What people want to inject into their bodies is none of my business (and what I inject into mine should be none of theirs, but alas the latter was not self-explanatory during covid...) — Tzeentch
Also, at what point do the people who voluntarily partake in unhealthy lifestyles get to take responsibility? — Tzeentch
The health care sector simply isn't organized like this. Usually made up of either private enterprises or controlled by municipal authorities there doesn't exist a centralized command that a nation would need. — ssu
Why was the realisation that your actions affect others such a problem during COVID? — Echarmion
Is not refusing a vaccine also "partaking in an unhealthy lifestyle"? — Echarmion
What is also remarkable, I think, is that both vaccination "camps" adopted a rhetoric that displayed the other side as a threat to their health and freedoms. — Echarmion
Our western societies seemed ill equipped to deal with the basic tension of individualism vs collective actions. — Echarmion
The vaccines weren't designed to stop the spread. That story used to be perpetuated by politicians who tried to guilt trip their citizens into taking a vaccine that they didn't trust. — Tzeentch
No, of course not. Normal, healthy people didn't have anything to fear from covid. — Tzeentch
The decision to take a vaccine is bound to a human right of bodily autonomy.
To me, that means something. If that means nothing to you, then I have nothing to say to you. — Tzeentch
Also, the idea that not taking the vaccine somehow turned one into a health hazard is completely made up. — Tzeentch
Ill-equipped in the sense that it allowed mass hysteria to take hold for several years. — Tzeentch
Unfortunately for some people, they found out too late that they weren't in fact healthy. — Echarmion
But this cuts to the heart of the issue: that this is somehow a conflict between the "healthy" and the "unhealthy" rather than a communal problem requiring a communal solution. — Echarmion
Sure. But does that mean we can ignore whether someone is vaccinated (not just against COVID)? — Echarmion
Well as I indicated I think the framing was bad. It seemed to be the framing that came naturally to everyone though. — Echarmion
Very similar to how the US gun control debate ended up. — Echarmion
Which is why I stated specifically we should go easy on this group during the first year. Give them a year to get their shit together. If they don't, then that's their responsibility and not mine. — Tzeentch
No one gave a fuck about healthy people who did not want to take vaccines - at no point during the hysteria were their concerns taken seriously, so I don't buy any allusions to community.
It was 'us vs. them', and healthy people were on the receiving end of it. — Tzeentch
There was no community. — Tzeentch
Yes. Vaccines are there for people who feel unsafe to protect them. This is how vaccines have always functioned. It's a personal choice. — Tzeentch
Or simply that the armed forces are an organization where future hypothetical plans have great importance. In every army there are multitude of officers all the time fighting and planning WW3. Operational Plans (OPPLAN) are most important to armies and it's armies are organizations perfected to issue commands and execute them in an coordinated fashion. The best example is this is that the US Army really made a plan to fight a zombie attack (see Counter-Zombie Dominance)! Yes, they say it was for training, but you never know...It might also be a symptom of adopting the business approach to healthcare. Neither the army nor the border guards are set up as a business. We accept that they have to provide a specific result, not just be efficient. — Echarmion
No one gave a fuck about healthy people who did not want to take vaccines - at no point during the hysteria were their concerns taken seriously, so I don't buy any allusions to community.
It was 'us vs. them', and healthy people were on the receiving end of it. Critical voices were silenced, people treated as second class citizens, etc. , European leaders went on national television overtly threatening healthy people who refused the vaccines.
