A bit of an off the wall comment but I think it'd be great if we could all have differing opinions and actually tolerate each other.
I've more or less quit reading in this part of the forum because of the lack of tolerance. I get it, we've all had a shit year and the world is still reeling from it, but the anger and spiteful, passive-aggressive shitshows online are painful to watch.
I'm comfortably on the fence with many thoughts about covid and how it has been handled. I expect my feelings will become more pronounced with time and some more experience going forward.
Opinions seem so heavily polarised nowadays. On the one hand people are scared of asking simple questions about vaccines for fear of getting napalmed (is this a new category in itself? We have pro vaxx, anti vaxx and now 'bully' vaxx) and those who are concerned about ending restrictions too soon are similarly pounced on.
Why the extreme anger and polarisation if someone disagrees with you?
Have we become so tense and myopic with this pandemic that we have forgotten how to accept not everyone is exactly the same as us?
Where do we draw the line here?
Wouldn't it be more helpful and productive all round if we learned some tolerance of differing viewpoints?
I bring this up as after my jab yesterday I was doing a bit of googling and discovered some great covid related talk on a US site called 'metafilter'. I was shocked at how tolerant and open they were regarding differing viewpoints and thoughts relating to the pandemic. For example, when anyone asked for advice about vaccine hesitancy, the general response was to gently lead them into good sources of info and most people (who were pro vaxx) expressed a sympathetic understanding of why people were concerned.