The funny thing about measles- death rate prior to the introduction of the vaccine was 1 in 500,000 and those that did die were kids who were suffering from malnutrition due to poverty. I look at that as kind of the jumping off point.
#5 and #6 are unfair. I've never seen a single post of that nature. #1 and #2 are extremely valid and should be stated. Do you think the polio vaccine was a bad thing? I'm old enough to know people who strongly believe otherwise.
The reason viruses like smallpox were eradicated is because they don't have an animal reservoir, whereas coronaviruses do. The problem with scientific arguments is most people don't understand what they're talking about (including me, not trying to sound rude). I had to research to understand why small pox vaccines were effective, bc we literally eradicated it.
Similarly, this would be like treating all vehicles the same, but some vehicles are cars and others are boats. They're part of the same family since they're both vehicles, but they have distinct characteristics that make them operate differently.
I 100% agree with your statement… and yet, with nearly every bit of new news, the evident effectiveness of these injections keeps further evaporating, and the harm correlated with their adoption keeps getting more and more undeniable. 🤷♂️
there isn't much vaccine shilling going on at GAW, but generally their arguments are
polio, smallpox, measles!
vaccines save lives!
no evidence of harm!
anecdote, coincidence, correlation, temporal!
autism is a beautiful addition to neurodiversity!
why do you hate autistic people!
The big one I hear constantly is, 'yeah because mandating vaccines to go to school is a new concept'
These people refuse to acknowledge that
parents can opt out (though some states have removed some exemptions)
the vaccines required for schools have been used for decades
(to my knowledge at least), there hasn't been a nationwide challenge to the legality of these school mandates
The funny thing about measles- death rate prior to the introduction of the vaccine was 1 in 500,000 and those that did die were kids who were suffering from malnutrition due to poverty. I look at that as kind of the jumping off point.
#5 and #6 are unfair. I've never seen a single post of that nature. #1 and #2 are extremely valid and should be stated. Do you think the polio vaccine was a bad thing? I'm old enough to know people who strongly believe otherwise.
The reason viruses like smallpox were eradicated is because they don't have an animal reservoir, whereas coronaviruses do. The problem with scientific arguments is most people don't understand what they're talking about (including me, not trying to sound rude). I had to research to understand why small pox vaccines were effective, bc we literally eradicated it.
Similarly, this would be like treating all vehicles the same, but some vehicles are cars and others are boats. They're part of the same family since they're both vehicles, but they have distinct characteristics that make them operate differently.
I'm too young and/or non-versed in the polio-vaccine development.
However, I am told there is a significant correlation between the prevalence of polio and the presence of lead-arsenide pesticides.
The evidence does raise my eyebrows, but I think history has occluded an accurate picture.
Nobody cares you think it's unfair, handshake.
I disagree. I think the extreme anti-vaxxer doomers are mostly shill sock-puppets.
I 100% agree with your statement… and yet, with nearly every bit of new news, the evident effectiveness of these injections keeps further evaporating, and the harm correlated with their adoption keeps getting more and more undeniable. 🤷♂️