This is a great point, which I haven't thought enough on; the people who were initially skeptical to the point of their typical absurdity are now the people pushing the hysterical reactions/mandates/experimental drugs.
Can you imagine how frustrating it is for a guy like me? I'm not huge into "conspiracies theories" like Bigfoot or flat earth or even space travel. I don't talk about any of that shit, I know "it's the jews", JFK was murdered by the CIA, etc.. And there I was, genuinely concerned about what I believed could be a deadly pandemic based on shaky info and scare videos which ripped through the internet's darker corners, then vanished. I recall a lot of the videos would be compilations of (undated) footage of Chinese people fainting, and sometimes going into seizue-like fits.
This is what I was afraid of coming to the USA. And when it finally began to be acknowledged, I remember early on hearing about a cop and like two other people who dropped with seizures because they had covid, and I was like "Oh shit it's starting". This is when the toilet paper memes exploded onto the internet. The lockdowns and shit didn't begin for quite a while after this. It was so surreal. I couldn't believe we were still allowing travel into the country- including China and Wuhan itself! I was baffled at how I was warning of this pandemic far before its existence was officially acknowledged, and then became skeptical when bodies didn't start piling up. I was also expecting mass car accidents, since this fainting and seizure activity seemed to be the most severe symptom at first.
Only a few weeks after it was acknowledged officially, the symptoms were specified to "the flu, and pretty much anything else you can find in a medical encyclopedia". Then, a few weeks later, as bodies weren't piling up in the streets, and ERs were deserted, I began to figure it out. Then the mask bullshit began, and I resisted it, saying that if I was sick, I'd stay home or wear a mask- but if I'm healthy, there's no reason to. Honestly, I don't have a problem wearing a mask if I go out when I have a fever or I know I'm sick; simply out of courtesy. I don't like being denied services and thus being forced to wear one, though, even if I'm sick with a cold or w/e.
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