I have the same feeling.
I’m sorry if what I said sounded like a personal criticism. I tried not to have it sound that way, but it probably came off like that anyway. I am reacting that same kind of hypocrisy and the politics taking precedence over faith, not you personally. We do need to care for each other and consider the common good and I’m not seeing a lot of that these days and it’s getting to me. So I jumped in your comments rather than giving you the benefit of the doubt. I’m sorry for that.
As far as Scranton goes, more notice would have been nice.
My daughter does not go there. However, she had more warning than Scranton gave and got an exemption. Having lots of time to think about it, she decided to get a vaccine because she will be living on campus and in a position where she will have to interact with other students in a position of authority. She is devout and it was a very hard decision for her. We talked about it a lot, for months really. The vaccine seems to have triggered a serious allergy which could be life-threatening in the future, but I am hoping for the best and that it will settle down when her immune system calms down. In any case, she can own her decision because she weighed it all and did what she thought was best. All kids should have that opportunity.