This depends a lot on the individual in question. My bubble is such that of the few thousand people I (indirectly, but individually) have any knowledge about their vaccination attitude, there is precisely one (the father of a friend) who has stated his intent not to get the shot. And I suspect he’ll change his mind at some point in the next 6 weeks.
”non-rationalist” isn’t a precise enough descriptor to have any idea how to convince them, and you haven’t specified what level of effort you’re planning to put in to convincing any specific holdout or small, identifiable group.
Personally, I don’t care what people say on surveys. I care what they actually do, to the extent that it affects those of us who are vaccinated. When there are no queues nor limits on vaccines (that is, when the bottleneck is willingness, not availability, worldwide), if there are enough non-vaccinated that it noticeably impacts transmission rates and effects the vaccinated, then I’ll figure out how to encourage more of the idiots to get it. My favored mechanism is vaccination patrols armed with dart guns.
But there’s quite a way to go before everyone who’s willing to get a shot worldwide has one. Until then, I’m fine with self-deprioritization.
This depends a lot on the individual in question. My bubble is such that of the few thousand people I (indirectly, but individually) have any knowledge about their vaccination attitude, there is precisely one (the father of a friend) who has stated his intent not to get the shot. And I suspect he’ll change his mind at some point in the next 6 weeks.
”non-rationalist” isn’t a precise enough descriptor to have any idea how to convince them, and you haven’t specified what level of effort you’re planning to put in to convincing any specific holdout or small, identifiable group.
Personally, I don’t care what people say on surveys. I care what they actually do, to the extent that it affects those of us who are vaccinated. When there are no queues nor limits on vaccines (that is, when the bottleneck is willingness, not availability, worldwide), if there are enough non-vaccinated that it noticeably impacts transmission rates and effects the vaccinated, then I’ll figure out how to encourage more of the idiots to get it. My favored mechanism is vaccination patrols armed with dart guns.
But there’s quite a way to go before everyone who’s willing to get a shot worldwide has one. Until then, I’m fine with self-deprioritization.
Same here. Fretting about how to convince, threaten, or cajole people into getting vaccinated is a solution in search of a problem, for now.