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Can you be fired for refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccine? America is about to find out

Can you be fired for refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccine? America is about to find out MarketWatch 5/9/2021 Andrew Keshner © MarketWatch photo illustration/iStockphoto Some workers are suing to get their job back, according to lawsuits reviewed by MarketWatch, but all these cases want judges to block employers from making vaccination requirements. Christopher Neve had a spotless record and several pay raises in his six years as a deputy sheriff with the Durham County Sheriff’s Office. In March, he was put on leave without pay for insubordination and then terminated, court and personnel records show. Video: Houston Methodist employees among those who testify in support of bill banning mandatory vaccines (KHOU-TV Houston)

Can you be fired for refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccine? America is about to find out

Durham County Sheriff s Department Hit a Nerve on Twitter

Durham County Sheriff’s Department Hit a Nerve on Twitter Expand When someone at the Durham County Sheriff’s Department hit send on a tweet showcasing a new “ghost car,” the reaction was likely the opposite of what was expected.  A video embedded in the tweet showed lights that flash after the vehicle emerges from hiding engaged people from Durham to London. Almost 5,000 people commented, mostly with criticisms. Two critical comments generated over 20,000 likes. “This ‘ghost’ car will be used by our #CommunityPolicing & traffic unit. W/ its low profile graphics you’ll never see it coming, especially at night. Make sure you’re not speeding, wear your seatbelt, and stay sober behind the wheel,” the Jan. 13 tweet read.

Nobel Prize nomination received by North Carolina progressive group

Getting nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize is only the first step towards winning the esteemed award, but Ryan Jenkins still took it as an occasion to get pretty tipsy. Upon learning the criminal justice reform committee he started had been nominated, Jenkins, an unemployed intelligence analyst in Chapel Hill, spent several hours this December sipping single malt whisky and informing fellow committee members that their work was now in the running for one of the world’s most famous awards. “It’s not even something that you fantasize about,” he said of the nomination. “It is such an utterly ridiculous thing.”

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