Skip to main content

Why the COVID vaccine is thought to cause sterility

 


There are various rumours on the internet about ways in which COVID vaccines could cause sterility. Generally, it turns out that these claims are not based on evidence, but the fact that so many people have this intuition makes it interesting to ask why this is so.

I think this is due more generally to the breakdown of trust in our public institutions, and more specifically to the desire that is seen, though not necessarily actualised, to make the vaccine mandatory. During the response to COVID we have seen what might be termed an imposition of identity from above, in the form of lockdowns and extremely strict control of the population so that people conform to particular patterns of being, which are apparently intended to control the virus. 

The tyrannical imposition of identity from above tends to obliterate the smaller identities below it. It is thus not possible for these smaller identities to reproduce authentically, as they are now, in some measure clones of the higher identity. The smaller identities are thus sterile (not able to reproduce themselves), and this is the reason for the intuition.

 




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Review of "The Language of Creation" by Matthieu Pageau

The problem we face today (and the problem that nearly all my reading, thinking and writing is centred on) is how to be the Church in the face of modernism. This was a really important book for me and I hope this essay goes some way to explaining why. I will say at the outset that I am simplifying here: pre-modern conceptions of the universe have persisted in the West, but nevertheless, the general trend has been towards abandoning such perspectives, and I am concerned with the overall downward trend, not exceptions. The general problem can be called scientism, that is, that matter is all there is, and thus the scientific method defines all there is to know. This is our basic outlook, and it manifests itself in many different ways, from ideologies as a concept, to consumerism and popular culture. In this way, all metaphysics, religion, spirituality and morality are seen as not based in material reality, and therefore not real, but rather imagined: they are social constructs, complet...

My (current) map of reality

This is a highly condensed version of how my map of reality developed; much is left out, and clarity is sacrificed for a packed sentence. My journey began in a tradition that has a deep respect for scripture, especially interpreted 'materialistically' or 'literally'. While there's problems with this, it has the strength of honouring the word of God: I was never persuaded by liberalism, which thinks it knows better than the Bible. My thought has always been that if God has spoken to us through Scripture, perhaps he knows what it means and we don't always, and to hold something in contempt is to place yourself in a position where you cannot understand it. But before I get in really deep, I should explain the basic problem I had, which was essentially a feeling of cognitive dissonance with my experience of the world, knowledge of history, literature, art and science etc, and what the mainline reformed-evangelical protestant church (I will use the word '...

Thinking imagistically

Icon of the Last Judgement by Fr. Luke Dingman Most of the time, we do not think using 'scientific', 'empirical' or 'rational' modes of thought: we do not think axiomatically or with pure logic. The reason is that such modes of approaching reality are extremely expensive: they require a lot of time, thought, rigor, training etc and most people do not have the leisure to learn to think in such ways. Instead, we mostly interact with reality in non-rational ways (not irrational): we attribute and assume cause and effect without 'scientific/empirical evidence'. That is to say, we use the language of story, symbol and imagination to approach reality most of the time. More than that, we make many decisions without fully thinking them through, that is, we make them according to habit or ritual or intuition. The reason, again, is that to think things through completely and in a fully rational way takes time, often more than a lifetime, because reality is comp...