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Kind of explains the abrupt Roe v. Wade reversal: a ruling based on a right to privacy & body autonomy would be in direct conflict with employer testing, contact tracing, forced vaccination, etc...
... except many of the people advocating for repealing Roe v Wade probably are opposed to COVID-related personal restrictions? It's an interesting comparison to think about but seems like more as a contrast maybe.

EDIT: I made a typo on my phone and originally incorrectly wrote "advocating for Roe v Wade".

From what I see, people who favored the original Roe v Wade ruling were, for the most part, strongly in favor of things like contact tracing & mandatory vaccination. Absent any special pleading, this all seems very contradictory to me.

I think USA was the only part of the anglosphere to not go all-out on vax mandates. Certain types will chalk all of that up to "muh guns" or "muh constitution," and perhaps they are right, or maybe there was just a pesky little piece of case law in the way, and the system is removing the obstacle before round-two commences?

Yeah a critical word got deleted when I wrote that. There's a lot of potential consequences of repeal for medical privacy and autonomy that it seems people are starting to think through.
As long as we're talking about bodily autonomy, biometric surveillance and hypocrisy I'd like to quote Robert Scaer.

"Fetuses confronted with an amniocentesis needle invading the uterus exhibit defensive motor behavior. Intrauterine needling of the fetus causes full blown stress-related increase in plasma cortisol and B-endorphin levels, with modulation, of the stress response slower than the adult. Fetuses can also learn to adapt their behavior to control the environment. When presented with a sequence of different voices through headphones, an infant will learn to access his mother's voice through regulating the frequency of sucking on a nipple. The evidence for learning by the unborn fetus in utero, by the premature infant in the pediatric intensive care unit, and by the normal full-term newborn is overwhelming. They learn through implicit conditional memory.

The assumption that infants in all stages of development do not experience pain, do not register arousal with threat, and do not process a response to traumatic stress is clearly outdated and invalid."

Even a cursory familiarity with the positions of those in opposition to abortion would yield the delightful semantic response of "not your body" when presented with the equally semantic argument of "my body my choice".

I don't doubt or disagree with anything you have written. I am simply speculating as to why such an old ruling would be so suddenly reversed. A mere coincidence of timing, arising from the number of justices Trump got to pick? Or something else?
I'm not really interested in isolated political incidents but rather how they fit into trends across long spans of time. This dichotomy of collective vs individual is also very interesting to me, and through that interest I've determined that some people seem to believe that this plane of existence is an engineering problem. That if you for instance, want to do away with scarcity or whatever, achieve anything at all, well then all that is required is a proper catalogue of inputs and corresponding outputs with as few and as limited variables as possible, and like I said, that to acquire such a catalogue is inherently good for it enables any beneficence.

So, regarding free will and self determinations about one's own body, that is to say, one's own inputs into this catalogue, right; if your question is why would some people be so obsessive about micromanaging those aspects of your life, well that's why. It's because they believe that to do so is to master the laws of nature, and therefore to be able to reformulate the world in such a way that they estimate mankind would be happier and better off. That's the closest I've come to understanding the why of this stuff anyway, and it doesn't sit right with me because the premise is nihilistic, and it seems to me to mirror parts of my own life in which others derived their own life satisfaction from making demands of me and making me do things I didn't want to do without my consent and in such a way that I was worse off for those things having happened to me.

As an ordinary person, who thinks democracy is mostly a sham to pacify the people with an illusion of agency, I am very interested in the answer to "What will they do next?", because the answers hint at how I can protect the people I care about. That being said, I don't think they are lawless. I believe they are operating by a code, and that the Roe reversal strongly hints at it, at least in part.

With the "engineering problem," I'm dubious of the whole enterprise. The combinatorics are well beyond even the best minds at this point. It's just high iq verbal wranglers making terrible messes, then using a barrage of re-definitions, convenient omissions, misdirections, PR campaigns, and jargon to cover their tracks. And they refuse to even scratch the surface on things like consciousness or the soul. The operating theory seems to be: "Turn everyone into a "last man" who wants for nothing, and it will all work out!" They get very angry and insulting when you quibble with this.

I'm fairly confident that, at the higher levels (tha one puh-cent! [in reality, a portion many orders of magnitude smaller]), the micromanagement is in service of a goal far more ambitious than any utopianism. They would like to reach for His throne. Mankind must be re-configured if they are to have any chance at this: the race, assembled into a synthetic divine being; the man, reduced to a cell. Judging by the present trend, this will probably be an existence of pure suffering.

