U.S. Military Uses Religious Test Against Service Members to Enforce Vaccine Mandate
Members of our military pledge their loyalty to the Constitution. Its First Amendment guarantees freedom of religion. So, it would be perverse to force men and women in uniform to abandon their deeply held religious beliefs to serve their country.
Yet that’s what’s happening regarding the COVID-19 vaccine mandates — for which the normal rules seem not to apply. . .
Last September, an Air Force Academy graduate requested a religious exemption. As a Catholic, she objected to benefitting from vaccines developed or tested on cell lines derived from a procured abortion.
The reviewing chaplain denied her request. What’s troubling is that he did so on theological grounds. If this case were unique, we might not worry much about it. But this is just one example of many. . .
Take the case of the Air Force grad rebuffed in September. The chaplain reviewing her request claimed her objection wasn’t a “sincerely held belief.” Why? Because she conceded that she took other drugs, such as Tylenol, which he claimed had also been “tested” on such cell lines. (Read more from “U.S. Military Uses Religious Test Against Service Members to Enforce Vaccine Mandate” HERE)
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