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No Gasoline without ‘COVID Papers’? It’s Happening…

(Jon Miltimore, Foundation for Economic Education) It’s hard to know what’s real and what’s fake on the internet these days. So when I stumbled on a Twitter post that claimed automobile drivers in Slovenia were forbidden from pumping gas without a COVID certificate, I was skeptical.

All the tweets I found were screenshots of a single story published by TV N1 Zagreb, a news partner of CNN. Attempts to find information of this alleged regulation on the Slovenian government’s website didn’t go well (I don’t read Slovenian!), but I was able to find another story published by a separate Slovenian news organization.

Unfortunately, it appears the story is not a Twitter hoax. TV N1 Zagreb offers these details.

“Most petrol suppliers, including the Ljubljana-based Petrol, which operates the largest number of petrol stations in the country, are rigorously applying the new restrictions, adopted on Saturday, activating fuel dispensers only after a driver presents a certificate showing that they have recovered from COVID-19, have been vaccinated, or have tested negative,” the news network reports.

TV N1 Zagreb reports that the new rule will not impact drivers making international trips.

Sad as it may be, you read the above lines correctly. To pump gas, drivers evidently must show proof that they “have recovered from COVID-19, have been vaccinated, or have tested negative.”

TV N1 reports that the new rules were implemented due to rising case numbers. Like many countries around the world—and some US states—Slovenia has seen its fall 2021 case numbers exceed those of 2020, even though a majority of its population is vaccinated.

And just like many other countries around the world, politicians are resorting to unseemly tactics to coerce individuals into taking their desired actions. In 2020, it was lockdowns. In 2021, it’s vaccine mandates.

Indeed, in some ways skepticism of the veracity of the story was completely unjustified. After all, telling citizens they can’t fill their cars with gas if they don’t present their COVID papers is little different than telling them they can’t eat in a restaurant, workout in the gym, or even go to work if they don’t take the state’s preferred steps.

In fact, Slovenia’s actions—as authoritarian and ill-advised as they may be—are actually less draconian in at least one important way than those in the United States. The Slovenian government, quite rationally, allows for evidence of previous COVID infection to qualify as being immunized, unlike many orders in the United States.

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