barmar, on 2021-December-21, 09:36, said:
That's a reasonable attitude.
The problem we have these days is that there's so much corruption at high levels of politics that many people have become overly cynical, and don't trust anyone in a position of power. So someone like Faucci, who has been at the forefront of fighting epidemics for decades, is assumed to be in cahoots with the drug companies.
And there's not much you can do to convince them -- anyone who tries is either gullible and fell for it, or is part of the conspiracy. That's the problem with conspiracy theories, you can't "prove" that they're wrong; at best you can show that they're unlikely, but that's not good enough.
For better or worse, societies evolve. Calculus in high school simply did not exist in St. Paul in the 1950s, not in the public schools anyway, and I knew a few kids from private schools so I don't think it did there either. Otoh, I had a driver's license three months after my fifteenth birthday, and bought a car that I chose going from lot to lot on my own and paid for with money of my own, a month later. The world was just different.
Here is a "conspiracy theory" from back then that I have mentioned earlier. I was eleven when the Korean War started. I read about it every day in the paper. In discussion, my mother explained that all wars are fought over oil. I told her that I didn't think there was any oil in Korea. She explained that if we were fighting there, there was oil there. But she wasn't part of a nationwide group, it was just her own weird idea. And maybe not all that weird, I have always assumed we would not give a hoot about what Saudi Arabia did or did not do if they were not sitting on oil fields.
Society is screwed up. Becky was talking (by phone, to a family member) with someone who has not been vaccinated, now is not feeling well, and has not been feeling well for six weeks, and will not go to a doctor because she believes, well, I am not sure what she believes, something about us all being part of a cosmic universe that takes care of us if we just let it. I suggested Becky call her back and not try to change her mind in any large way but to speak about Becky's worries and maybe convince her to see a doctor to alleviate her, that is, Becky's, worries. She tried, no luck.
I don't get it. Part of life is and always has been to make the best choice in an uncertain world. Some choices are tough, vaccines are clear-cut. I get tired of saying I don't get it, but I don't get it.