I saw something similar on LinkedIn relating snow tires to the jab. The surprising part is the amount of negative feedback the post received. I get the feeling they have greatly exaggerated the number of people that received the jab.
And you know the smoothbrain that came up with this thinks they're oh so clever. Turning on lights to see in the dark is exactly like injecting an experimental drug into your body!
It's a brain dead analogy as are most of these types of analogies. The implicit assumption (and therefore critical flaw in the logic) is that driving with lights on (which is obviously sensible and good) is equivalent to getting the experimental gene therapy (i.e., an unquestionable good in mind of the person expressing the analogy).
We simply disagree that it's a good. All the additional bullshit beyond that is just window dressing around the initially flawed assumption.
I like rolling dice: I have never drove drunk. My fiance was killed in 1995 by a drunk driver.
I have never wore a condom. Been with about 2 dozen women. No children, no std's. No extra payments.
Instead of going with a regional medical care insurance provider I got coverage at the local Catholic hospital that has better surgeons, spends for latest tech, and good pricing.
I saw something similar on LinkedIn relating snow tires to the jab. The surprising part is the amount of negative feedback the post received. I get the feeling they have greatly exaggerated the number of people that received the jab.
And you know the smoothbrain that came up with this thinks they're oh so clever. Turning on lights to see in the dark is exactly like injecting an experimental drug into your body!
It's a brain dead analogy as are most of these types of analogies. The implicit assumption (and therefore critical flaw in the logic) is that driving with lights on (which is obviously sensible and good) is equivalent to getting the experimental gene therapy (i.e., an unquestionable good in mind of the person expressing the analogy).
We simply disagree that it's a good. All the additional bullshit beyond that is just window dressing around the initially flawed assumption.
I'll stop turning on my headlights the moment evidence shows it causes myocarditis and heart attacks. Not quite the same.
Unbelievably moronic arguments
I like rolling dice: I have never drove drunk. My fiance was killed in 1995 by a drunk driver.
I have never wore a condom. Been with about 2 dozen women. No children, no std's. No extra payments.
Instead of going with a regional medical care insurance provider I got coverage at the local Catholic hospital that has better surgeons, spends for latest tech, and good pricing.