Advocatus Diaboli, have you ever once made a post which is on topic, rather than always going on these odd tangents of yours.
The issue I raised was one of morality, and I think the moral action of the CDC is higher than the way Mind would like to conduct the pandemic response.
Mind by his own account is a libertarian. This is a philosophy of wanting the highest freedom for the individual. So for a libertarian, it is a much hated imposition to be told to wear masks, to be told to socially distance, to be coerced into vaccination, to be placed under lockdown, and so forth. Even if these things save the lives of the elderly and vulnerable, libertarians would likely be against them, because libertarians put their individual rights first. Libertarianism is really an opposite of socialism, as in the latter is it the good of the community that is paramount, whereas libertarians are all about the good of the individual.
So knowing Mind's philosophy, and having read what he has stated many times about the elderly in this pandemic, I can see why he fails to understand the CDC's actions. The CDC are trying to look after the whole community, especially the vulnerable. Once you understand that, you can understand why the CDC have certain policies, such as keeping quiet about mild or rare vaccine side effects, because publicising them can create vaccine hesitancy, which then kills more people than the side effects do. You have to appreciate the moral angle to understand the road taken.
I should clarify why this is a moral issue: if it were purely a scientific issue, then the CDC should publicise all data, include any rare adverse effects of the vaccines. Science after all is about uncovering the truth. But because it is also a moral issue, about trying to save lives, that can come into conflict with the scientific issue, because publicising rare vaccine side effects actually can result in people dying as a result of vaccine hesitancy.
So you often need to understand the morality of saving lives to understand why government agencies took certain actions.
If you have any intelligent comments to add about this moral question and philosophy, then please post. Just try not to go off on some pedantic tangent again.
Edited by Hip, 31 January 2024 - 02:47 AM.