I Did My Research
Someone sent me a Tik-Tok video of some woman explaining why getting vaccinated was a bad idea.
I didn’t watch it.
Instead I responded with questions and answers from the Johns Hopkins and Mayo Clinic web pages that provided detailed answers to frequently asked questions.
The person didn’t respond.
People believe what they want to believe when it makes no sense at all.
Aaron Rodgers has Covid.
He also misrepresented his cooperation with the NFL’s policies.
He consulted Dr. Joe Rogan and has been taking medicine designed for horses because he doesn’t trust the vaccine and it’s his body and blah, blah, blah.
And why do I care?
Because it’s front and center. He’s missing the next couple of games.
He puts the I in team, I guess.
It is his business, I guess, but he’s better off staying quiet about it because his rambling, sometimes nonsensical reasonings left no doubt that his “research” is lacking.
A friend of mine also reasoned much the same way. He actually screamed:
“I did my research on it!”
I responded by reminding that I had watched him fail Earth Science three times.
Doesn’t matter now.
There’s all sorts of misinformation out there. It’s fun to parrot it as gospel truth to pretend that you’re smarter than everyone else.
Rodgers seems like a bit of a pill, doesn’t he?
He held the team hostage all off-season but wouldn’t say what he was irritated about.
Such an uncomplicated issue made complicated by misinformation and ignorance…
…but why listen to Johns Hopkins or the Mayo Clinic when Becky from Iowa has all the best research?
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