05-09-2021, 09:30 PM
|
#2409
|
|
Be Kind
Join Date: Apr 2020
Drives: 2020 86
Location: MD
Posts: 1,130
Thanks: 5,622
Thanked 1,324 Times in 637 Posts
Mentioned: 7 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by AnalogMan
It's funny in a not at all 'funny' way when people conflate and confuse 'freedom' with choosing to not get vaccinated.
As I said before, this is not about someone's personal 'freedom'. Not getting vaccinated is not a ‘personal choice’. A personal choice is something that only affects you alone and no one else. Anyone can do whatever they want in a vacuum, but no one has the right to harm other people. Not getting vaccinated puts many people at risk of illness or death.
It’s like the difference between choosing to drive your car into a wall vs. driving the wrong way in the oncoming lane on the highway. The former might be your own personal choice to kill yourself. But the latter immorally puts many people at great risk against their will.
If you saw someone going the wrong way coming at you in your lane on the highway, you probably wouldn't cheer them on for exercising their personal 'freedom’. Not getting vaccinated forces a risk on anyone that a non-vaccinated person comes in contact with.
Unfortunately, this kind of thinking is why this country will never be rid of the coronavirus. Our future will be one of pandemic spikes and waves, variants coming and going, and fluctuating effectiveness of vaccines. Similar to what happens now with the flu, except that COVID carries a much higher risk of serious long-term health complications, and death.
As a society, we have accepted a high level of disease burden, and death, as being OK (see: Florida). Which I think says a lot about our morality, ethics, intelligence, and simply humanity. Or lack of it.
|
Nothing anyone does affects no one but themselves. I'd start there.
|
|
|