Let me be clear. I think your "argument" is callous and cruel. If people in nontraditional situations suffer more, as they often do, this should be an impetus to charity, understanding and love on our part, not smug superiority and fear of moral contagion. For shame.
If you followed my (scare quotes) argument, you would see that what I'm saying is that we - me and I'm sure you - welcome all sorts of imperfections all the time without even thinking about it. If we do pause and examine some statistics for a moment, it's apparent that lots of situations carry a certain amount of risk. That doesn't stop us from welcoming pretty much anyone into our communities.
If you view the unvaccinated as a risk, perhaps you can extend the same grace to them as you do to others instead of casting them out of your schools shouting "unclean, unclean!"
I'm not sure if you completely miss the point or if you're having an argument with statistics
Let me be clear. I think your "argument" is callous and cruel. If people in nontraditional situations suffer more, as they often do, this should be an impetus to charity, understanding and love on our part, not smug superiority and fear of moral contagion. For shame.
So it's a little bit of both.
If you followed my (scare quotes) argument, you would see that what I'm saying is that we - me and I'm sure you - welcome all sorts of imperfections all the time without even thinking about it. If we do pause and examine some statistics for a moment, it's apparent that lots of situations carry a certain amount of risk. That doesn't stop us from welcoming pretty much anyone into our communities.
If you view the unvaccinated as a risk, perhaps you can extend the same grace to them as you do to others instead of casting them out of your schools shouting "unclean, unclean!"
That's my point.