The times call for some honest talk lest the number of unnecessary deaths related to Covid-19 climbs out of control.
This is especially the case for people who believe in God.
If you do, it would be understandable if you are struggling to hold on to your faith. I certainly am.
When bad things happen, doubts about God are natural, if not unavoidable, and while bad things continue to happen to us personally, we cannot escape what is happening to us collectively, and therein lies the rub for me.
The degree of selfishness we are seeing in America among the unvaccinated is enough to make anyone wonder where God is.
I find myself going a step further in wondering why God didn’t do a better job at creating human beings in the first place.
“The stupid” is a phrase that has caught on that seems to be an appropriate description of the reasons unvaccinated Americans are giving to explain why they are doing what they are doing.
It’s a perfect way, for example, to describe the claim that the government is inserting tracking devices in people when they are vaccinated.
So, too, with the notion that Covid-19 is a ruse the government is using to take away our freedoms.
I cannot think of a better way to describe the argument that even if Covid-19 is real, its dangers are overblown than “the stupid” in light of the fact that more than 36 million Americans have been infected, nearly 630,000 have died, and worldwide over 4 million have lost their lives.
I would say the same thing about the unvaccinated continuing to support Republican Governors like DeSantis of Florida and Ducey of Arizona who have been vaccinated themselves, but not only refuse to reinstate mask mandates, but to forbid city and school leaders across their states from doing so on their own.
Most of us know someone who is unvaccinated so you know what I’m talking about. I had a friend tell me he wasn’t going to get vaccinated because, in his words, “I don’t want that sh*t in me.”
He couldn’t tell me specifically what the “sh*t” was, but he was sure it was bad.
I would say that his reasoning, if you can call it that, fits comfortably into the category of “the stupid.”
But refusing to get vaccinated is not the only reason the term “the stupid” has earned currency in the conflict over public safety as the virus continues to kill people.
Resurrection School in Lansing, Michigan says that even mask mandates should be rejected because they hide the fact that people are made in the image of God.
For real. The school filed a lawsuit last week before the U. S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals that the state’s mask mandate that has now been rescinded violated the Catholic doctrine that human beings are made in the image of God. “A mask shields our humanity,” the school’s attorney wrote, “and because God created us in His image, we are masking that image.”
As we often say, you can’t make this stuff up.
Like the Church of Glad Tidings in Yuba City, California that presented disgraced Trump national security advisor General Michael Flynn with a Woodland Camo AR-15 rifle during Sunday morning worship service a couple of weeks ago. Flynn responded by saying, “Maybe I’ll find somebody in Washington, D.C.,” to which the congregation burst into laughter and applause.
A word of caution here. Avoid looking the church up on the internet and especially the husband and wife senior pastors because they take the term “jackleg” and the category “the stupid” to a whole new unimaginable level.
All you need to know is that it is a safe bet to assume the leaders and members of Glad Tidings Church won’t be wearing masks anytime soon, practicing social distancing, or promoting vaccinations.
But in the midst of all these examples that cause sane people to shake their heads, there is another side of the ledger.
There are thousands of healthcare professionals who put their lives at risk early in the pandemic and are doing so again even though this time around they know they are being forced to do so because of “the stupid” that seems to be controlling people’s actions.
There are millions of us who are putting on masks again and avoiding close contact with crowds because of “the stupid.”
There a thousands of business owners now scrambling once again to find a balance between keeping people safe and staying in business for the same reason, and school officials trying to figure out what to do to keep students, teachers, and staff safe.
I suggest the fundamental truth today is that the unvaccinated are being treated better than they deserve to be because most vaccinated people are good and decent and care about the health and well-being of others and not just themselves, and they are the reason I don’t give up on believing in God.
Their goodness and decency come from somewhere. Maybe it’s pure chance, but I choose to call the source of both “God.”
And that belief plays a primary role in keeping me from losing all hope in and for humanity.
If I believed human beings are all we got, that we created God rather than God creating us, I am sure I would be overcome by the persistence of “the stupid” and give in to despair.
Every day there are stories of things people have said and done that make you wonder if “the stupid” is as much a pandemic as the virus is.
But every day there are also stories of things people have said and done that leave no doubt that goodness and mercy and decency and tolerance and kindness and compassion exist in abundance.
It finally comes down to making a personal choice about which group to focus on. Believing in a good God is what leads me to choose to see the good being stronger than the bad.
Of course, there is sufficient reason to go with “the stupid” and give up on God altogether, but at this point I’m sticking with God.
It’s my way of saying I don’t believe “the stupid” will have the last word, and that helps me to want to get up every morning and make the most of the day I have been given.
