandates on March 7. For the past few weeks, unvaccinated fans have been welcomed into New York's arenas and performing arts venues, but city-based athletes like Irving have been unable to play. (He was allowed to watch his teammates play, though, which really drove home the absurdity of that arrangement).
Adams' announcement on Thursday is meant to clear up that obviously contradictory public health policy. But perhaps it is more accurate to say that his announcement is meant to put an end to the bad press surrounding this whole mess.
Now that Irving is allowed to play, there won't be a steady stream of criticism directed in Adams' direction. But that won't help the millions of New Yorkers who remain subject to the vaccine mandate. Under the new set of rules, for example, an unvaccinated bartender can serve drinks at Madison Square Garden or in a Greenwich Village music club—but she can't work at any of the city's other drinking establishments. What's the public health rationale for that distinction? There plainly isn't one.
The new rules make as much sense as the exemption that has always existed for visiting performers and athletes—an exemption that was widely criticized, even by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver.
If Adams now believes there is a vital public health reason to require that bartenders, barbers, city workers, and investment bankers be vaccinated, then why do basketball players and stadium staff not present the same public health risk? Perhaps there is some magical COVID-preventing quality to the air that circulates inside the city's arenas and theaters? That seems unlikely.
If the rules aren't going to apply to everyone equally, they ought not to apply to anyone. This is a basic tenet of good governance.
New York City's private employer mandate—like the similar one that the Supreme Court blocked at the federal level—probably never should 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.
Creating new loopholes and granting special privileges does not change any of that. Irving might finally get to play in front of his hometown fans, but many New Yorkers are still subject to overreaching, nonsensical, ineffective vaccine rules.
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… then why do basketball players and stadium staff not present the same public health risk?
Money.
Celebrities are better than normal folk, after all. See Obama's birthday and who was wearing masks.
How in the world did anyone think this would go over well with the public? Shows a complete lack of understanding of humanity. It's almost like the WANT to piss people off, which I don't understand. But that seems to be the thing to do with politicals these days.
Piss off whom? The 80% of voters who will propel him to re-election?
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Anybody not on the "in" list.
And this isn't just the new guy. The prick before him was making everyone in the nation remember just why we fucking hate people who heart NYC. Biden and his minions blaming unvaccinated for covid spread and putting in mandates they knew people wouldn't follow. CDC hiding data and flat out lying to the public. Etc. It all pits people against each other and blames people who are nether culpable nor have the voice to defend themselves.
Adams doesn't give a shit how NYC is perceived by someone like me, nor does Trudeau, or Newsome, or anyone else. But I now see garbage people in a garbage city (I have always disliked NYC, but... fuck that place and those people) not even pretending to give a shit about you if you're not a rich democrat.
This shit is a fundamental problem with any authoritarian government. Any one party government, but especially now that they all have emergency powers.
But, even if it IS 2/3 of the voters who are happy with this shit, like Adams got, it's still two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for lunch.
The funny part was when Irving was allowed to sit in the stands, with 8 random people within 5 feet of him, but couldn't play on the court with 9 other elite athletes in a 5,000 square-foot area.
Fascists gotta do fascism.
'New Yorkers are still subject to overreaching, nonsensical, ineffective vaccine rules.' It couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of folks. Having lived in upstate NY, NYC and Albany deserve each and every bit of bad press and bad news that comes their way. They do after all, manage to allocate most of the funds within the state budget for fucktarded nonsense downstate. Surely merely having ocasio-cortez is enough to count for 50% of the state's budget, she being an econ major and all.
Eric tell us again how Biden is going to be a good president
No mean tweets =mission accomplished.
Free Kyrie!
And just in time for the playoffs.... coincidence?
Just in time for baseball season. It's extremely possible Aaron Judge isn't vaccinated.
Free at last! Free at last!
Fauci's poison death shot should not be mandatory.
Just for poor black people.
But.......but......science!????????
Rules are for little people.
Peter Dinklage hardest hit.
Why is the mandate legal at all? If someone had a contract to perform certain work, then wouldn't banning them from doing so be "impairing the obligations of contract", which the Constitution prohibits states (and their subdivisions, like cities) from doing?
The other layer of absurdity to this mandate is underlined by Jen Psaki's announcement that she caught covid.... Again.
Despite vaccination and boosting and a prior bout.... She caught it again.
The *only* justification for any of these mandates is stopping the spread of the virus to third parties, particularly I. Large numbers, as a public facing employee might. But if the vaccine does not do that, and merely provides "some protection against severe disease and hospitalization", then the mandates really cannot be justified at all.