Thursday, June 4, 2020

How Fear of a Virus Changed Our World By Barbara Loe Fisher

  
How Fear of a Virus Changed Our World

By Barbara Loe Fisher 
Fear is a primal biological response to a perceived threat to our survival. Fear triggers momentary paralysis and then a fight or flight reaction before the brain can rationally analyze and calibrate our response to a perceived threat.
 
Right now, people around the world are living in fear of being infected or infecting someone else with a new coronavirus that can kill those most vulnerable without warning. Along with confusion and uncertainty, which prolongs fear, many of us are traumatized by the authoritarian measures governments have taken in response to the COVID-19 pandemic that began in China in late 2019.
 
The "new normal" is disorienting, like we have taken a hit to the gut and then to the head that we didn't see coming. Maybe that is why so many Americans, who value freedom of speech, religion, assembly, privacy and the right to work, have given those constitutional rights up, without stopping to think through the ramifications of the larger precedent being set.
 
Read this referenced commentary, watch a video and make a comment here.

 
2020 marks the 38th year of the founding of our non-profit educational charity, the National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC). This year, NVIC is sponsoring the Fifth International Public Conference on Vaccination Oct. 16-18, 2020 with the theme of "Protecting Health and Autonomy in the 21st Century."
 
Due to ongoing COVID-19 social distancing regulations that may also involve travel restrictions this fall, NVIC's conference will be held online so more people in the U.S. and around the world can participate.
 
NVIC's conference will be professionally produced and include formal presentations and panel discussions featuring more than 40 distinguished speakers from the U.S. and other countries, as well as live chats where attendees can comment and connect with each other.
 
The goal is to empower and inspire attendees with high quality information and informed perspective about vaccine science, policy, law and ethics within the context of challenges posed by suppression of scientific inquiry and rational criticism of public health policies that affect freedom of thought and speech and other civil liberties.
 
Learn more about NVIC's October 2020 conference here.
 

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