Jan,
I certainly think that “we” the sane outnumber “they” the stupid, yet I worry that the tactics that have influenced the latter are sinister enough — and seductive enough — to lead more and more “lambs to the slaughter”! In plain English, as you proclaim, the lies and distortions are killing thousands of people!
Please continue your valiant efforts to call-out the evil cowards among us!!
Bill Blackwell
You and I and all of us, Bill, must keep calling these people out. Today’s comments by the current mayor of Boston comparing NYC’s mask mandate to the days of slavery prove that “the stupid” is color blind.
Hi Jan,
As a thouroughly vaccinated UK citizen, I wonder if your unvaccinated friend ever served in any of your country’s armed services. If so, he wouldn’t have been given any choice in the matter, as I’ve seen You Tube videos (in my country as well as yours!) of would-be Marines and Airmen having to run gautlets of doctors and nurses. Or, if he didn’t serve, perhaps whenever he had a filling at the dentist he was willing to undergo the procedure without anaesthetic?
For my part, I’ve lost count of the number of times doctors and nurses have injected medicinal fluids of one kind or another into my body, but somehow I’m still alive and kicking!!
Miracle of miracles. Nigel, you’re alive in spite of vaccinations and other nefarious shots you’ve received from government spies masquerading as healthcare professionals. I guess I can say the same thing about living here in America. Both of us are very lucky, indeed, not to have been “put down” already.
Jan, I was not allowed to call people stupid when I was young. It remains difficult for me to do so. But the selfish and dangerous behavior that you’ve addressed by anti-vaccination folks are infuriating at best. Maybe there is no better description than “stupid.”
I called their words and actions “the stupid,” Wilbur. Whether they are I will leave to someone else’s judgment. That said, my friend, you need to overcome the superego finger you believe is point at you when you say something you were told as a child you shouldn’t say. There are in fact stupid people in the world and saying so is a good thing because stupidity leads to some very bad things.
I painted a large sign for my yard. It reads. ” We are vaccinated for you. Please vaccinate for us” That said, if I was a worn down ICU nurse in 2020/ 21, and a unvaccinated ” the stupid”came into my unit, I would want to refuse them care . Hopefully, hospital admin will start addressing ways to manage The stupid b/c this is not ethically or economically sustainable . Not sure how God would feel about my intolerance or lack of compassion, but I really don’t give a s**t anymore.
Dixcy, I have never believed God expected us to be nice all the time. That’s the definition of sentimental religion that is filled with platitudes but not worth an earthly thing. You have always been better than anyone who believes “the stupid” makes sense and always will be.
Jan,
I’m at a loss to understand the workings of the minds of the willfully unvaccinated. I understand how your approach gives you motivation to get up every morning to continue the battle. I, on the other hand, can’t ignore that the “Author of all things” must show that “the stupid” are part of that creation. If there is, as you say, the “Good God,” there must be a “Bad One,” too. Are they one and the same? If God is All Knowing, he can’t be Good; if he is Good, he can’t be All Knowing. And, yes, I have stolen that formulation from some philosopher, whose name escapes me at the moment.
At any rate, in spite of my feeble ability to understand the mental processes of “The Stupid,” I, too, continue to rise into each new day with hope and the knowledge that there are many who see the value in concern for others and follow sane protocols.
Cheerz!
Gene
Gene, I appreciate your thoughtful response. I think Epicurus was the first to formulate the statement about God, only he put in in term of goodness and power. If God is all good, he cannot be all powerful; if God is all powerful, he cannot be all good. He was addressing the issue of evil. Philosopher David Hume picks up on the theme. The problem of evil is the primary question religion has never answered adequately, but for me the presence of good is the primary question atheism has not answered adequately either. That is why I understand both believing in God and not believing in God to be choices beyond the possibility of proof. That said, the presence of “the stupid” is a fixable problem. It’s called knowledge. In that sense, then, words and actions that fit the category of “the stupid” are choices as well. We may not know why people make that choice, but we do know they are responsible for it. Many thanks for the discussion.
Jan,
Thanks for the enlightening information about God. I agree that Atheism does no better in the explanation. Let’s all keep trying to fix “stupid.” Cheerz!
Gene
Yes, absolutely.
It’s a hard time for people who try to understand others. The lizard brain is off and running in a segment of our population. James Baldwin once stated that there is a segment of American who would rather burn the country down than to let historically marginalized people in. He was right. And we’re witnessing it through the refusal to mask, get vaccinated, and to acknowledge history. They would rather burn it down than live in a non-white-washed version where they feel like they hold all the cards.
The Baldwin quote says it all. Thank you, Luke.