bilby said:
Their freedoms are not as important as their health.
More important to whom? To them, they are - though they actually do not believe the exercise of freedom is bad for their health in this case.
Regardless, I was talking about the motivation. It's easy to make a caricature of one's opponents, but better to actually learn what they think, or just realize one does not know.
bilby said:
And even if they are stupid enough to believe that they are, their freedoms are most certainly not more important than my health.
Not to you. Whether the government should give more weight to one or the other is a matter to be assessed on a case by case basis. They're mistaken, but that does not mean that confining them is a proper course of action. By the way, as I mentioned in the previous post, the intelligent guy I have in mind is willing to get infected and isolated for 15 days if needed in order to get immunity and not be a risk to others. That too would be a loss of freedom, but one more bearable to him than a vaccine (he does not reject against vaccines specifically, but medicine in general, processed food, etc. )
bilby said:
People who engage in behaviours that are damaging to others are routinely restrained from doing so by society.
I'm not sure how that is related to my point about their motivation, but that depends on the behavior. People who do not wear face masks and do not vaccinate because of
the flu pre-covid are not restrained. People who engage in behaviors like promoting Christianity, Islam, Marxism, Wokeism, or anti-nuclear activism are also not restrained (well, not in your country anyway), even though those are behaviors that are damaging to others.
bilby said:
That's pretty much the sole purpose of society in the first place.
Society does not have a purpose. Humans, like other monkeys, are social animals. Society just is.
bilby said:
I have zero sympathy for childish individualists who insist that they have the freedom to endanger others. Society has not only the right, but a duty to force such people to behave in a way that doesn't endanger others, or to deprive them of their liberty if tbey persist in their harmful behaviour. That applies equally to those who persist in refusing a vaccination against a deadly disease, as it does to those who persist in driving while drunk.
Well, the guy I mentioned is willing to get infected and isolated. But that aside, generally these people do not believe they are endangering others (yes, they are mistaken, but the motivation is different).
That aside, you say "Society has not only the right, but a duty to force such people to behave in a way that doesn't endanger others, or to deprive them of their liberty if tbey persist in their harmful behaviour. That applies equally to those who persist in refusing a vaccination against a deadly disease, as it does to those who persist in driving while drunk.".
How deadly?
The flu is a deadly disease: it kills many people. Covid is much deadlier. But again, where to draw the line? (at any rate, how about those willing to get infected and isolated to get immunity? )
bilby said:
Fuck their lifestyle. My lifestyle requires that my family don't have their lives endangered by the counter-factual beliefs of spoiled middle class brats whose lives have been so effectively protected against disease that they have no concept of how dangerous it can be.
But he is - and his family, so they are - willing to be infected. They just do not want vaccines. Or medicines. Or processed foods. Etc.
bilby said:
You can tell when someone is "more intelligent", by the fact that they do NOT reject vaccines.
(Or clean water, or food safety standards, or traffic regulations, or any of the thousands of technological and social advances that enable us to live long, healthy, and pleasant lives).[
You can't. There is some correlation for sure, but you can find a lot of highly intelligent people who believe that Jesus walked on water, raised the dead and resurrected. That's even more improbable than their claims about the vaccines, even if the latter are very improbable too. But you can tell he's smart enough to do philosophy reasonably well. That's considerably above average.