Does the Sheer Number of Stupid People in Our Midst Explain Why We Got the Response to the Pandemic so Disastrously Wrong?

Drawing upon the insights of historian Carlo M. Cipolla, Harry Hopkins delves into the five basic laws of human stupidity in TCW, revealing their prevalence and the harm they have caused in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Stupidity is a more dangerous enemy of the good than evil,” said the German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who was hanged in Flossenbürg concentration camp in April 1945. His words reflected the bloody experience of a man dedicated to resisting Nazi tyranny.

What prompted me to write about stupidity has been my Covid experience of the last three years. I never imagined in my wildest dreams that people could behave in such a way as to leave me completely baffled. I’m sure you feel the same and it is still not over. While Covid may be on the back burner, we are facing the attempted Great Reset. I wanted to try to understand what drives people to behave in such an inhuman way, and how do those in power get so many on board with their diabolical plans?

Stupidity is a complex and fascinating topic. One of the acknowledged experts is Carlo M Cipolla, an Italian economic historian who died in 2000 at the age of 78. He was a member of both the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society. He wrote a book entitled The Basic Laws of Human Stupiditypublished in 1976 and now recognised as a milestone. He lists five basic laws:

1. Always and inevitably, everyone underestimates the number of stupid individuals in circulation.

If you doubt this, think about all the people you had judged intelligent before you realised that they were behaving stupidly, idiotically and dangerously over the Covid narrative. Following its directives to the letter although it appeared incomprehensible to a sizeable minority must rank as the biggest example of mass stupidity in recent times. The fact that so many fell in line with this proves the first basic law.

2. The probability that a certain person is stupid is independent of any other characteristic of that person.

This is a fascinating observation and one that explains a lot. Like other human characteristics, stupidity is distributed roughly equally across all human beings regardless of their level of education.This goes some way to explain why, when subjected to the same levels of propaganda and nudge messaging, some individuals automatically recognised the falsehoods inherent in their government’s behaviours and others did not; why the most highly educated could fall for it, whilst the apparently less educated realised right off that it was nonsense. 

3. A stupid person is one who causes losses to another person or a group of people while they gain nothing or may even suffer losses themselves.

This is the most important law and should be branded on the soul of those who try to understand stupidity. It is not a matter of IQ, but rather a lack of interpersonal relationship skills. Cipolla believes it is possible to classify people based on their behaviour. It seems to be self-evident that stupid people harm others and often themselves, whilst the behaviour of truly intelligent people is aimed not only at helping themselves but also helping others. Covid has seen a glaring example of narrative adherents behaving in a self-centred and ultimately self-destructive way by going along completely with what they were told and in so doing have seen their businesses, their jobs, their health, their relationships and in some cases their own lives destroyed in the process. Cipolla summed this up neatly when he said: “There are people who, by their illogic actions, not only cause harm to other people, but also to themselves. Such people belong to the genus of the super stupids.”

4. Non-stupid people always underestimate the damaging power of stupid individuals. In particular, non-stupid people constantly forget that in any time and place and circumstance dealing and/ or hanging out with stupid people always turns out to be a costly mistake.

When the ‘three weeks to flatten the curve’ was introduced in March 2020, non-stupid people, although not buying into the Covid madness from the start, probably thought naively that this would see an end to it. They had not reckoned on the destructive and deadly dangerous nature that those who were super stupid possessed. They did not imagine this because rank stupidity at this level was beyond their understanding and comprehension and besides, stupid people’s attacks always catch intelligent folk by surprise. Stupidity is a characteristic of a person just like hair colour and is therefore not open to rational argument and persuasion. As if to bolster this truth, how many of you have tried to argue the anti-Covid case with logic, facts and common sense only to be met with derision and ridicule? Illogical actions cannot be understood using logic, which of course comes as a big disappointment when attempted by sensible, intelligent people.

5. Stupid people are the most dangerous type.

Intelligent people, however much they may disagree with you and however hostile they may be, are generally predictable. In contrast stupid people are entirely unpredictable. Which makes stupid people far more dangerous than intelligent people.

Worth reading in full.

Subscribe
Notify of

To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.

Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.

34 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
lymeswold
lymeswold
2 years ago

1. Always and inevitably, everyone underestimates the number of stupid individuals in circulation.

Today I’m sitting on Dunster beach on the west Somerset coast, looking across towards Wales. It’s a lovely day, a light wind is blowing, no-one is around. Someone just walked past wearing a mask…

D J
D J
2 years ago
Reply to  lymeswold

When I was allowed back to see patients in clinics in 2020 I faced a formal complaint from a patient after I told him and his wife that they could take their masks off. I mentioned 50 years of evidence regarding their lack of benefit for respiratory viruses.
They were furious.’That’s you opinion. We listen to the experts!’
‘They lied to you, and I am sorry that they have scared you so much. I think they are evil.’
The paperwork afterwards took up a fair bit of time.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago
Reply to  D J

Your patient had the same level of intellect I saw displayed by the father of a girl who was being excluded from her senior school. I was a volunteer Community Governor, chairing the disciplinary appeals committee. On being informed that their appeal against exclusion had been dismissed, his classic response was “It don’t matter, I’ll learn her meself”

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago
Reply to  lymeswold

They possibly drove there, wearing the mask and gloves inside their car

FerdIII
2 years ago

100% spot on. Rona fascism, the medical nazism, the stab and LD tyranny and the morons who complied, nay cheerleaded and roared for more, simply revealed how stupid our ‘civilisation’ has become.

