ALAN writes:
In the 1946 motion picture “Little Giant,” Lou Costello’s character is a vacuum cleaner salesman. His first attempt at salesmanship is met by a woman who says NO and slams the door in his face even before he can recite a sales pitch.
That, I submit, should be the model for all of us who have no intention of taking an alleged “vaccine” for an alleged “virus” whose existence has never been demonstrated. It is a metaphor for how we should respond to the Militant Vaccine Pushers.
That Americans today are morally and philosophically bankrupt is nicely illustrated by the zeal with which they search for “reasons” not to accept any such “vaccines”—those “reasons” being exemptions stamped “Valid” by Authority A, B, C, X, Y, or Z. Citing “exemptions” for alleged health reasons, alleged religious beliefs, or any other alleged excuse, or because of the alleged “dangerousness” of such alleged “vaccines” is moral cowardice on the part of people who hate responsibility. It is as if they hate moral agency more than anything else in life.
My mommy or daddy says it is okay for me not to be vaccinated, or:
My doctor says it is okay for me not to be vaccinated, or:
My employer says it is okay for me not to be vaccinated, or:
My clergyman says it is okay for me not to be vaccinated.
Such people are a population of infants. They have no comprehension of what is meant by individual rights, the sovereignty of an individual over his body, his health, and his life, limitations on government power, or limitations on the lust for power by do-gooders.
Because an individual says NO is all the reason he needs not to buy a vacuum cleaner or accept a vaccine. Any vacuum cleaner salesman in the 1940s who did not take no for an answer and attempted instead to bribe or coerce a housewife into buying a vacuum cleaner would have been promptly censured and fired by his employer. Any vacuum cleaner company who claimed no liability if their machines did not work or blew up would have been denounced by reputable companies. (more…)