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megpie71: 9th Doctor resting head against TARDIS with repeated *thunk* text (Default)
megpie71

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megpie71: Impossibility established early takes the sting out of the rest of the obstacles (Less obstacles)
Saturday, February 19th, 2022 08:45 am
(In response to: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/feb/16/belittling-the-canberra-convoy-protesters-will-just-push-ostracised-people-further-into-their-bunkers)

I read this article, and I thought "gee, it's nice Simon Copland is able to feel some sympathy for the various protesters out there." But I rather disagree with his premise that "We must seek to understand and address their feelings".

Mr Copland talks about these protesters having formed an "intimate public" group as part of the camp and the protest, and yeah, I can understand that. Heck, I've been part of "intimate public" groups myself - I've gone to science fiction and fantasy conventions, and I've camped out at the Canberra show-grounds myself as part of the National Folk Festival. So I can sympathise with the protesters feeling disappointed, even despairing, when the event breaks up, and they have to go home, resume their everyday life, and deal with being an ordinary part of society again, after a few days (or weeks) of being something extra-ordinary. It's a bit of a let-down, and it's not the most enjoyable situation to be in.

But I think while we're busy looking so hard at the humanity of these protesters, we need to also pay attention to the thing which has united them together. This isn't just a gathering of people who have got together to celebrate a relatively harmless hobby (like folk music, or enjoyment of a genre of entertainment). This is a group of people who got together in defence of an ideology of "liberation" which rests very solidly on the idea that their personal freedom to perform certain activities over-rides the right of anyone else in the country to enjoy a safe, healthy life.

The people in this convoy who "lost friends over [their] views" lost those friends, almost certainly, because of their ideological stance.

Their ideological stance, in a lot of cases, involves effectively telling a lot of other people that they are dispensable. That they are not as human as the holders of this particular stance, and therefore do not merit the same level of consideration. For example, as an autistic person, I'm not considered by many anti-vaccination thinkers to be as human as they are - my existence, to them, is something to be feared, to be dreaded, and something that should not be. To a lot of anti-vaxxers, I am a monster, and I belong dead.

Forgive me for disagreeing with them on that one.

For the sovereign citizens, and the other extreme glibertarians in the crowd, there is nobody on the planet who is as human as they are, and they are fighting hard for their right not to be bound by the dictates of wider society. Mind you, when you stop and talk to a lot of them, you find out what they're actually fighting for (once you strip out the rhetoric, and boil things down to their core notions) is that they should share in the benefits of society (things like infrastructure, services and so on) but not have to deal with any of the costs of society. There's a reason a lot of billionaires in the USA describe themselves as "libertarians", after all. To these people, as a person who has relied on social security to survive at times, and who is going to be looking for support from the NDIS in order to be able to live a slightly fuller (and healthier) life than I do at present, I am anathema. Again, I belong dead, because I am a "parasite" who needs a bit of help from other people in order to be able to contribute fully to society (like a lot of people with disabilities).

Again, I disagree with them as well.

The neo-Nazis in the crowd think I should be dead because I'm a person with a disability (and even more so because I'm a white woman who has reached the end of her reproductive life and not bred good little white children for the nation). Of course, I'm part of a very long list of people they think belong dead, starting with the indigenous owners of this continent, and moving on from there covering things like "people who aren't white enough", "people who aren't Christian", "people who aren't Australian enough", right the way along to "people who don't entirely agree with their every thought".

Do I need to say I disagree with their point of view? Or can we take this as read?

Now, I agree with Mr Copland that it's good these people found a sense of community in their convoy. Community is a human thing, a thing everyone who is human wants and needs to be part of. But let's not lose sight of the fact that these people, this community, want to deny a lot of other people the opportunity to be part of any community at all (much less theirs). There are the immunocompromised and people with "pre-existing conditions" (by which, apparently, the health authorities mean "anyone in less than 100% health, both physical and psychological") who currently aren't able to take part in community events, because it isn't safe for them to risk infection - and let's note this group skews strongly toward those who are on lower incomes, those who are in rural areas rather than urban areas, those who are indigenous, those who are disabled and so on. There are the elderly, who are both vulnerable to things like COVID due to issues of age-related physical and mental deterioration, and also vulnerable because their living systems mean they're unable to move away from sources of potential exposure. The same applies to persons with disability who are living in supported accommodation.

I'm sure a lot of us can talk about people who very literally haven't left their houses if they could possibly avoid it since the pandemic started spreading back in February 2020, simply because they don't want to risk their lives. I'm sure there's a lot of us who fall into that group ourselves.

According to these protesters, we deserve to die, so long as they can carry on acting as though the bad things in the world won't touch them. While the protesters are "expressing genuinely held feelings", as per Mr Copland, I'm sure Mr Copland can also understand that quite frankly, if these people want me to meet them half-way, then they have to start by acknowledging my genuinely held feeling that I am as human as they are, possessed of the same essential humanity, and stop upholding ideologies which say I'm expendable. I'm more than happy to form a community with any of the protesters. Whether they can say the same about me is on them. But I'm more than happy to meet them half-way. It's just the half-way point where I'm prepared to meet them is one where they recognise I don't deserve to die simply because of who I am. If they have a lot of travelling to do to get there, then that is on them, not on me.
megpie71: Text: "Thud.  Thud.  Thud.  Splat." (ewww messy)
Monday, January 24th, 2022 09:13 am
There's been a lot said about "living with COVID" in various bits of media and so on. But I don't know whether anyone's really been thinking about what COVID means on a cultural and social level yet.