-penis women?
-‘pride’ month (what about the drugs, child porn, child abuse, gay gestapo intolerance, perversions, psychologial afflictions etc etc)
-plant food causes climate?
-fossils make hydro carbon fuels?
-trees falling down in a forest create a coal seam?
-injecting poisions using animal organs, pus, blood into your own bloodstream will kill a ‘virus’ that you can’t indentify either in your body or outside it?
-wearing a face diaper keeps out the flying viruses even though you can’t identify where they are flying from or whereto?
-aliens, UFOs, the quiet vertical ‘moon landing’, chewbaca is real?
-Biden won 81 million, or was it 81 billion votes….etc etc etc

Honestly as PT Barnum stated, a moron is born every minute. And here we are in our age of reason, age of the enligtenment, age of science, age of light – stupid as F*ing doors.

stewart
2 years ago

I find the idea that we are surrounded by idiots as seductive as anyone else. It’s comforting to have a feasible explanation especially if it’s nice and simple.

However, I don’t attribute people’s behaviour during covid primarily to stupidity.

The stupid things – the lockdowns, masks, jabs, vax passports – were all imposed coercively. People did them because they were intimidated into doing them. Had it been completely voluntary with no coercion, none of them would have persisted for very long if they even got started at all.

Let’s not confuse stupidity with cowardice and moral fragility.

Epi
Epi
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Yep up to a point but I remember going to lunch between lockdowns with fellow retired colleagues all university educated apart from me. They entered the restaurant and were shown to their seats wearing masks, once seated they removed their masks. On going to the lavatory they put their masks back on until they sat back at the table. We paid the bill maskless apart from the waiter and then they placed their masks back on their faces when leaving the restaurant. If that isn’t f…ing stupidity I for one don’t know what is. Think I was the only maskless person in the establishment.

Mogwai
2 years ago

Apparently this is the UK. Does anyone recognise the place? I remember walking down a high street in Wembly and being the only white person. I thought that was odd but this is next level!

https://twitter.com/RadioGenova/status/1672524501270122497?cxt=HHwWgsC-hYWLgLYuAAAA

Mogwai
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

But if it’s so dangerous to stay in Libya where are all the women and children?

”From Libya to Italy. An army of 500,000 men ready to invade Europe. @GiorgiaMeloni
does not speak. With her in power, dozens of invader boats arrive in Italy every day. In 9 months she has allowed over 105,000 invaders to enter Italy, 400 every day! We want Julius Caesar back!”

https://twitter.com/RadioGenova/status/1672863811030720512?cxt=HHwWgIC94buxmrcuAAAA

giantspider
giantspider
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Maybe J C was stabbed in the back – by an African!

transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

I would guess at Birmingham

You can tell it’s not Pakistan because of the buildings and street signs – it’s obvious it’s a first world country

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago

Bradford?

1984imminent
2 years ago

Each side believes the other is stupid. I noticed that on both sides, the language is almost identical.
”Look at those selfish arseholes flocking to beaches, and refusing the vaccines; they’re going to die, and prolong the restrictions, it’s very sad.”
”Look at those stupid lemmings queueing up
for the clot shots, they’re going to die, it’s very sad”.

Mogwai
2 years ago
Reply to  1984imminent

The difference is though, we unjabbed haven’t died, we are not taking up space in the hospitals and we don’t get diagnosed with myocarditis or have to worry about dying from an unexpected bout of ”cause unknown”. Just by being here, unscathed, we rub their noses in it. They took untested, proven dangerous medication for nothing and we are the constant reminder of how gullible and pig-ignorant they are/were.

transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  1984imminent

Yes, but I don’t advocate forcing people NOT to have “vaccines” (though I’d prefer my tax ££££s were not spent on it) whereas Covidians want to see everyone forced to be like them. So we may both be stupid but they are dangerous and/or evil.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago

Why concede that our side might be stupid when there’s zero evidence for it?

transmissionofflame
2 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

I certainly would not concede anything with regard to Covid but I’m surely not right about everything.

It seems to me there is a fundamental difference between those with a largely “live and let live” attitude and people who like to stick their nose into other people’s private business. I don’t think it’s a difference there is much hope of resolving other than new countries because the two visions of how society should be organised are not compatible.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
2 years ago
Reply to  1984imminent

But we were and are right about their stupidity while they were and are wrong about ours.

