| > obey rules applying to everyone for the greater cause of society? Sounds like communism. No cause can be considered greater than freedom. > No matter what you argue beyond, the epidemiological aspect is now not really the point here anymore. He faked stuff He should be investigated for faking then and expelled/imprisoned/fined by a court if evidence proves him guilty. > second test was just created so he counts as recovered, which was the requirement to get in if not vaccinated Just test him antibodies/T-cells + PCR and you know if a person used to be sick and recovered. No necessity for speculation here. Presence of immunity (which one only get through overcoming the sickness or a vaccine) is an objective thing. Is it not? I would also suggest introducing a law sentencing people who falsely claim they are immune or expose others to a risk of being infected any other way to serve a sentence aiding in a hospital taking care of infected people. |
Are you a 10 year old American from the Cold War? What you're saying is so comprehensively stupid I'm not entirely certain you're a real human.
No, that's not what communism is. If you want to know what it really is, go read "Das Kapital" and the "Communist Manifesto", you might learn a thing or two.
As for freedom... it's subjective. Absolute freedom is obviously incompatible with living in a society with other humans. And as we've seen time and again, most people value many things over freedom. Just look at Singapore and Rwanda, people there are happy with the prosperity and stability even if they're really not free on a lot of levels.