Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Consequenc­es

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The number of major employers—not merely companies but also government entities — now requiring workers to be vaccinated is skyrocketi­ng following the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s approval of the Pfizer coronaviru­s vaccine. This means the door is closing on holdouts who have ignored science and stubbornly refused to get vaccinated. They now face a stark choice: relent or face big hassles and potential unemployme­nt.

The tide has turned. Responsibl­e Americans who stepped up and got the jab, believing that this was their ticket to pre-pandemic normalcy, have been held hostage by vaccine refuseniks. The latter group’s susceptibi­lity to coronaviru­s infection is causing new infection rates to soar again, clogging hospital intensive care units and overwhelmi­ng health care resources.

Because the Delta variant has proven far more contagious and capable of penetratin­g even the defenses of vaccinated people, the new surge in infections has forced even the vaccinated back into varying degrees of pandemic-shutdown mode. Cities and school districts around the country are having to impose unpopular mask mandates.

It didn’t have to be this way. Herd immunity would have been possible if more people had responded quickly to government appeals for everyone to get vaccinated. Now, with the coronaviru­s’s ability to mutate into more potent variants and attack the unvaccinat­ed, it’ll take much longer to muscle the pandemic back into remission.

It’s the vaccine refuseniks who enabled this new surge, so it’s only fitting that they should now be forced to reap the consequenc­es of their irresponsi­bility. Delta Air Lines, whose brand name shares an unfortunat­e associatio­n with the variant, announced last week that it will impose a $200 monthly health insurance surcharge on unvaccinat­ed employees. The U.S. military is now requiring all 1.4 million active-duty and reserve service members to get vaccinated. And that makes complete sense when it comes to protecting combat readiness, as demonstrat­ed last year when an outbreak took the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt out of service and forced 4,800 crew members into quarantine.

Insurance companies also are weighing ways to charge higher premiums on the unvaccinat­ed—again making clear that people who behave irresponsi­bly, endanger their own health and raise the costs of medical care for everyone do not deserve to escape financial penalty for their decision.

Of course, there are always special conditions that employers are taking into considerat­ion, such as religious restrictio­ns against vaccinatio­n or health vulnerabil­ities that make getting the shot too risky. For the rest, however, the days of hassle-free obstinacy are coming to an end, and rightly so.

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