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Young people aren’t idiots on vaccine passports

Credit: Getty

July 30, 2021 - 12:15pm

‘Young people’ like me are just citizens like all the rest: with many sides to what we are and do. We may go to nightclubs, live gigs, festivals and sporting events but they don’t dominate our lives and they aren’t all we are.

I’m a musician, a political researcher, an events organiser, an engineering graduate and a science enthusiast. Where do I – where do any of my contemporaries – fit in to the pigeonholing of my generation that this vaccine passports debate seems to assume? Where do I stand?

I want to wander. I don’t want to plan my freedom. I don’t want to have to prove to someone that I am allowed that freedom. I don’t want prying eyes judging or authorising my movements.

I want the freedom to take small risks in so many areas of life. The thought of being forced to show a vaccine passport to attend events leaves a bad taste in my mouth. But I do long to attend those events. And I do think about how safe they are. My brother, too, longs to attend those events. For him the risks are higher. Leukaemia and Pneumothorax have left him vulnerable to Covid-19. If I have freedom, he has less.

From my perspective as a performer I am more strongly convinced of the passports case than from my perspective as an attendee. As a performer I stand on a stage shouting and singing and dancing around, sweat dripping in front of a crowd of people doing the same in response. In a small hot music venue with little ventilation — and they mostly are — this is a high risk setting and I do have to accept that. I feel a responsibility for fans who’ve paid money to see us, to do something to mitigate the risks as I go from crowd to crowd: a potential bridge from Covid hotspot to Covid hotspot.

From my perspective as an attendee I feel a bit differently: that the choice should be mine whether I take the risk. No gig-attendee loves the ticket-checking and the strong-arming, and an instinct of defiance rises within me.

Meanwhile, as an event organiser I’m conflicted. I do feel a responsibility for the safety of attendees but I also feel that people are making the choice to come to our event, so the responsibility lies with them. They don’t have to come. That’s different from being a performer where it’s me going to them rather than the other way round.

And while the principle of the vaccine passport may be straightforward, the actual implementation is tricky. Who loses out if an attendee has to cancel because of a ping? Should they get their money back? (Generally, events run on very tight profit margins and they cannot afford to be doing it this forever.) And if they can’t, are we coaxing them into dangerous behaviour?

While Covid is still prevalent in the UK, I am prepared to accept limits to my personal freedom in order to increase the freedom of others. That, on balance – and it is a balance – is where I come down. But something else is beginning to worry me. What’s the exit strategy? At what point would we cease to use the passports? Might they be the thin end of the wedge for other kinds of checking? There needs to be a clear way out to avoid drifting into a dystopian regime in the long term.

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Malcolm Ripley
Malcolm Ripley
3 years ago

Question : who dies after a concert ?
That’s all that actually matters, who dies, who ends up in ICU. Pre vaccine those who died were over 80……I suspect they might not be going to concerts. The flu is far more dangerous to under 40’s than Covid and yet we never had passports for flu did we?

THIS IS A CASEDEMIC. People are treating a positive test result as a sign of potential death! It’s crazy. They are now starting to behave as if the unvaccinated are dirty disease spreaders and yet the truth is the vaccinated are the uperr spreaders of the delta variant and dying from it (latest figures England, Scotland, Israel). You could not make this insanity up.

Edward De Beukelaer
Edward De Beukelaer
3 years ago
Reply to  Malcolm Ripley

Indeed, it is time journalists (and politicians ) start using proper language on covid nd inform peopl about the reaility and not some story that suits a number of interests.
Please young people, get on the barriers because you are lied to all the time and the future (I like to be optimistic) is in your hands.

Terry Needham
Terry Needham
3 years ago

I am older than you and I accepted vaccination as I thought it was sensible for me to do so. I fully accept that you, and everyone else, should do as you think best.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 years ago
Reply to  Terry Needham

… as hopefully we fully accept the rights of private venue owners to do as they think best.

Edward De Beukelaer
Edward De Beukelaer
3 years ago
Reply to  Terry Needham

Note that if one says I had the vaccination, one should really say: I took part in the vaccination experiment: data available for scrutiny in 2023-4 isch

Andrea X
Andrea X
3 years ago

I had to do a big eye-roll for most of the “article”, starting from the obligatory relative with health issues (who, it always seems, are only at risk of catching covid and nothing else).
As to the rest, as he says, people make their own choices. Let’s leave it at that.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
3 years ago

To cancel because of a ‘ping’? I thought anyone with smarts had deleted that ridiculous app.

Galeti Tavas
Galeti Tavas
3 years ago

Any article that begins with ‘Young people aren’t idiots’ you know is going to be a mess, as they mostly are. The writer then goes on to say he, and his ilk, want to party and be creative, and dance and have fun – and yes, there is something to that, but I get this Peter Pan feel from his writing. No mention of the real world, the world of working, producing, the Economy, and so on. Of rent and mortgage, of 9 – 5 and politics, the world almost all of us inhabit. This is such a ‘Young Person’ feeling article I felt like came from some other world, but then I am an old guy who lives pretty solitary on lone construction sites, and hours a day on the water alone and has let the current world go by.

Having read so many thousands of books, and tens of thousands of articles it is pronounced how different types of people produce a different feel in their writing, almost as much as if you were face to face, you get a rel vibe from the writer. Writing actually conveys so much more than just the words – as we do in physical conversation, what and who we are also is projected. All of us used to writing say a great deal about ourselves just between the lines – odd how that is, how sophisticated our language is.

I have to go to work – posting on here is much more fun than working – I have an AC unit to install today…. no fun.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
3 years ago
Reply to  Galeti Tavas

Oh well, I ‘retired’ 3 years ago, consulted back in for 2 years and then boom Covid and my life-long identity went. It has been a lesson. Enjoy the work while you can… and remember that installing an AC is way healthier than working in corporate.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
3 years ago

Good to see the author clearly isn’t an idiot on this issue.
However, I’m unconvinced that most of his peers have a similar multi-faceted perspective ….

Last edited 3 years ago by Ian Barton
Martin Smith
Martin Smith
3 years ago

As a young fit person your risk of getting ill from Covid is vanishingly small. People with co-morbidities should get vaccinated if they want to attend large public events and or inhabit crowded intimate bar rooms.

Karl Juhnke
Karl Juhnke
3 years ago

I work with young people and I generally like them.
Obviously many of our young have a woke image of the world which denigrates anything The West has created; including freedom. So glad to read from a young (how young?) man thinking for himself.
How quickly can those with moderate wokeness turn themselves around and face the authoritarians coming their way?
What can I do to help them?
These are the questions we need to ask if we want to continue as somewhat free and democratic peoples.