🦌 A free hunting license.
⚾ A ticket to a baseball game.
💰 A chance at winning $1 million.

Here are all the strange ways seven US states are incentivizing residents to get vaccinated against COVID-19. 💉

businessinsider.com/vaccine-incent…
Effective through May 31, any Maine resident who gets vaccinated is eligible for "Your Shot to Get Outdoors," which allows residents to choose between a free fishing license, a free hunting license, and more.

businessinsider.com/vaccine-incent… An image shows a person fis...
Using money from Biden's stimulus package, Ohio @GovMikeDeWine will offer five $1 million prizes to vaccinated adults.

Any vaccinated Ohio resident, 18 years and older, is eligible for the $1 million lotteries.

businessinsider.com/vaccine-incent… A graphic showing a quote f...
.@NYGovCuomo announced that the Yankees and Mets will give free tickets to fans who get their shot at the ballparks before games.

New Yorkers can also get vaccinated under the giant blue whale at NYC's @AMNH.

businessinsider.com/vaccine-incent… Alt: A picture of the giant...
Connecticut is launching the #CTDrinksOnUs campaign, where restaurants will offer free drinks to customers who bring in their vaccination cards. A food purchase is also required.

This program will run from May 19 to 31.

In Illinois, Chicago is launching the "Vax Pass," which will allow vaccinated individuals to get exclusive deals at summer concerts, and it could also extend to barbershops and salons.

businessinsider.com/vaccine-incent…  A graphic shows a quote fr...
New Jersey @GovMurphy launched the "Shot and a Beer" program for all residents (aged 21+, of course). It allows any New Jerseyan to bring their vaccination card to a participating brewery for a free beer.

The program is active for the month of May.

Kentucky is partnering with Kroger and Walmart to give every vaccinated adult a free Cash Ball 225 ticket, where a top prize is $225,000.

Once vaccinated, residents get a coupon that can be redeemed at any Kentucky Lottery retailer through June 1.

businessinsider.com/vaccine-incent… An image of a person outsid...
Subscribe to our newsletter, Insider Weekly, to get a selection of our top stories from the past week straight to your inbox.

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More from @thisisinsider

16 May
Nearly 200 times in 2021 alone, elected officials and their staffers have had to draft remarks memorializing the loss of some 15,000 lives to gun violence.

The people who must come up with these words are running out of things to say.

businessinsider.com/gun-violence-m…
In politics, the phrase “thoughts and prayers” dates back at least to President Harry Truman.

As an expression of public grief, specifically following a mass shooting, the phrase dates back at least 22 years to the Columbine shooting.

businessinsider.com/gun-violence-m… Image
Former President @BarackObama wasn't afraid to deploy the expression. "I'm sure I wrote it several times for him in his first term," said Cody Keenan, Obama’s speechwriter.

Obama also used it in his second term.

businessinsider.com/gun-violence-m…  A 2016 tweet from Presiden...
Read 11 tweets
16 May
Alireza Fazeli Monfared, 20, wanted to live as a free gay man in the West.

His family in Iran beheaded him days before his dream came true, activists say.

insider.com/alireza-fazeli…
Monfared was murdered on May 4 after his half-brother learned about his sexuality, the LGBTQ network @6rangiran told Insider.

He was seeking an exemption from Iran's compulsory military service so that he could claim asylum elsewhere.

insider.com/alireza-fazeli… A graphic shows an excerpt ...
Monfared was an Arab-Iranian from Ahvaz, the capital of Iran's Khuzestan province. His family was wealthy, and his Instagram page shows a love of designer fashion.

He also enjoyed experimenting with makeup but felt unable to do so in public.

insider.com/alireza-fazeli…
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15 May
Jerusalem's Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound, known to the Jewish people as Temple Mount, is at the heart of escalating violence between Israelis and Palestinians.

This is why one of the world’s holiest religious sites is the most contentious place in Jerusalem.

Al-Aqsa Compound is in Jerusalem's Old City. Israel considers the entire city as its capital.

Palestinians consider East Jerusalem as the future capital of the independent state that they seek. The site is the third holiest place of worship for Muslims.

It is believed the Prophet Muhammad ascended into heaven from the site. But access is especially hard for the 3 million Palestinians who live in the occupied West Bank.

Read 8 tweets
14 May
The way the South Asian diaspora has been grieving loved ones has changed amid the pandemic.

A once collectivist experience has been replaced with isolation and anxiety, having unique effects on how they view their cultural identities.

insider.com/covid19-pandem… A photo of a man conducting...
Pre-pandemic, South Asians often relied on huge support systems of family and friends to look after each other. And in times of grief, they would open their homes to mourn together through customs and prayer.

insider.com/covid19-pandem…
For Saurav Dutt, to have the honor of Hindu death rituals taken away by the pandemic felt like he was "cheating the person who has passed away of the ritual that they deserved."

Read 10 tweets
18 Apr
Snapchat has become an on-demand delivery app for teens to score illegal drugs. Some kids are dying after taking one pill. 👇 businessinsider.com/snapchat-insta…
Devin Norring, a 19-year-old from Minnesota, died last year after taking a pill filled with fentanyl — a highly addictive opioid — that he arranged to buy via Snapchat.

Devin's mom, Bridgette Norring, believes there are "thousands of families like ours."

businessinsider.com/snapchat-insta… A quote from Lisa Smittcamp, the district attorney in Fresno
Instagram accounts touting the availability of pills including Xanax often list a Snapchat handle for arranging deals.

Snapchat's mapping location feature is an ideal tool for buyers and sellers to find each other, experts and law enforcement say.

businessinsider.com/snapchat-insta… A screenshot of the article linked in the first tweet. It re
Read 8 tweets
17 Apr
There have been 147 mass shootings in the US since New Years Day, according to data published by the Gun Violence Archive (@GunDeaths).

2020 saw 86 such incidents between January 1 and April 16.

insider.com/mass-shootings…
Atlanta, Boulder, Orange, Indianapolis.

Recently, news coverage of one deadly shooting has often been interrupted by breaking news of another.

insider.com/shooting-at-in…
Research shows the timing of these back-to-back shootings likely isn’t a coincidence.

The more people see violence, the more it becomes normalized.

insider.com/mass-shootings…
Read 11 tweets

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