A few days ago, Dilbert creator, and more lately contrarian commentator, Scott Adams admitted “the anti-vaxxers won”.
If you’re not that familiar with Adams, he imploded his highly successful career as a cartoonist and public speaker by predicting that Donald Trump would win the 2016 election.
He didn’t even say he was a Trump fan (in fact his political views are largely extremely Left-wing) but the prediction itself, and the idea that Americans might not be absolute monsters for voting Trump, was enough to lose him most of his living.
He then became popular in a completely different market, with his relatively red-pilled takes on the culture war. When it came to Covid, however, he strongly and repeatedly backed the vaccine, thus alienating much of his new, vaccine sceptic, following.
However, in another twist, Adams has now admitted, unequivocally, though not without a touch of snark, that the ”anti-vaxxers”, as he calls them, have won.
The thrust of his argument (against his prior self) is that those who refused the vaccine now have natural immunity, and don’t have to worry about an mRNA time bomb five years down the line.
And that’s perfectly true.
What’s not true is his statement that the choice to refuse the vaccine was simply a “coin flip”.
Adams seems to be speaking as if we are still in a normal world, making straightforward decisions based on reliable data, rather than the new paradigm where everything is weaponised by a ruling elite, to the point that even something as seemingly objective as science becomes the sinister, entirely political concept of ‘the science’.
In other words, we’re not in Kansas anymore, but Adams is acting like we are.
Which is odd, because in many other ways Adams is totally ‘awake’. Indeed, he spends the beginning of his stream on the vaccine talking about how he was totally “brainwashed” about the evils of President Nixon. Which is not one you hear very often. In fact, Adams might be one of the first ‘Nixon Truthers’, except for Tucker Carlson, from whom he gained his new knowledge, and Roger Stone, who famously has a tattoo of Nixon on his back.
Anyway, the point is that Adams is highly perceptive on some issues, but totally fell for the mainstream narrative on the vaccine.
He claims vaccine sceptics bested him by simply applying a basic “heuristic”. Namely: don’t trust the government or big companies.
That is clearly a straw man, since vaccine sceptic views range from the most advanced arguments of professional epidemiologists, to the humble commoner who just doesn’t trust this dodgy new medicine. (You have probably seen some of the Laffer curve memes regarding vaccines and IQ. If not, I include one below for your consideration).
Straw man or not, Adams admits that this suspicion of authority is a totally sound approach. After all, when has not trusting the Government ever really been wrong?
What is strange is that Adams’ research led him to the conclusion that he should take the jab. He is a highly intelligent person who has proved himself very capable of thinking independently. Normally those are the people questioning just about everything surrounding the Covid hysteria.
Perhaps Adams was following his own “heuristic” of contrarianism, leading him to rail against his new-found red-pilled audience, just as it initially prompted him to highlight the positives of Trump.
More likely he really did just believe he was making a rational, well-researched choice. But, unlike Sam Harris and so many others, he is willing to admit he got it wrong.
For me it’s all much more simple: I never once considered taking the vaccine.
Perhaps I am one of Adams’s anti-vaxxer heuristic gang. Perhaps, despite once scoring a solid 137 on a Mensa test, I am just the Hammerheaded low IQ chap from the meme, who fears the 5G magnet.
Either way, I gave it about as much thought as the “killer bees” scandal. I admit I was a bit worried about Y2K, but you don’t fool me twice.
Which is relevant, actually, because what Adams appeared to miss out of his heuristic was that it’s not just government and Big Pharma we doubt, but the mainstream media. And all three working in concert (the very red-pilled would say in “Lockstep”) should raise alarm bells in even the most placid normie.
Though, somehow, clearly that did not occur for most people, as the normies all lined up for their arm poison, while I stood aloof and totally bemused.
The whole thing was entirely alien to me. It was just something normies were chatting about amongst themselves, like whether to choose go-karting or miniature golf for their work event – I’m not going to either, so I don’t need to listen.
Although I had thoughts like “Will I be banned from society?” and “Which of my family members would put me in a Covid camp?” I never considered actually taking a medicine that you only seemed to need if you watched too much TV. I don’t buy the gizmos on late night shopping channels either. Because I’m not mental.
Scott Adams, on the other hand, despite his past good work, doesn’t seem to have fully digested quite how off his picture of the world really is. Maybe he just needs to take a few more red pills.
And, pace Adams, it was not a coin flip. I simply never picked up the coin.
This post is sponsored, presumably proudly, by Thor Holt.
Thor also has very sound views on the vaccine, and will help with your business presentation, salary negotiation, and just about anything else you care to name. Especially if you are a ‘Pure Blood’.
You can find Thor at https://uk.linkedin.com/in/thorholt
And if you’d like a shoutout for your Substack/business/novel/Slipknot tribute band, email ndsubstack@gmail.com
Many thanks.
1) yes, as per my sponsorship, I am indeed proud of you Nick. This is because you take a courageous stance around free speech, and innocent until proven guilt. And now, the vaccine and Scott Adams.
2) I declare prior interest on Scott as I’ve interviewed him a few times and really like the guy. However, this coin flip decision making twist he threw in after his admission that we got it right, did grate a little didn’t it?! ;).
3) Here’s how I made the decision.
Media - ‘hey check out these vaccines peasants, they’re gonna be great’
Thor - ‘well you guys tell the truth at least 20% of the time’
4) Thor now researches vaccines.
Discovers they may contain some murky stuff around a previously aborted foetus (yes some of them do as it turns out) Gets the ick.
5) With memories of my unfortunate old neighbour, Mike who, thanks to Thalidomide, had stumps for arms; here was my basic logic; ‘these are touted at Brand New vaccines, hence can’t possibly have had long enough to be tested.
6) End of decision making process? Nope! Because as a business owner, I know it’s good to be challenged on my thinking on important decisions. it’s what I do for others all the time, so I asked the smartest investor I’ve ever met and have known for 10 years. Instead of disagree, He sent me a list of ten logical reasons why these vaccines were a very bad idea.
So, yeah coin flip it was Scott. Lol.
Excellent post, Nick. Like you, I never considered having the injection but most of those around me did, including my family. Many of those who did have it, I would previously have thought were intelligent but still they had it, for whatever reason. What I don’t understand is, what makes those of us who did not have it different from those that did? One of my fellow refusers says it’s because we are “chosen”. It’s certainly caused me a lot of problems but the more problems it causes me, the more I know I am right about it.