Introduction
About a month ago, or so an extension of the 2019 COVID19
pandemic entered the US. I call it an extension at this point only because it’s
got people triggered to near early pandemic behavior despite current reports
from South Africa and the US showing that this new variant, dubbed “Omicron,” is
milder onto the scene [1][2][3]. Although nothing has changed
in my now heavily appreciated hometown in the country, it’s my current city
that continues living in dystopia. This applies for many other cities around
the country as they adopt the next round of draconian measures. Many places
have seen mask mandates come back into place, and many employers continue to
press their employees on vaccines. Lastly, another dose of the vaccines has
seen a massive revival in importance, and social pressure to consider another
round of lockdowns have been proposed by politicians and commoners alike.
What’s driving dystopia?
It’s the testing. Over in my current city, there’s a social
urgency to test ourselves for COVID whether or not we have symptoms in the
process. We have people who test themselves weekly even though they are
vaccinated and boosted, and wear their mask, and obey the federales. Some of
them have even admitted to testing themselves every single day, what madness!
So how does this translate to dystopian policies?
It’s been a point of contention since the beginning of the
pandemic about what dataset we need to pay attention to, the current datasets
are:
-Cases
-Hospitalizations
-Deaths
Depending on your field, you will emphasize these sets in a
different order, but generally, the lines of have fallen along this trend from
my observations:
The key here is that a majority of the general public as
well as the majority of public health officials emphasize the cases as the
primary dataset. The next piece falls on the mid-level managers who are in
charge of changing operating procedures at their workplace. So, to try and
simplify it all together in a way that makes sense to me at least…
Now, the neuroticism and self-inflicted misery of places
like my current city wouldn’t be so bad if they weren’t so arrogant or
self-righteous about it. The number of times I have heard my co-workers talk
about the “stupidity” of their neighboring counties and states is astonishing.
In more than one case, I’ve asked my co-workers about their thoughts on how the
rest of the surrounding area has moved on from the COVID era.
In response, they call these people: stupid, dumb,
hillbillies, confederate flag carriers, and more. Some of my co-workers live in
these areas and still hold this view. Others acknowledge that they were able to
get COVID related resources such as cold-medicine and tests from these places
and yet still call them dumb. The lack of self-awareness is unsettling
sometimes. While this is going on, these people are tripping over themselves,
blocking traffic, causing long wait times for tests results, and causing
shortages of cold-medication and COVID tests in our area, because they’re “smart.”
If this is what it means to be “smart,” to walk outside alone
with a mask, to sit in a shop by yourself with a mask on, to drive in your car
alone with a mask, to refuse to take an order or let someone pay without a
mask, and more.
Is it smart to constantly test yourself when you’re ok and
the disease is mild? Is it smart to blindly believe anyone with a PhD or MD just
because they’re on your favorite news station? Is it smart to yell at someone without
a mask when you’re not wearing one yourself? Is it smart to advocate for mask
mandates when you always take off your mask when alone? Is it smart to watch
live streams of your favorite place where people clearly have masks on and then
tape a sign to the door telling people to put a mask on? Is it smart to take a
booster if it was never modified for the disease at hand? Is it smart to watch
co-workers slog through work on the day of their booster and think it’s just
normal? Is it smart to watch a young, healthy woman take a 4-day leave of
absence because of a booster reaction and think to yourself that it just happens
sometimes? Is it smart to watch vaccinated and unvaccinated people alike get
sick around you and still think that the vaccines are highly effective or
effective?
All these things I have seen and heard in one of the wealthiest
and most-educated counties in all of America, and furthermore, at a workplace
with high levels of Master’s and doctoral degree holders. If this is what it
means to be smart, then I would rather be stupid, dumb, dense, a maroon, an
oaf, a dunce, and even a half-wit. At least the so-called “stupid” learned to
move on with their lives and stop the dystopian nightmare that has become COVID-era
culture.
I think from this point forward I’m going to treat the words smart and educated as insults, and tell people that I’m not smart, but that I’m “gleefully stupid.”
References
[1] Matthews
S. Omicron may be nearly 100 TIMES less deadly than Delta, scientists say
[Internet]. Mail Online. 2022 [cited 2022 Jan 9]. Available from:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10358361/Omicron-nearly-100-TIMES-deadly-seasonal-flu-scientists-believe.html.
[2] Chutel L. Illnesses tied to the Omicron
variant may be milder, a preliminary study suggests. The New York Times
[Internet]. 2021 Dec 14 [cited 2022 Jan 9]; Available from:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/14/world/africa/omicron-south-africa-study.html.
[3] UC Davis Health. Omicron: 10 things to know about the very contagious COVID-19 variant [Internet]. newsroom. [cited 2022 Jan 9]. Available from: https://health.ucdavis.edu/newsroom/news/headlines/omicron-10-things-to-know-about-the-very-contagious-covid-19-variant/2022/01.
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