I think the latter is possible. And should be the standard. Government thinking we are too stupid to make our own health care decisions ticks me off.Zobel said:
again i'm not sure where you think we disagree.
healthy children and young adults have a much lower risk for poor outcomes. I agree.
however, even considering that, the vaccines lower that risk further. the risk ratio for the vaccine or number needed to treat or whatever you want to is in favor of vaccinating kids. just like it is for the flu shot (another disease which has a low risk to young people). covid vaccines have a lower risk of serious side effects than the flu shot.
I am not defending fauci or any public official. public messaging sucked. but that doesn't mean social media was good.
if we're talking about learning lessons, based on what you're saying then one lesson is that the general public sucks at medical research and has some really confused opinions about vaccines.
i suspect that a lot of this was driven by the idea of a "noble lie" which is the wrong response to the statement above.
what happened
people may not understand -> let's infantilize them and lie if necessary to get the outcome we want
vs what should have happened
people may not understand -> let's improve our communication and have frank, open discource
maybe its a pipe dream, maybe the latter isn't possible. i really don't know, to be honest. social media disinformation is a really powerful obstacle.
And your thinking is not the thinking I have a problem with.
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