The yellow star thing is disgusting. I'm pretty sure that most of the Jewish people at that time would have worn a mask or taken a vaccine had it been an option to change anything for them. They had no choice! And they were being led to their deaths due to true awful discrimination, not being denied access to a private business because it cares about the health of their staff and customers! It's almost been an entire month since masks stopped being mandatory in England so if it was only about masks her ban wouldn't still stand, there is clearly a lot more to that story that she's leaving out to claim to be the victim! Well talking about going to a pub where she knows she may have issues suggests she wants drama and is instigating!Fiona Rose-Diamond comparing being banned from all her local pubs to Jews wearing yellow stars. As if Jews were only concerned about not being able to nip down their local for a cheeky pint, the delusional bint .
Fiona you crazy duck, it wasnt so much you were barred for not wearing a mask, it was more to do with you being an attention-seeking gobby bleep.
The Norwich pub she is going to tomorrow must be The Murderers Pub in the city centre. Anyone local to there and fancies going down to hurl dog tit at her my Spaniel is happy to oblige with the ammunition.
I actually want to see the outcome of any legal attempts at claiming discrimination by any of this lot? It would be interesting to see what happened when they play the Equality Act card as they aren't claiming discrimination against any protected characteristic, yet very few will manage to claim it as medical exemption (as Tesco may not be allowed to ask about your disability, but a court sure can!), I think you'll struggle to find many religions truly against vaccines, and then 'philosophical beliefs' likely wouldn't stand up given these are merely viewpoints for most taken from Social Media memes.
Worth a shot? Are anti-vaxxersā beliefs protected under the Equality Act? | EmploymentLinks | Linklaters
A small, but vocal, band of anti-vaccination conspiracy theorists (so-called āanti-vaxxersā) are convinced that Covid-19 vaccines are not safe. Could employers be liable if anti-vaxxers are discriminated against, or ridiculed by their colleagues, for their views?
www.linklaters.com