BIG BROTHER KOVID-1984 TAKES CONTROL beginning in ISRAEL
Israel To Disclose Names Of Citizens Who Have Not Been Vaccinated Against Covid
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Source: Niamh Harris
Israel’s parliament passed a law
Wednesday allowing the government to share, with other authorities, the
identities of people who have not had the covid vaccine.
The measure which passed with 30 votes for and 13
against, allows local governments, the director general of the education
ministry and some in the welfare ministry, the right to receive the names,
addresses and telephone numbers of citizens who are not vaccinated against
covid..
Netanyahu’s Likud party defended the
law as purely a means to promote vaccination. The measure is aimed at enabling
those bodies to “encourage people to vaccinate by personally addressing them”,
according to a parliament statement.
However, the move has drawn backlash
from critics who raise privacy concerns for those opting out of inoculation.
Haaretz reports: when what’s at stake is an
important and vulnerable right like privacy, which is already being eroded, it’s essential
to ensure not just that the proposal would be effective, but also that there is
no equally effective way that would infringe less on people’s rights, and that
the benefit expected from the proposal outweighs the damage to privacy. This
assessment must be made intelligently rather than in an atmosphere of hysteria.
The fact that the vast majority of
the people likely to be at high risk from the coronavirus (the elderly and
people with preexisting medical conditions) have already been vaccinated (or
are in the process of doing so) – and this fact is to Netanyahu’s credit, since
he played a role in it – enables Israel to act in a considered fashion.
Moreover, we’ve already learned to be
wary of Netanyahu’s flashes of genius with regard to privacy, like the Shin Bet security service’s cellphone tracking.
This tracking, aside from severely infringing on our privacy, has proven
ineffective at identifying coronavirus patients, yet it has also proven hard to
get rid of.
In fact, governments rarely go one
step forward and one step back when they start riding roughshod over
constitutional rights. Not only is it very hard for the right in question to
regain the ground it has lost, but even worse, each such retreat paves the way
for additional infringement on that right, since it no longer enjoys its former
status, having already been weakened.
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