ignatiusjreilly
Footballguy
If you had asked me 5-6 months ago, I wouldn't have been in favor of mandates. Well, maybe in certain areas, like hospitals and elderly care facilities (I'm still dumbfounded that people oppose them there). And certainly in favor of private businesses having the right to require vaccines for employees or customers. But in general, I would prefer not to have mandates, especially from the government.No.
Question for those who support mandates. Do you have ANY limits? Are you fine with ongoing boosters being mandated? Are you fine with future government decisions about what gets injected into your body?
There were two things that shifted my thinking:
a) The failure of incentives like vaccine lotteries and employee bonuses to move the needle (or maybe it was just that they were effective in pushing certain people to get vaxxed, but ultimately not enough of them).
b) The Delta variant, which raised the costs of having a large segment of the population that was still unvaccinated
My support for mandates is not based on ideology or a desire to control people. It's a case of finding a balance between personal liberty and the need for collective action (which is pretty much the definition of what governments are supposed to do). I get that different people will find difference balance points, but for me, the compelling public need to get a virus that has killed nearly 1M Americans under control, the proven effectiveness and safety of the vaccine, and what I consider to be the relatively minimal inconvenience of getting a shot (which is something we require in lots of other contexts) tips the balance pretty far in favor of mandates.
So to answer your question, there are plenty of limits. If the public health crisis were less pressing, if we could get the same results through other means, if the vaccine were less effective or had a higher rate of side effects, then yes, I wouldn't want mandates. But that's not where we are right now.