5 And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the children of men builded.

6 And the Lord said, Behold, the people is one, and they have all one language; and this they begin to do: and now nothing will be restrained from them, which they have imagined to do.

Sure. Reverse engineering the fall of man basically. But again to the question of why. Why be so nihilistic about life and the world that you want to do it over? Why believe that such a thing is achievable through some technological mechanism?

Well, maybe because you've seen some other technological mechanism facilitate something you thought was unachievable, like adherence to severe and rigid religious regimen facilitating group perpetuation in many disparate circumstances, and so you're just superimposing that experience onto a different circumstance and pursuing the belief of a similar outcome irrationally, which is where the shirking of feedback you mention comes in.

> Why be so nihilistic about life and the world that you want to do it over?

The technical caste, for the most part, believes in emergence rather than creation. If this has all come about through pure chance, why wouldn't someone think that our own minds, limited as they are, can eventually do a better job?

As for the true rulers of this world--the bank accounts behind the paychecks, whose memos set a thousand wheels into motion--I suspect that they take the Old Testament very seriously--if only to play for the other team; to reform the creation of a deity they deem malevolent. They don't have to believe it's achievable. They already know. The highest authority said so. Think along the lines of the masonic temple legend, or of gnosticism--with all of its offshoots & predecessors...

> like adherence to severe and rigid religious regimen

This is an insightful connection, which is no doubt true in many cases. Some inherit religion in their tribal identity package--never delving too deeply into its substance, yet ready to kill and die for words carelessly read. Others come to it earnestly--being late to understand sin, and too filled with trembling over their own sins to punish others harshly. The same can be written for science/engineering, with its wide gate for careerists and its strait gate for Teslas & Newtons.

What's knowledge? "Justified, true belief"? Belief me and my friends really, really believe in, with some trial and error mixed in? How self serving and unsatisfying and prone to disaster, given critical mass.

I'm not really sure where to take this from here. What do you think the antidote to nihilism is?

I'd need to know how you define nihilism. From where I sit, I see very little of it. The people aren't sceptical about knowledge or reality; they think they have monopolies on it. The people haven't rejected religious and moral principles; they have multiplied them. Harari is a case-in-point; the Martin Luther of the WEF religion, posting his theses against the enlightenment-era doctrines of the great Western normie.

If you mean nihilism in the Übermensch sense--of tearing down to build anew--I think the only antidote to that is extinction, and who would want that?

I don't think anyone wants extinction, but they'll get it anyway and that's what makes Harari, all the multiplications and the imagined monopolies delusional. I think people are in fact full of dejection, disappointment and skepticism, including at themselves. I can only truly speak for myself though. I feel that way and I'm very much more like these people than I would like to admit, but I have to believe I can build anew beyond that in such a way that doesn't necessitate me tearing down everyone else first.

I've never been very compromising and even normal conversations with me feel like battle, often. I just try to have a good time and speak my mind. When I get harassed by police or tricked or screwed around in whatever way at least I can then believe it's not my nihilism being expressed.

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In the US, we have HIPAA. If they share data for research, it has to be anonymized. To share with providers, they need permission. That is a far cry from "total biometric surveillance".
Do you really think the Powers That Be, the ones that could Use Covid for Total Surveillance, can’t skirt HIPAA? COVID conspiracy theories are way too late to this game. If there’s any truth to them, sorry but it happened decades ago. You missed the boat the day you were born and the nurse drew samples.
"the Powers That Be" are your words not mine. I am simply pointing out that what we have now (i.e. bits of data, with non-zero regulatory compliance requirements, scattered higgledy-piggledy, across disparate systems owned by different entities) is not the same thing as the "total biometric surveillance" Harari is so excited about in the video. Those are his words BTW: "total biometric surveillance"
But federal and state governments are ramping down testing and funding for testing. What tests there are are mainly home tests, and health agencies aren't even interested in hearing about positive results. Surveillance isn't getting entrenched.

Edit: Also from what I can see, he's not actually a member of WEF, he just gives talks there.

It’s a “TED Talk” for the WEF alumni.
Utopians like Harari don't actually have any ideas about even the most fundamental questions like the nature of consciousness, the nature of free will, whether it is right to force someone to do something they don't want to do, or what is the significance of freedom of association.

They rely on that poverty of discourse for validity and probably find disagreement, debate and the constant tension of these questions to be irritating and they want it to end, so their propositions simply assume a position on these things then assert some moralistic or otherwise utopian vision of plenty to be derived from them at some undefined point in the future. This is what irrational and religious people do in order to justify their own power, because ultimately that's what really matters to them.