@Pat What I found more interesting about this study is how it was partly debunked by showing that children were not choosing the immediate reward of a single marshmallow over the later reward of several due to an inability to delay gratification. Later studies showed the choice was made because some children lacked trust in adults and simply did not believe and chose the immediate (and certain) reward over a delayed reward they never thought they would get since they were so used to being lied to.

I would say that in any attempt to relate this study to COVID you will find the same sort of thought process holds true. That is, many have lost trust in the government and institutions. They feel if they delay getting their rights back they may not get them back at all.

@freemo @Pat

That is, many have lost trust in the government and institutions. They feel if they delay getting their rights back they may not get them back at all.

It’s an extremely well-founded fear too, judging by the past 100 years, and even more so the past 30…

@ademan @freemo

Re the marshmallow study, I was thinking of the folks at CDC. They relaxed the guidelines about 2-3 months prematurely.

We never lost any rights. We just needed to respect the rights of others (the right to not be assaulted by a chemical weapon).

@Pat Yes I figured that is what you were thinking of it in terms of (though i disagree about their guidelines being premature, or that they were good guidelines to begin with).

I am just giving another interpretation of the same metaphor.

And yes of course we lost rights, we lost the right to determine for ourselves what is medically effective. The right to peacefully assemble, for example, is a pretty fundamental right. You can argue revoking the rights were justified, thats another argument, but there is no doubt rights were revoked.

@freemo

I think we agree on the right to assemble and the right to control your own body with regard to medical procedures that don't effect others. I think only a few jurisdictions actually tried to prevent people from gathering in a private setting (e.g., churches). Nearly all of the policies from the states were guidelines and not mandates.

Although an environmental argument could be made against actions that promote the spread of the virus and cause more virulent strains, kind of like regulations against dumping too much of some particular toxin into a river... I haven't thought that argument completely through though.

@Pat like i said, the policies themselves are debatable, but it seems we agree that it was, for better or worse, a limiting of our rights. So to the original point it is somewhat expected that people dont have much trust or comfort in a government restricting our rights for longer. People dont trust the government so like the marshmallow test we will take our rights now cause we dont trust we will get them at all if we wait.

@freemo

This may seem like a fine point, but I assign a very specific meaning to the word "rights" in this context.

Some of our freedom was limited by the virus, but not our rights. An analogy is if there is a flood (a natural disaster) that floods out a road. We can no longer drive on the road, but the flood didn't take away our rights, it limited our freedom. Authorities may recommend that we do not attempt to drive on the road because of the danger. They may even have reason to prohibit that action in some circumstances (if some jerk gets stuck in the water and needs to be rescued while emergency personnel are busy helping others; or if the guy is driving a bus and he tries to drive through the water and endangers the passengers on bus.)

I see the limits on our freedom as happening because of the natural disaster of the virus, not because of the appropriate limits that flow from that natural disaster. (And yes, there were some authorities who used the situation for a power grab, but most didn't. Most States had suggested guidelines, not mandates.)

@Pat

Except you cant just make up your own definitions. The definition of a right is "Rights are legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement;"

Ergo you cant separate out freedom from rights. While you may not want a right to exist, or even think such a right existing is harmful. The definition of a right is well established.

It seems like to me your on a euphemism treatmill. You're trying to redefine words you deem as positive or negative so as to be associated with your opinion in a purely positive light. I dont usually find that to be a productive practice. It also isnt terribly constructive as it reduces most conversations to semantics rather than meaningful content.

There is also a big difference between a road flooding and thus causing you not to cross it vs the government stopping people from crossing it as a result of the flooding. I could have a large wheeled 4x4 more than capable of safely crossing the road, someone with a regular car cant, they are free to evaluate if their situation is safe and despite the road being flooded still has the **right** to cross it (though may lack the means), unless the government takes that right away.

Take that analogy to the virus, the virus would have made it wise not to have public gatherings, and thus many people would have chosen not to. That isnt a restriction of ones rights, just as the river flooding is not. But the second the government sets it as a rule and disallows public gatherings its a very different situation and there is no way, short of denying the dictionary definition of the word, you cant see that as a revocation of ones rights.\

@freemo

There is a very specific difference between a right and a freedom. A freedom can be limited from many sources, such as a lack of means, or even just the laws of physics. A freedom can also be limited through a proscribed restriction, in which case it is also a limit on one's rights. A right exists in the context of a society -- your rights imply that someone else recognize them. This is the difference between the two concepts.

Pre-pandemic, society had an understanding about what rights would be recognized by society based on the conditions of our situation and upon reasoned extrapolation of certain values.

When the pandemic hit, the situation changed, and a reasoned extrapolation of our values under that new situation formed a slightly different set of specific rights. That's all.

Some people are not very good at change. They don't like it. And many don't have a very deep understanding of where rights come from or how the recognition of those rights have been developed (hint - rights aren't given to us by the government). So when the situation changes and requires a quick re-extrapolation of our fundamental principles to meet the new challenge, they become confused or even restive. They believe that the pre-pandemic set of specific rights are absolute even if the exercise of those rights violate the rights of others under the new situation.

This is what has happened during the pandemic.

@Pat

> There is a very specific difference between a right and a freedom.

Again, we dont get to make up our own definitions for things. These words are well established and well defined.

Freedom: "the power or right to act, speak, or think as one wants without hindrance or restraint."

Right: "Rights are legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement;"

You cant distinguish them as different categories just because it suits you.. A freedom is what you get when a right is granted, a freedom is ones execution of a right.

But as I said debating semantics is silly, these words are already defined for us so we dont have to invent language as we go. Its even more silly when we try to redefine words simply because it makes our opinions sound less harsh to people, that gets us nowhere.

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@Pat The only way I can interprit what you said in a meaningful way is that you are confusing the general idea of "right" with "natural rights" which are a subset.

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