Herald on Sunday

No-vaxx Djokovic deserves verbal jab

- Paul.lewis@nzme.co.nz

One of the intriguing and surprising elements of the lockdown has been just how many stupid people are out there.

The ones who didn’t understand how going surfing or for a spin in their car might endanger others; the ones who think Covid-19 only affects old people; the ones playing touch rugby or frisbee in the park; the two dropkicks driving down our 50km/h road at 90km/h on Friday; and the ones who think it’s just another flu.

Let’s not even get into Health Minister David Clark — plus the almost unbelievab­ly brain-dead subspecies of Americans who are demonstrat­ing against the lockdown and “for freedom” — aka, as someone pointed out, the freedom to infect other people.

This week, along comes Novak Djokovic, the best tennis player on the planet. In a Facebook chat with Serbian players, translated by Reuters, he said he had a difficult decision to make if receiving a coronaviru­s vaccine became mandatory to compete on the tennis circuit.

“I am opposed to vaccinatio­n and I wouldn’t want to be forced by someone to take a vaccine to be able to travel,” Djokovic said. “But if it becomes compulsory, what will happen? I will have to make a decision. I have my own thoughts about the matter, and whether those thoughts will change at some point, I don’t know.”

He later released a clarifying statement asking whether a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n would be necessary for travel. He said he was intent on exploring options other than vaccinatio­n but did not rule it out if necessary.

He added: “Just like the rest of the world, I am a bit confused. Despite having access to informatio­n and resources, I am left in doubt about what could be the best thing to do.”

Uh, anti-confusion memo to Novak: Get vaccinated, pal. It doesn’t exist yet, but when it does, get the jab. It might save your life, even if your Facebook chat seems to align you with the conspiracy-theory, flat-earth, 5G tower-burning, kidnapped-byaliens throng that is the antivaxxer­s. Even more importantl­y, it might save someone else’s.

Tennis has been one of the sports hardest hit by the virus and stands to be one of the longest affected because both major tours, men’s and women’s, are global and involve much crossing of borders. Without a vaccine, it’s difficult to see how top-level profession­al tennis can be played.

But there’s clearly no border restrictio­ns on stupidity. Measles were eradicated in the United States 20 years ago. Last year, nearly 1300 cases were reported, mostly from people who hadn’t been vaccinated. Measles sounds like kids stuff but, at its height, infected millions and killed up to 500 Americans a year — and anti-vaxxers still contend that measles vaccine causes autism, a theory soundly debunked by our best scientific brains.

What happens when the vaccine arrives, only to be the subject of deep suspicion by anti-vaxxers?

Part of the overall problem is celebritie­s such as Djokovic (and others, when it comes to 5G); role models casting doubt only adds to the natural inclinatio­n of anti-vaxxers to be contrary to anything promoted by the establishm­ent.

Another part is people like me telling anti-vaxxers they’re idiots after they reject the facts. As a communicat­ions strategy, this hasn’t worked. When all the anti-vaxxers hear from the other side is that we have worn underpants with higher IQs, it seems to push people into even more extreme positions.

The inclinatio­n not to believe political leaders has taken root deeply in places such as the United Kingdom and US; it’s where Donald Trump came from, after all.

When you have the leader of the free world introducin­g twaddle like injecting disinfecta­nt to combat Covid-19 (one of his scientists had to stand up afterwards and say it wasn’t a good idea), you fear for the human race but you can see how antivaxxer­s gain momentum.

Maybe what’s needed is a bit of their own medicine, so to speak. Instead of trying to win them over with facts, maybe the best tactic is to start websites specialisi­ng in viral propaganda that listening to antivaxxer­s makes great big cauliflowe­rs grow out your ears or your genitals shrink.

We can’t be too hard on Djokovic — he and the others in the big three of men’s tennis (Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal) have banded together to organise millions of dollars of financial aid for lowerranke­d players struggling with the paralysis of the game due to the pandemic.

Great. But, as Albert Einstein once said: “Only two things are infinite — the universe and human stupidity, and I’m not sure about the universe.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Novak Djokovic.
Photo / Getty Images Novak Djokovic.
 ??  ?? Paul Lewis
Paul Lewis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand