Can the unvaccinated ride in the back of the bus?

In the old days, people who looked like Rosa Parks were forced to ride in the back of every bus. Now, in 2021, do the same prejudicial rules apply?

Well, if the bus happens to be one used at the upcoming BNP Paribas tennis tournament in Indian Wells, California, then unvaccinated people not only can’t ride in the back of the bus, they can’t board it at all.

Tennis has long been accused as a sport at which very few minorities attend. Given that Black and Hispanic Americans are amongst the highest unvaccinated, it seems “highly convenient” to introduce rules that are guaranteed to keep visible minorities to a minimum. There are no exceptions to these rules which will ban a higher percentage of “colored” people. For these visible minorities, there are no exemptions for those with negative PCR tests, with antibody tests, with medical exemptions or with religious exemptions. Just a guarantee that there will be a much higher percentage of white people. Clearly Black & Brown Lives Don’t Matter to some.

19 Replies to “Can the unvaccinated ride in the back of the bus?”

  1. Yes Black and Brown lives DO matter………..when politically expedient, for Democrats.

    When expediency is over, they are trash, as much as any other dark or light skin toned being.

    Anything for power. Exhibit A, the Liberal Party of Canaderp.

  2. Oh please …. Indian Wells has lots of older residents who are scared of covid. This has nothing to do with race and everything to do with Riverside County Health’s rules. Not everything has to do with race. I live in neighbouring Palm Desert seasonally and no one has any problem with Mexicans or Blacks, except may a few drug gangs and the odd loser.

    1. I think you’re missing the point. The racism angle is just a red herring, to point out the hypocrisy of the left when it comes to divisive identity politics.

      Of course the policy isn’t about racism, but the end result is that POC’s, BIPOC’s, and possibly other minorities, *will generally be excluded* from the event. It is, after all, an unintended consequence of this segregation policy.

      1. Nonsense. nothing to do with race. The left’s war is against anyone who does not want to be vaxxed. I do agree that it is another way to create division, chaos and conflict.

        1. “Nonsense. Nothing to do with race!”

          I thought I had said that. Just checked again, and yep. I did say that!

    2. The policy has a disparate impact on non-ytpypo, therefore it’s racist.

      Hey, we didn’t make these rules, but they’re the rules now.

  3. Is anyone else sick of hearing how this or that minority is more adversely affected by certain policies? There’s only one race that’s judged by their skin and it isn’t latinos or blacks. In fact if anything blacks benefit from systemic favouritism. That ‘blacks to back of the bus’ shit went out of style around the same time as striped bell bottoms. And good riddance to both of those things.

    1. Yes, I am and everyone who is lumped into a racial or ideological box. If our board rooms do not reflect the general population, it is because they do not have equivalent education and experience, mostly. It took a while for women to take on these roles, and the fact is, many women choose not to.

      Critical race theory is a failed theory.

      1. Failed theory or not it’s becoming systemically entrenched in our society because we are in the third generation of college and university grads who have taken the socialist indoctrination they received into the government and corporate world. HR and PR departments across North America are filled with the brainwashed useful idiots that are doing their damnedest to bring down capitalism from within. Why else would companies actively work to alienate half of their potential customer base with the SJW virtue signaling nonsense of the last few years? As for the government, who still believes that the elected representatives are actually in control of anything? All of the information that they base their positions on is filtered through many layers of underlings (civil service and party) before they get to see it, and all those underlings have PoliSci degrees heavy in marxist theory.

      2. “If our board rooms do not reflect the general population, it is because they do not have equivalent education and experience, mostly.”

        If that were so, then how do you explain the results of these types of studies?:
        – nber.org/digest/sep03/employers-replies-racial-names
        – hbswk.hbs.edu/item/minorities-who-whiten-job-resumes-get-more-interviews

        Same resumés (= “equivalent education and experience”), just different and racially coded applicant names.

        1. Simple. The first one is from 2003, therefore the previous generation. The second one is “…on job search websites in 16 metropolitan sections of the United States.” In other words, they’re looking for work in areas that predominantly vote Democrat and still have the racist attitudes of that party.

          You’re finding the racist subculture that elects Liberals and Democrats. The soft bigotry of low expectations, “If you don’t vote for me, then you ain’t black”, etc. Those of us who see profession and attitude first, not race, aren’t the ones to blame for remaining racism. Like how anyone who says “Black Lives Matter is about justice, and saying All Lives Matter is racist” are saying that black people aren’t fully human and cannot be held to the same standards as full citizens.

          Clear enough for you?

        2. So choosing names that one is familiar with or are easier to pronounce is now racist.
          Got some bad new for you, asswipe, no matter where you go in the world, people do that. Its not “evidence of racism”, it is natural human behavior.

        3. Ah, here’s the story from you that I just referred to in another thread. Once again you display your childlike gullibility. Looks like you were up past your bedtime.

          “Yes, I did apply under the name of Fotherington Smythe-Jones and said I have a PhD in electrical engineering,, but as a matter of fact my name is Quindarious Gooch and I dropped out in grade 9. So, when do I start?”

          Sure thing, Ted. Sure thing.

          1. Dang, this makes it look like I don’t know how to write a hyperlink, but it’s the blog software redirecting it. Anyway you can look him up, he’s a real person apparently.

  4. https://www.ukcolumn.org/video/frances-long-time-vaccine-policy-chief-covid-policy-is-completely-stupid-and-unethical
    Coronavirus
    France’s long-time vaccine policy chief: Covid policy is “completely stupid” and “unethical”

    ———————————————————————-

    Interesting tidbit from the interview. This guy thinks anyone vaccinated should be quarantined from everyone else. And, what everyone is calling a “vaccination” is not one. It is a genetic injection. He points out countries like Viet Nam had basically eradicated the disease but as soon as they started the “vaccinations” the virus returned.

    You will find that Dr. Perronne is more than qualified to speak to this topic. And yet, he is being censored by the media for not towing the line.

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