Like I said, this thread is usually good for a laugh.
Paul, most people with persistent symptoms after an infection do recover in the first couple of years. That doesn't make them special or possessors of some superior knowledge. It certainly doesn't warrant the earning of a badge, not even an embarrassingly bad badge reminiscent of frog spawn or Bubble Guppies.
What next? A day for people who recover from Covid-19 without any persistent symptoms at all to wear a badge to celebrate their moral superiority over people who develop Long Covid, no matter for how short a time?
Or perhaps Garner's followers would like to display their wide ranging moral fortitude by
earning more badges?
View attachment 26996
it is behavioural psychology (which as a proper subject isn't 'mental health treatment' but looking at how sadly certain things are used to manipulate and can be for the good or bad and harmful impacts etc) and basically bullying - now we are decades past those old days where they can claim it was 'the first time we have done it institutionally, and maybe it might work' and now know that all these things as treatments don't work, so can't employ the wilful ignorance excuse to pretend handing 'supporters/bullies' a badge as a tool to button-press and rub in what those who are ill can't do and will harm them is pretty horrific. But also plain propaganda of basically disability bigotry at a level that I can't think how retro it is - pre-equality acts say early 2000s
it is basically suggesting that ill people are thickos when they have more on their plate than not ill people have so are quite the opposite, and dealing with more complexity because of that than not ill people which needs to be the message most need to be reminded of.
Instead this is a clear attempt to spread rumours of the idea someone disabled is:
too thick to eat a vegetable without encouragement?
not 'behaving themselves' - they literally are suggesting 'people drink more than one glass of wine' with this? so it is not even veiled slander isn't it, given most of those they are inferring 'need this' don't drink and they are suggesting those who aren't ill and probably themselves actually are the drinkers should now assume the truth is the opposite?
should be going to the gym and laziness is at the root of 'one of their problems'.
So yes, it is behavioural psychology in the sense that I think the target audience is not the ill or recovered but those surrounding them/the general public, as usual for this lot/ - and a standard tactic
that sort of appraoch/tactic of focusing on selling to those who aren't the object who will be on the consequences end of it, but silencing their voice to sell to those who can enforce it on them that 'there is something wrong with them and it's
this that
we tackle' is talked about well in episode 2 of eg 'The Program' on Netflix to focus on brainwashing those surrounding those who are targeted with useless therapy (so they don't notice or won't listen that 'the therpay' isn't therapy, help or doesn't work, but mainly the only message is 'these people need/deserve this)