Did anyone bother to read those documents mentioned? They were from the FDA.
Here is the important part:
The FDA does not regulate or treat viruses. The FDA is responsible for protecting the public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and security of human and veterinary drugs, biological products, and medical devices, and by ensuring the safety of our nation's food supply, cosmetics, and products that emit radiation. Therefore, we have no responsive records.
They're not at all confessing that monkeypox is a hoax. They're saying they don't have any records concerning it because that's not their job.
Looking for information on monkeypox at the FDA makes as much sense as asking the DEA for their information on it and then saying they were admitting it was a hoax when they didn't have any information on it because that's not their job.
Please don't spread this around, trying to redpill people. It would just make us look ignorant and/or deceitful.
Things like this really should not happen as often as they do here. It's important to make at least a small effort to confirm claims like these. After all, this is supposed to be an elite research board.
Intellectual honesty is important. I refuse to believe that whoever initially started passing this around did not understand what the FDA was saying. They just counted on people being too lazy to look deeper into it, and that even if they did, they'd be too dumb to understand what it said.
It really frustrates me when people, especially those here, will believe just about anything they're told. People really need to be careful about confirmation bias. I think that's what is responsible for things like this happening.
Did anyone bother to read those documents mentioned? They were from the FDA.
Here is the important part:
They're not at all confessing that monkeypox is a hoax. They're saying they don't have any records concerning it because that's not their job.
Looking for information on monkeypox at the FDA makes as much sense as asking the DEA for their information on it and then saying they were admitting it was a hoax when they didn't have any information on it because that's not their job.
Please don't spread this around, trying to redpill people. It would just make us look ignorant and/or deceitful.
Things like this really should not happen as often as they do here. It's important to make at least a small effort to confirm claims like these. After all, this is supposed to be an elite research board.
Intellectual honesty is important. I refuse to believe that whoever initially started passing this around did not understand what the FDA was saying. They just counted on people being too lazy to look deeper into it, and that even if they did, they'd be too dumb to understand what it said.
It really frustrates me when people, especially those here, will believe just about anything they're told. People really need to be careful about confirmation bias. I think that's what is responsible for things like this happening.