To me, this promotes division which I'm against no matter which side it comes from. The last thing we need is to make the people who took the stab ,for whatever reason, think we're coming across as superior to them. Particularly when trying to convince them not to take stab 3,4,5 and so on.
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"They?" THEY? Who are "they?"
They aren't any of the jabbed I know, that's for sure.
On the web, we hear the screeching of the ultra-woke minority 10% (or whatever) but in real life -- in MY real life, anyway -- everyone I know who took the jab did it because they believed the Authorities speaking on television and everywhere saying that they needed to and that it was good and safe, or because they needed their job or business to continue or because they desperately wanted to sit beside a loved one in the hospital who was dying and the non-vaxxed weren't allowed in, or for some other reason.
NONE of these people have ever shown any inclination to slander others as "nazis and white supremecists." To a man and woman, they're all decent and kind-hearted souls who have been victimized by the psychopaths who put this nightmare into motion and have kept it going. As you might expect, I don't live in a big blue city, but even IN those cauldrons, not everyone is as you describe.
Yes, plenty of the vaxxed are lefty idiots and millions are toxic, malicious individuals. But millions aren't -- and for that matter, more and more of them are innocent children. Also, many of those not completely broken-minded are coming to our side; learning what's been done to them is both helping with this and (because of psychological defenses) slowing it down.
"Love one another, as I have loved you" -- the "new commandment" Jesus gave us in John 13:34 -- is something worth remembering in our situation. It fits right in with Q's comments about the need for unity.