Marjorie Taylor Green back to comparing COVID rules to the Holocaust

three weeks after visiting the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and Say sorry To repeatedly compare coronavirus protections to the Holocaust, Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene returned Comparing COVID-19 regulations incorrectly to the Nazi German regime.
In a tweet on Tuesday, Green said people have the option of getting vaccinated and that they don’t need to have a “medical brown shirt” knocking on the door urging them to do so. “Biden pushing a vaccine that is not FDA approved shows COVID is a political tool used to control people,” Green tweeted, neglecting to mention the fact That the FDA has granted emergency approval for several coronavirus vaccines.

“People have a choice, they don’t need your medical brown shirt ordering vaccinations at their doorstep. You can’t force people to be part of a human experiment,” she replied to the comment. Biden said Tuesday about potentially sending health professionals into communities to go door-to-door to provide people with more accurate information about the vaccine.

brown shirt“—also known as the SA, or Sturmabteilung—were paramilitary groups that facilitated Adolf Hitler’s initial rise to power until the Nazis came to power.

When asked about Green’s remarks, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told CNN on Wednesday that “we don’t take any of our health and medical advice from Marjorie Taylor Green.”

“What we’ve seen during the past several months is that one of the biggest barriers is access, and people know when they can get the vaccine, where they can get the vaccine, the efficacy and safety of the vaccine,” Saki continued. “It’s up to each person to decide whether they’re going to get vaccinated or not.”

“I made a mistake and it really bothered me for a couple of weeks, and so I definitely want to own it. The horrors of the Holocaust are something that some people don’t even believe, and some people don’t. Deny, but there is no comparison to the Holocaust,” Green said last month after completing a private tour of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC.

“And there are words that I have said that make comments I know are offensive, and I want to apologize for that; anti-Semitism is true hate, and I saw it today in the Holocaust Museum,” He added. “And I think it’s something we should all remember and never forget. That’s why I want to come here today and say that I’m sorry to offend people who comment about the Holocaust, it has no comparison. Will never happen.”

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