Categories
Pandemic

Covidiot

My last blog entry was about the derogatory term “Maskhole.” Today’s post looks at the origins of the insult “Covidiot.” The Merriam Webster online dictionary didn’t have a definition for this term but there was an entry in the Urban Dictionary dated March 16, 2020 which was submitted by user ‘you’reanidiot’:

Relating to the 2020 Covid-19 virus: Someone who ignores the warnings regarding public health or safety. A person who hoards goods, denying them from their neighbors. Did you see that covidiot with 300 rolls of toilet paper in his basket? That covidiot is hugging everyone she sees.”

A few months after this entry appeared, an article entitled “What Does ‘Covidiot’ Mean, and Who Qualifies as One?” appeared on the Health.com website. Author Korin Miller writes: “A covidiot doesn’t take COVID-19 and the risks of the virus seriously, despite what government officials and the global health community say. At the same time, they may also engage in selfish behavior that doesn’t look out for the greater good when it comes to slowing down and stopping the spread of the coronavirus.

The term has appeared in online news websites. In an article for News18.com, a woman was seen at a Kentucky gas station wearing a hole in her mask conveniently situated where her nose and mouth would be. When asked why, the woman replied that it helped her breath better. The article was aptly titled “This Covidiot Woman Has Cut a Hole in Her Mask to Help her Breathe.” Click on the TikTok video below to watch.

woman wears a mask with a hole in it

Social Media Trends as of May 10, 2022

Facebook #covidiot: 42,000 people are posting about this
Instagram #covidiot: 55,593 posts
TikTok #covidiot: 66,600,000 views
YouTube #covidiot: 795 videos and 441 channels

Google Trends: the popularity of the term “covidiot” reached its peak during the week of March 22, 2020 coinciding with the outbreak of the pandemic.

Covidiot search term

Sources

Miller, Korin. “What Does ‘Covidiot’ Mean, and Who Qualifies as One?” Health.com. July 15, 2020. URL: https://www.health.com/condition/infectious-diseases/coronavirus/what-does-covidiot-mean.

Samann, Joe. “Check this funny mask out.” TikTok. April 30, 2020. URL: https://www.tiktok.com/@joegotti96/video/6821575139763834118?referer_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.news18.com%2F&referer_video_id=6821575139763834118&refer=embed.

“This Covidiot Woman Has Cut a Hole in Her Mask to Help her Breathe.” News18.com. May 5, 2020. URL: https://www.news18.com/news/buzz/this-covidiot-woman-has-cut-a-hole-in-her-mask-to-help-her-breathe-2606931.html.

you’reanidiot. “Covidiot.” Urban Dictionary. March 16, 2020. URL: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Covidiot.

Categories
Pandemic

Vaxtard

Mostly seen online, this derogatory epithet is used to describe people who fully support vaccines and believes they are the ultimate Covid cure. The term has appeared online since at least August 12, 2021 when a Twitter user going by the name “Arkad The Covid Survivor” defined vaxtard as “a person who wants to force the mRNA injection on EVERYONE, regardless of their current age, health, lifestyle, natural immunity or personal beliefs, for a illness with a 99% survival rate.

The following month, RealJason, an Urban Dictionary contributor, submitted a definition for vaxtard as “someone who naively believes that the COVID vaccines are the ultimate cure and will make COVID disappear. Despite the fact that these vaccines are entirely experimental and are seeing a rapid decline in efficiency over time.

Although the term is not popular enough to be picked up in Google Trends, it did appear as a meme on the website America’sBestPics.com. The meme also appears on T-shirts sold by a few apparel websites.

Vaxtard meme. Contributor unknown.

Social Media Trends as of May 7, 2022

Facebook #vaxtard: people are posting about this
Instagram #vaxtard: 14 posts

Sources:

Arkad the Covid Survivor. [@KounterPoint]. (2021, August 12). What’s your definition of #vaxtard? Twitter. https://twitter.com/KounterPoint/status/1425681166774902790.

“Vaxtard” meme. Aamericasbestpics.com. 5 Feb. URL: https://americasbestpics.com/picture/today-s-new-word-vaxtard-person-who-thinks-covid-vaccine-9cD5rXPD9?s=cl.

“Vaxtard.” Urban Dictionary. URL: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Vaxtard.