There was no community. It was tyrannical one-way traffic and the damage this has done is enormous. — Tzeentch
So has your hospital learnt as an organization something when the next lethal pandemic hits? — ssu
And those mass shootings are unfortunately quite frequent on the national level. And earthquakes and hurricanes can be anticipated to hit certain places. Yet as you said, usually there's that one disaster coordinator, and likely he or she has some other admin work too.But it's not true that healthcare can't respond to emergencies. Every American hospital has a disaster coordinator and everybody knows what they're supposed to do if there's an industrial or weather disaster, or the ubiquitous mass shooting. — frank
Yet as you said, usually there's that one disaster coordinator, and likely he or she has some other admin work too. — ssu
But you did mention quite a lot of issues that make our society far more prepared to any other era. — ssu
It is pathetic that these sheep continue to double down on it all, despite the fact Coronavirus-2020-hindsight has proven lockdown and vaccine policy to be an absolute disaster. It is a case of too much pride and zero dignity. — Merkwurdichliebe
Obviously if you call someone an undignified, prideful sheep they'll not make a very great effort to second guess their choices. They'll just label you an anti vax conspiracy nutjob and ignore you. — Echarmion
Pathetic — Merkwurdichliebe
Is what I call people that summarily declare large amounts of other people essentially subhuman — Echarmion
I can safely say that it has changed my outlook on humanity as a whole. Perhaps worst of all is the deafening silence afterwards. As all the lies were exposed and myths dispelled, there is still scarcely a sign of any reflection. — Tzeentch
You say sheep, but I'm more reminded of stampeding wildebeest who don't care whom or what they trample in their blind panic. — Tzeentch
I don't buy that it was some nefarious plot by government to tyrannize citizens. I think the lockdowns were was just an overreaction, and if we had to do it all over again, with the facts we have now, we wouldn't do lockdowns — RogueAI
On one hand there are people in high places who probably felt they should "never waste a good crisis" - people like Schwab, Bill Gates, etc. - they've long had some funny ideas about what the world should look like. There's little hard evidence to implicate these people, but I have no doubt they have major influence on politicians on the national level. Schwab famously called the pandemic a "window of opportunity" to roll out his ideas. At that point, hard evidence or no, I know enough. — Tzeentch
Then there's big pharma, which clearly had perverse incentives to contribute to the media storm, and did so on a gigantic scale. — Tzeentch
[...] pandemic-era emergency declarations bar the vaccine injured from suing vaccine manufacturers in civil court. Those with a COVID-19 vaccine injury are also prohibited from pursuing compensation through the standard Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP)
CICP is designed to provide compensation to individuals who suffer serious injuries as a direct result of the administration of certain countermeasures, such as vaccines, drugs, or medical devices, used to respond to public health emergencies. It covers injuries resulting from pandemic vaccines and other countermeasures.
VICP, on the other hand, specifically focuses on compensating individuals who experience injuries or adverse reactions caused by vaccines covered under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. This program primarily deals with routine childhood vaccines.
Finally there are politicians on the national level, who probably realized at some point that they had made a grave error, but did not want to take the fall politically, and instead doubled down on the narrative. — Tzeentch
The people themselves are simply not equipped to deal with this kind of fuckery. Under normal circumstances people are reasonably capable of critical thought, but not when the information landscape is thoroughly poisoned on this scale, from places of authority no less (WHO, national governments, etc.). — Tzeentch
A perfect storm of all the worst elements of humanity — Tzeentch
We were able to see just how many people (the vast overwhelming majority of people) are willing to throw away their basic rights simply because they are told to. We also saw how they will defend their choice to abandon their basic rights with the weakest, flimsiest bullshit, and then go on to indiscriminately impose the same upon everyone else.
It is pathetic that these sheep continue to double down on it all, despite the fact Coronavirus-2020-hindsight has proven lockdown and vaccine policy to be an absolute disaster. It is a case of too much pride and zero dignity. — Merkwurdichliebe
maybe this is true if you've been predisposed from the jump to leap to this conclusion. In actual fact, all it reeks of in hindsight is more-than-initially-assumed incompetence. Which is, let's face it, the norm. There is no such thing as a competent government, and least of all when it comes to public health. We don't need to invoke any intent to get the results we got.wreak of coordinated corruption more and more as time passes. — Merkwurdichliebe
You also can't (No, you can't) be sure that those public health protocols didn't ensure a far-less intense negative outcome from the pandemic than without. — AmadeusD
people in high places [...] Schwab, Bill Gates [...] big pharma [...] politicians on the national level [...] WHO, national governments — Tzeentch
I have no doubt they have major influence [...] people themselves are simply not equipped to deal with this kind of fuckery — Tzeentch
Too little hard evidence is what makes it all so murky. That's what gives the herd the right to deem anything that does not conform to the official narrative as wackadoodle conspiracy theory. — Merkwurdichliebe
s just...I can't stop thinking about how the process of law was so rapidly abandoned as the fundamental liberties of citizens in "so-called" free societies were blatantly trampled upon. — Merkwurdichliebe
Regardless of the possibility that it was, in hindsight, right, there’s always a niggling Kantian asking whether that matters — AmadeusD
We don't need to invoke any intent to get the results we got. — AmadeusD
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