The funny thing is... this guy isn't being "grilled" at all... he's being asked totally inert and logical questions. That's how deceived we've all been. When basic, common questions seem like an aggressive interrogation.
That's what's going on. This man sees himself as a good person and a good pharmacist. He believes his chain, I think he said CVS, has an interest in helping people. And up until this point, he's had no reason to question that. People come in with all kinds of ailments and health conditions, he gives them medication, and they get better or at least stay alive.
Now this lady is asking questions. To his credit, he realizes that her questions are valid and legitimate, and he tries to answer them. But now he's confronted with evidence that he's been deceived. And that he's been fooled. And that a good pharmacist would have reviewed all of the safety information before dispensing anything.
His distress comes from this realization which challenges his own identity.
Also to his credit, he's handling it better than most people would.
Think about how many people he administered the shot to that wound up dead or horrifically injured because they were randos off the street and he wasn't their family doctor. This is why VAERs reporting is so ridiculously low.
This is more of a spiritual battle above all else. Going to be a lot more examples like this - individual egos battling to survive the attack from truth
He handled it very well, these are the kind of internal crisis moments that can collapse peoples personal worldviews and drive them straight to suicide.
The funny thing is... this guy isn't being "grilled" at all... he's being asked totally inert and logical questions. That's how deceived we've all been. When basic, common questions seem like an aggressive interrogation.
Cognitive Dissonance
That's what's going on. This man sees himself as a good person and a good pharmacist. He believes his chain, I think he said CVS, has an interest in helping people. And up until this point, he's had no reason to question that. People come in with all kinds of ailments and health conditions, he gives them medication, and they get better or at least stay alive.
Now this lady is asking questions. To his credit, he realizes that her questions are valid and legitimate, and he tries to answer them. But now he's confronted with evidence that he's been deceived. And that he's been fooled. And that a good pharmacist would have reviewed all of the safety information before dispensing anything.
His distress comes from this realization which challenges his own identity.
Also to his credit, he's handling it better than most people would.
Think about how many people he administered the shot to that wound up dead or horrifically injured because they were randos off the street and he wasn't their family doctor. This is why VAERs reporting is so ridiculously low.
This is more of a spiritual battle above all else. Going to be a lot more examples like this - individual egos battling to survive the attack from truth
He handled it very well, these are the kind of internal crisis moments that can collapse peoples personal worldviews and drive them straight to suicide.
Yes - and or rage.
I've learned people are not smart.
They're trained.
That's very true.
Trust the science! Don’t question the science! The science is settled!
The experts all agree!
The woman asking the questions was great in her delivery. I marveled at how calmly she asked these direct questions. She kept pulling him along.
I wish I could do this.
Study Chris Voss. Within 1 year with practice you can.
Me too Fren.
I love how she dropped a MOAB on "Safe and Effective" with just a single question.
Big true