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Vaccination and seat belts
Hello all,
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on a lighter note¡
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I¡¯ve just read this argument pro vaccination (from the archives) by Roger Rawlings:
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It mentiones seat belts as a comparison. The argument for vaccination is even better than the argument for wearing seat belts, according to Roger.
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This made me think of a situation, in which a then co-worker of mine, in an anthroposophical organisation, intentionally did not wear his seat belt. I remember being astonished, because I thought the only reason not to wear your seat belt was because you forgot. But he put on the seat belt when there was a police car in sight and afterwards put it off again immediately. Unfortunately I didn¡¯t ask him about it. He was very into anthroposophy - a real believer.
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So my questions are these: where does this behaviour come from? Does it have a link with anthroposophy? Did Steiner mention seat belts in his lectures (not many cars around back then)? Have some of you seen similar behaviour? If you say the argument for vaccination is better than for seat belts, does that even work on people who believe you should not wear a seat belt for some reason in the first place?
PS: a little search on the internet revealed that there is a broader movement of people not wearing seat belts intentionally, as an anti-government statement (or pro-freedom if you wish). ?
That makes me think: do anthroposophists wear bike helmets? ;-)
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Just curious (as always),
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kokanje
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On Thu, 13 Feb 2025 at 07:50, Kokanje via groups.io
<landvankokanje@...> wrote: There were no seat-belts then, so he can't possibly have said anything about them. I think maybe people who are more cautious (wearing seat-belts, helmets, and so on) are perhaps more careful about whatever ideas they are attracted to, perhaps they're more averse to harm ad danger in general, thus avoiding crazy beliefs? So maybe it's not a matter of anthroposophy making people not wearing seat-belts but of people being drawn to anthroposophy being the same people who would choose to flaunt all sorts of rules of supposedly normal behaviour? There might, of course, also in some cases be a matter of taking karma to the extreme -- I suppose! With vaccination, there are all these additional things -- like vaccinations being bad for the child's spiritual development -- which confuse things. One might -- if one takes this spritual danger seriously --even imagine that not vaccinating is the choice with the less risk attached to it. Or perhaps anthroposophists are not really as quick to adapt to new mores, living more in the past? Not that long ago -- like when I was a kid, in the 80s -- it was still quite "normal" not to use seat-belts or helmets, wheras today most people would find such behaviour totally reckless. (At least for kids not to use these things.) Anthroposophists are not always the fastest when it comes to adapting to new fashions and trends. -alicia |
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