It’s fashionable (literally) to be obsessed with vaccination status
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Does anyone else get a good chuckle out of the self-righteousness on
display by the people who have received the COVID-19 jab and seem to want to
make a temporary career out of pro-vaccine activism?
You know who I’m talking about: the people who proudly post photos on social
media of their vaccination certificate for the world to see. This phenomenon has
apparently become so prevalent that the French government has had to warn these
dim bulbs not to display the document’s scannable QR code, which contains
private information. Hey, fools, save that for the airline, festival and concert
workers who’ll now need to see your health-related data in order for you to
access previously routine aspects of daily life.
Then there are the now-cliché selfies of people getting a shot in their arm,
often followed by comments about how moved they were by the experience,
sometimes to the point of tears.
Enough people have even fetishized the jab experience that Google autofill even
suggests “Covid T-shirt” right alongside “Covid T cell response,” suggesting
that virtue-signaling COVID-19 immunity is on par with actual immunity.
And there’s no shortage of vaccination T-shirts for those interested.
A Canadian vaccination campaign mounted by a coalition of COVID-19 task forces
is selling T-shirts that read “This is our shot” on the front, with a logo
featuring half of a red Canadian maple leaf and an upright vaccine needle. The
campaign’s website asks that people “Wear your shirt to your vaccination
appointment and take a selfie of you getting your vaccine. Post it using the #ThisIsOurShotCA
hashtag.”
Vancouver-born actor Ryan Reynolds tweeted a photo of himself in the shirt and
wrote: “Finally got my #ThisIsOurShotCA t-shirt.” Reynolds is perhaps best known
for playing the Marvel comic character Deadpool, delivering lines such as, “You
may be wondering why the red suit? Well, that’s so bad guys can’t see me bleed.
This guy’s got the right idea. He wore the brown pants.” No doubt this is the
kind of guy you’d want to assist you in making individual health choices that
were previously the domain of your personal physician.
New York Magazine has curated a list of COVID-19 vaccine merchandise. Virtue
signalers can buy a “Relax, I’m vaxxed” button, an “I got my Covid vaccine”
iron-on patch (featuring a giant snot-green virus molecule), a wine or champagne
label that reads “Congrats on getting your V-card,” socks decorated with
someone’s idea of what antibodies look like, or an $11 T-shirt with all the
names of the vaccines administered in the U.S.
Who would actually wear this stuff in public? Can you imagine going on a speed
date and finding yourself across from someone in a “Vaccines Cause Adults”
T-shirt? Or someone in a top featuring a cat’s face and the message “Don’t Be a
Pussy. Get Your Vaccination”?
How about creating an online dating app strictly for people who self-identify as
vaccinated? It’s not like the average love-seeker is going to sign up for a
matchmaking tool that limits the options to people who define themselves by
their vaccination status. But it will help remove people who’ve replaced their
personality with a vaccine-related identity from the general dating pool, where
they would otherwise annoy the rest of us.
People obsessed with vaccine status are making it easier for governments to
tighten the screws on freedom of movement with proposed vaccination
certificates, which are going to be required for certain public venues and for
international travel. If the vaccine is so great and provides such effective
immunity, why do countries need to impose quarantines and PCR testing on
travelers who have been jabbed? If you’re a Brit now allowed to visit Portugal
because you have your vaccine passport, why do you still have to wear a mask on
the beach and risk coming home with tan lines on your face that make it look
like you slept in the sun with a book over your mouth?
Governments have peddled the vaccine as a way to end restrictions, but now
they’ve moved the goalposts yet again. Even your cattle-branding proof of
vaccination isn’t enough to get your freedom back. For now, just scan the pass,
drink the Kool-Aid and post the selfies. And hey, nice T-shirt.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN