Source: “NO SHOES, NO SHIRT, NO SERVICE?” Peggy Hall
mirrored from Peggy Hall, TheHealthyAmerican.org
https://www.bitchute.com/video/KLvge8Is9D4p/
A shirt is not a medical device. Requiring someone to use a medical device to obstruct their breathing as a condition of entry is not the same as requiring a shirt, which has to do with decency laws. (There are no laws that I know of requiring shoes). Could a store make you take an aspirin as a condition of entry? It’s the exact opposite: private businesses are legally defined as public accommodations and must not deny entry to the public. I also discuss “direct threat” and how that is a bogus claim by the store jerks, er — clerks. Download your cards
here: www.thehealthyamerican.org/documents