There's a lot of indications that COVID is going to be the new equivalent of what polio used to be. It's a disease which can be deadly, but which is even more dangerous to the people it leaves alive. COVID is a crippling illness, rather than a killing one - and as the various variants evolve to become more contagious and less severe, we're going to see a greater number of people with various disabilities showing up in our society.

Now, on the one hand, this is something which has been coming since the growth of antibiotics (and vaccination) made a lot of the former childhood menaces into just names on a sheet of paper. We don't think about the danger of measles any more, because by and large, measles is pretty much gone from the wider community. Enough people are vaccinated that it doesn't have the space to spread, and when it does show up, it's generally easy enough to treat with a course of antibiotics. For about eighty years now, the Western nations haven't had the widespread menace of illnesses which render children deathly ill, and then linger on as things like heart conditions, lung problems, digestive issues, or other organ failures. Since the widespread eradication of polio, the sight of children with limbs in calliper splints hasn't been a regular thing, and the idea of people living their life in an iron lung (or other BiPAP ventilation) isn't something which is a regular part of the public consciousness. The idea that pregnant women have to take care to avoid illness (for fear of what it might do to the baby) has largely passed out of the public mind as well. Rubella isn't a menace that causes deafness and blindness in children any more - it's a shot you get in high school and don't worry about.

COVID looks set to bring all these ideas flooding back. Again, it was always going to be an inevitability - we're starting to see the growth of multiply-resistant bacteria (which means our antibiotics aren't working as effectively as they used to) and it's only a matter of time before one of these multiply-resistant forms turns out to be a contagious disease that's severely harmful to humans. To be honest, my money used to be on multiply-resistant tuberculosis (which not only exists, but is actually a slowly-growing problem here in Australia), but these days, I'm thinking COVID is going to be the disease which is going to remind humans of our place in the wider scheme of things. We're clever monkeys, no doubt. But that's all we are - and we're tied into the wider ecology of this planet.

And the fun thing is: we're only two years into this pandemic. So we don't know what the long-term effects on children being born to COVID-affected parents are. We don't know what the long-term effects of COVID are on adults or children. Heck, we're still learning of the long-term effects of surviving polio from the last generation of post-polio patients, and we're still learning the full extent of what post-polio syndrome entails. Even if we managed to eradicate COVID (which we probably won't - coronaviruses are remarkably resilient little darlings; just look at influenza!) we're stuck with dealing with the after-effects for anything up to a century after the last case has been cured, and I don't know whether anyone is ready for this.

Meanwhile, the point I'm trying to make here is this: what we're experiencing with COVID is not unprecedented. Indeed, I'd say the unprecedented bit was the eighty years beforehand, where contagious diseases were eminently treatable, and only minor worries. What we're actually seeing with COVID is a return to historical "business as usual" - local epidemics disrupting economies, disrupting supply chains, disrupting social life, disrupting everything.
megpie71: Animated: "Are you going to come quietly/Or do I have to use earplugs?" (Come Quietly)
Sunday, December 26th, 2021 06:41 am
So, it's been about six months since I last put anything up here (I really need to get back into the habit of posting).

At present, I'm busy recovering from getting a COVID booster shot on Thursday evening. This one (Pfizer, first I've had of that type; the first two were Astra-Zeneca) is leaving me with a few side effects I hadn't been expecting. For starters, my left arm is still sore (which reminds me of the first dose of Astra-Zeneca, where I wound up feeling as though I'd had a tetanus booster; my arm ached for about a week), and this time it looks like there's a degree of immune system response involved in things (the area under my left arm, where all the lymph nodes live, is sore and achey). Plus I'm tired all the time, although this may just be a perfectly normal response to the combination of five days of having to be up and about and social while autistic, and a several-day heatwave, both of which would leave me tired even without the vaccine involvement.

I'm also having to deal with having be up and about and social (I'm the one person in my team who isn't taking time off over the Christmas break) for six days in a row - 4 days of work, plus Christmas day visit to the in-laws yesterday and a visit to my family today) which for me is a bit of a stretch and a push. I get two days to recover, but given I generally have 3 days off each week to recover from 4 days work, I suspect I'm going to be a little bit stretched-thin at work next week.

Ah well, I'm still alive so far. It's a start.
megpie71: 9th Doctor resting head against TARDIS with repeated *thunk* text (Default)
Friday, June 25th, 2021 06:55 am
Had my second dose of Astra-Zeneca on Wednesday. The first dose was back in April (about two or three hours before the Australian government decided that only people over 50 should get it - given the injection date was two days after my 50th birthday, I figured I was safe). So, I just have to wait another week and a bit, and I will be all vaccinated and done, and ready to go out and interact with people without fear of COVID. Given I'm in Western Australia, this is not the huge thing it is in other parts of the world (or even other parts of the country).

Now all I have to do is figure out whether there's anything I'd actually want to do which involves interacting with people in the first place.
megpie71: Kerr Avon quote: Don't philosophise at me you electronic moron; answer the question (don't philosophise)
Sunday, March 22nd, 2020 12:07 pm
Okay, this is getting tagged "COVID-19" in the title and in the tags so people who are busy trying to curate their reading lists (e.g. me!) can avoid it if they feel the need.

What this is: a quick run-down of my situation with regards to COVID-19, and why I'm not talking about certain topics.

Read more... )
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