Following Damar Hamlin’s Freak Collapse, It’s The Mindlessly Obedient Vaccine Fanatics Who Are Truly Cruel
The perpetual lockdown lovers are also included. “vaccine” Fanatics shouted about it once more “THE SCIENCE” Following Monday’s onfield collapse of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hollin, I noticed the uncanny similarities that these hateful nags share with some people in the newish docuseries “Don’t Pick Up the Phone.”
The Netflix production revisits the shocking series of events entailing a man’s phone calls to dozens of fast food joints wherein he convinced employees to humiliate and sexually violate other staff members and customers in the restaurant. He would typically tell a manager he was either a detective or a police officer, and that he had received complaints that one of the employees had stolen money from a client. He would tell a manager that the accused worker could either consent to a strip-search, which would be administered by the manager or that there would need to be an arrest.
It remains a confounding mystery that those who received the calls willingly followed orders to perform cavity searches on coworkers right there in the restaurant, with no proof that they were talking to legit law enforcement — obviously he wasn’t — and no hesitation as to whether it felt wrong. One theory that was suggested by a psychologist who was interviewed for the program was that the phenomenon was reconstructed in 1960s by Stanley Milgram, a social scientist. In a series of experiments, Milgram instructed participants to quiz actors who were hooked up to a shock machine, and each time an actor answered a question wrongly, the participant was to administer a painful zap (which wasn’t real — but the participants thought it was).
“Stark authority was pitted against the subjects’ strongest moral imperatives against hurting others, and, with the subjects’ ears ringing with the screams of the victims, authority won more often than not,” Milgram wrote. He concluded that “the extreme willingness of adults to go to almost any lengths on the command of an authority constitutes the chief finding of the study and the fact most urgently demanding explanation.”
In essence, many people, maybe even most, tend to obey self-proclaimed authority, even when what they’re instructed to do contradicts their natural impulses and dispositions. It’s the exact behavior leftists engaged in Monday night when anyone pondered aloud whether Hamlin’s freak collapse was perhaps a side effect of having received a Covid shot.
The Washington Post: “The inevitable, grotesque effort to blame vaccines for Damar Hamlin’s collapse”
Vice: “Far-Right Trolls Are Already Spreading Anti-Vax Conspiracies About Damar Hamlin”
Salon: “Right-wingers use NFL player’s collapse to push anti-vax conspiracy”
The vaccines were approved demonstrably linked to heart complications, though as of now, it’s unclear to what extent. It could be an extremely rare event. It might not happen often. might be We are more familiar with this than we realize. Honest people will admit to the lack of certainty. But the scolds aren’t operating based on honesty. They’re taking direction from authority: “THE EXPERTS,” Who calls such questions? “misinformation” And “conspiracy mongering.”
They justifiably justify their antisocial, procensorship actions by always appealing to authority. They are the
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