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I never said these people don’t exist at all. I said I’ve never met one. So I guess I’m saying they’re definitely a tiny minority.
And again: employer mandates still mean it’s optional. Absolutely optional. It’s optional because it’s not forced.
You know what baffles me the most about this, though? That you’re so hell bent on defending another random poster, who still hasn’t even taken the time to clarify his own post or even respond to me. How can you be so sure that’s what he meant?
Sorry Im taking so long to reply (had a rough couple of days including getting to play veterinary ambulance twice and getting my car fixed but whoops-not-really). Only now getting to look over the responses.
He’s got the right general idea though - there were lots of folks calling for government COVID vaccine mandates (but were not successful in actually getting them) and most of those calling for it were also decidedly pro-choice because of bodily autonomy.
There aren’t a whole lot of controversial cases for bodily autonomy outside abortion, but we did have one big obvious one that’s not that old…
Maybe a loud minority, sure, but it still seems to me that he’d be talking about those people, not the people it seems he clearly wasn’t talking about (at least to me).
Idk, we had a mandated meeting at work on thursday that was very much not optional, in direct opposition to the occasional meeting that we have that is optional (those are still mandatory for management, but that means they do not have the option to “not go,” while those for whom it is optional, not mandatory, can “not go.”) Anyway I’ve already conceded that mandatory, while not meaning optional by any stretch of the imagination, does also apply to situations as you’ve described, this is a moot point. Mandatory doesn’t mean “hold you the fuck down and stab you,” it literally means “required by a law or rule.”
The point I’ve conceded is that technically you’re right, “rule” can mean work rules not government rules, the point I have not conceded is “he meant those using it to refer to ‘law’ not ‘rule.’”
And no, I’m just saying what I think he meant due to clear context clues, frankly I was just going to leave the one comment but then you misunderstood that and now we’re here. I’m hoping this will be the last time I have to comment about it quite frankly.
Don’t worry, I’m tired of these discussions too. I’ve had them too many times over the past years. We obviously use different definitions of the word ‘optional’ and that’s fine. Let’s just leave it at that.
I never said these people don’t exist at all. I said I’ve never met one. So I guess I’m saying they’re definitely a tiny minority.
And again: employer mandates still mean it’s optional. Absolutely optional. It’s optional because it’s not forced.
You know what baffles me the most about this, though? That you’re so hell bent on defending another random poster, who still hasn’t even taken the time to clarify his own post or even respond to me. How can you be so sure that’s what he meant?
Sorry Im taking so long to reply (had a rough couple of days including getting to play veterinary ambulance twice and getting my car fixed but whoops-not-really). Only now getting to look over the responses.
He’s got the right general idea though - there were lots of folks calling for government COVID vaccine mandates (but were not successful in actually getting them) and most of those calling for it were also decidedly pro-choice because of bodily autonomy.
There aren’t a whole lot of controversial cases for bodily autonomy outside abortion, but we did have one big obvious one that’s not that old…
Maybe a loud minority, sure, but it still seems to me that he’d be talking about those people, not the people it seems he clearly wasn’t talking about (at least to me).
Idk, we had a mandated meeting at work on thursday that was very much not optional, in direct opposition to the occasional meeting that we have that is optional (those are still mandatory for management, but that means they do not have the option to “not go,” while those for whom it is optional, not mandatory, can “not go.”) Anyway I’ve already conceded that mandatory, while not meaning optional by any stretch of the imagination, does also apply to situations as you’ve described, this is a moot point. Mandatory doesn’t mean “hold you the fuck down and stab you,” it literally means “required by a law or rule.”
The point I’ve conceded is that technically you’re right, “rule” can mean work rules not government rules, the point I have not conceded is “he meant those using it to refer to ‘law’ not ‘rule.’”
And no, I’m just saying what I think he meant due to clear context clues, frankly I was just going to leave the one comment but then you misunderstood that and now we’re here. I’m hoping this will be the last time I have to comment about it quite frankly.
Don’t worry, I’m tired of these discussions too. I’ve had them too many times over the past years. We obviously use different definitions of the word ‘optional’ and that’s fine. Let’s just leave it at that.
Sounds good to me!