Are any of us terrified of considering the possibility that we might have made a terrible mistake in avoiding the jabs?

Epi
Epi
2 years ago
Reply to  1984imminent

As I have stated in an anecdote below (or intimated it) anyone who thought that standing up in a restaurant maskless was “killing granny” but sitting maskless wasn’t has got to be ..well just plain nuts. Sorry but where’s the logic?

Alan M
Alan M
2 years ago

When you consider how stupid the average person is, remember that, by definition, half the population is worse!

Exile on Spencer St
2 years ago

Excellent interview with Scott Atlas on The Highwire at the moment describing just how stupid, in terms of medical knowledge, were the ‘experts’ advising the previous and current US Presidents. Of course, their stupidity was self-serving, confirming Cipolla’s law No.5.

Jon Mors
Jon Mors
2 years ago

What has become clear is that very many individuals who are objectively intelligent, in the IQ test sense of the word, are slaves to their desire to conform (or ‘agreeableness’ as Jordan Peterson would say). I don’t think ‘stupid’ is the right word for this. WE are the exception. Genetic or upbring or both – I don’t know.

Jon Mors
Jon Mors
2 years ago

Had to take my daughter to the local hospital today. Nobody wearing a mask in the queue to the reception, got asked to wear one before sitting down, said ‘exempt’, she said ‘sorry’, and I stomped to my seat. Got called in to the doctors’ area. Nobody wearing masks. Went to X-ray. Again no masks. Went back to reception. Didn’t get asked again. I have to go to a (private) hospital for a separate reason later this week so have all this to look forward to again. Hey ho; practice I suppose.

Dr G
Dr G
2 years ago

For me, the most egregious example of stupid was the couple of local young female GP’s who celebrated on Facebook the injecting of their young children with the Covid transfection agents.
To simultaneously ignore the Hippocratic principle of “primum non nocere”, to abrogate any maternal duty to protect one’s offspring, and to be unable to fire up a single neuron in the pursuit of critical thought, in a highly educated individual requires an exceptional degree of stupidity.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago
Reply to  Dr G

Highly educated or force fed knowledge?

Dr G
Dr G
2 years ago
Reply to  DevonBlueBoy

I toyed with using the phrase “highly indoctrinated” rather than “highly educated”, but figured the terms are becoming synonyms.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
2 years ago
Reply to  Dr G

👍👍

Covid-1984
Covid-1984
2 years ago

Some elements of a society absolutely love their mask. It means they can carry out crimes with immunity from facial recognition.

Kornea112
Kornea112
2 years ago

There are not just “stupid” people, there are also outright “evil” people. Those who act knowing their actions are destructive driven by a desire for power and control. The other “evil” people are those who follow evil orders because they get a paycheck for doing so or they do not want to create waves.

Alan
2 years ago

I think some care is needed in using Cipolla’s definitions. He specifically defined a stupid person as someone who does something that harms others but does not gain anything from it. He also defined Intelligent people as those who benefit from their actions and provide benefits to other, Bandits who harm other but benefit themselves and Helpless people who can harm others and themselves. It follows that his definition needs stupid people to be in positions of power to cause harm to a large number of people and whilst we might consider many politicians to be stupid it is not the same ad Cipolla’s definition. I also think that many people who fall into Cipolla’s definition also consider they are doing good, and let’s face it in the case of the pandemic and covid vaccine policies most people did not see them as stupid and complied. Who really are the stupid?

rachel.c
rachel.c
2 years ago
Reply to  Alan

Agree. I believe (hope) that most people are not inherently stupid. The problem is they are lazy and willingly ignorant, not wanting to question whether what they are told by “authority” about what to do and believe. They don’t seem to care and have lost their moral compass, community spirit and any sense of personal autonomy. Perhaps like drug addicts, floundering and hitting out at anyone who challenges them. Even though many are not well off by our standards I think it a symptom of decadence. They’ve lost touch with the reality of everyday hunting and gathering for survival. On the other hand, most people in the freedom movement are the opposite, though some who are far down a particular rabbit hole can behave similarly

jsampson45
jsampson45
2 years ago

There is a difference between intelligence and wisdom, the fear of the Lord being the beginning of. Wisdom is rare. What else is new?

The Enforcer
The Enforcer
2 years ago

Living for thelast 30 years in the North East of Scotland, I have witnessed hordes of people voting SNP; some of whom I thought of as intelligent.

Gross stupidity or cognitive dissonance – take your pick

SomersetHoops
SomersetHoops
2 years ago

The answer to the title question is yes. Even people who have some basic intelligence are stupid enough to believe every word of biased lying rubbish spouted from our government leaders. This happened with covid, and it’s happening again with the crazy unnecessary drive to net-zero. I just wish people with more than one functioning brain cell would do some basic research and find the truth.