It might just be status quo bias or cynicism-driven pattern-matching, but I feel like for any given deadline, paxlovid-is-illegal is more of a “stable state” than paxlovid-is-legal—it feels like it would be easier to lock the general public into ’paxlovid is dangerous/untrustworthy/ineffective” with a campaign against it than it would be to lock the general public into a state of “paxlovid is safe and works and we use it” with a campaign for it, although now I’m actually trying to visualise a world in which paxlovid remains illegal indefinitely in the face of evidence I feel less confident in that cynicism than I did two weeks ago.
It might just be status quo bias or cynicism-driven pattern-matching, but I feel like for any given deadline, paxlovid-is-illegal is more of a “stable state” than paxlovid-is-legal—it feels like it would be easier to lock the general public into ’paxlovid is dangerous/untrustworthy/ineffective” with a campaign against it than it would be to lock the general public into a state of “paxlovid is safe and works and we use it” with a campaign for it, although now I’m actually trying to visualise a world in which paxlovid remains illegal indefinitely in the face of evidence I feel less confident in that cynicism than I did two weeks ago.