Post
by Brian Peacock » Sun Aug 15, 2021 9:32 am
One can understand that view only if one believes, at some basic level, that everything that happens to you in life is solely your responsibility or the result of one's own action, or lack thereof. 100 years ago it was not uncommon for people to believe that a congenital disability was punishment for sin. We also saw how Fred Phelps et al blamed the 9/11 outrage on manly bum sex. It's magical thinking.
When I was a lad a yearly treat was to watch the Grand National steeple chase - and my father would ask each of us to pick a horse before the race and then he'd pop down to the local bookies to put 50p on each horse. My pick, I think it was called Alverston, fell a Becher's Brook and broke it's leg and had to be destroyed. I remember brief background shots of it thrashing around on the ground unable to get up as the race continued. As silly as it seems now, at the time I was consumed with guilt, somehow believing that picking it as 'my horse' had sealed it's fate. In my mind Alverston's death was intimately tied to my action of picking it out of the list. That was childish magical thinking of course, but at that age one's lack of life experiences predisposes you to seeing yourself as the reference point for all things.
I think anti-makders/vaxxers may similarly see themselves as the reference point for all things they experience in life. For one, they're obviously all people who haven't died from the virus - so in some sense a raging pandemic is not something that has effected them. What has effected them is the fallout: the lockdowns, the mandates, the lay-offs, and the other things that have negatively impacted on them and ability to make the kind of choices they want to make. They may also believe that individually each of them is in total control of everything that happens to them, and so the fact that they're not fighting for breath in an ICU is a vindication that they've made the right choices - at least so far. If they believe, on the basis of personal experience, that Covid is something which happens to other people then why should they wear masks or have a vaccine(?) - at the end of the day that's someone else's problem not theirs, and trying to force them to wear a mask or take a vaccine is to remove personal agency from them; to make them do something to mitigate problems that other people are having.
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"It isn't necessary to imagine the world ending in fire or ice.
There are two other possibilities: one is paperwork, and the other is nostalgia."
Frank Zappa
"This is how humanity ends; bickering over the irrelevant."
Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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