If this was the Plague where 25% of the population was wiped out and every family had buried at least one close relative, would you need the government to tell you this was something you needed to take seriously? Or would you just know it was serious business because every day it seemed like someone you knew was now dead?
I'm just repeating myself here. You seem to be writing a narrative that applies to things that happened before but having nothing to do with this one.
Offering fries and a burger in exchange for getting vacinnated is the level vaccine encouragement should be at in general. It's not the "you're not allowed to have a job or leave your house" crap that was being pushed before.
Why is "vaccine encouragement" necessary at all for this thing? People who are afraid of it are vaccinated; people who aren't, aren't.
If 6 billion people were dead and entire US cities were wiped out, "vaccine encouragement" wouldn't be necessary because people would be killing each other for a chance to get a couple spots ahead in the line.
Any "narrative" beyond that is something I didn't say.
If the battle you're fighting is "well at least they're only spending billions of taxpayer dollars to vaccinate every American against a virus most won't even know they got instead of throwing the unvaccinated on a desert island" then you are correct that I have no interest in fighting that battle.
If this was the Plague where 25% of the population was wiped out and every family had buried at least one close relative, would you need the government to tell you this was something you needed to take seriously? Or would you just know it was serious business because every day it seemed like someone you knew was now dead?
I'm just repeating myself here. You seem to be writing a narrative that applies to things that happened before but having nothing to do with this one.
Offering fries and a burger in exchange for getting vacinnated is the level vaccine encouragement should be at in general. It's not the "you're not allowed to have a job or leave your house" crap that was being pushed before.
Why is "vaccine encouragement" necessary at all for this thing? People who are afraid of it are vaccinated; people who aren't, aren't.
If 6 billion people were dead and entire US cities were wiped out, "vaccine encouragement" wouldn't be necessary because people would be killing each other for a chance to get a couple spots ahead in the line.
Any "narrative" beyond that is something I didn't say.
Once again repeating the narrative for a totally different battle. Ok, good luck.
If the battle you're fighting is "well at least they're only spending billions of taxpayer dollars to vaccinate every American against a virus most won't even know they got instead of throwing the unvaccinated on a desert island" then you are correct that I have no interest in fighting that battle.