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The Vaccine Thread


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2 minutes ago, CousinsCowgirl84 said:

If he was that stupid he couldn’t have been that smart....

 

Back when John Madden used to say things on the air that I thought were insightful or witty, one thing he said that stuck in me.  

 

It takes a very special man to be a head coach in the NFL.  
You have to be smart enough to understand the game.

And dumb enough to think it's important.  

 

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@primetime441  The statement you made (below) is partially false and partially misleading. 

 

"Respectfully, "lots of rules" do not require you to take an experimental vaccine which is not FDA approved." 

 

The last part of your statement is partially false and partially misleading.

 

The "experimental vaccine" is false. This is not an experimental vaccine. It went through all tests necessary for qualification. The only difference was they allowed human and animal testing to be done at the same time instead of in series. It also allows them to file the paperwork later. 

 

The "not approved" part is misleading. An EUA does not mean it does not have FDA approval. An EUA is a type of approval. It allows the paperwork to be filed later. 

 

If none of that makes a difference - how about actual numbers - 334,000,000 doses given and only 6000 deaths reported to VAERs, none can be directly linked to the vaccine. Other major side effects have accounted for a whole 300 to 400 more people. 2 to 5 per million suffer anaphylaxis. There have been a very few (39) reporting Thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), but both of those are only in the J&J vaccine. Here is the link to the VEARs a page from CDC - https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/safety/adverse-events.html

 

Contrast that with 35,000,000 having contracted Covid with over 625,000 deaths. And the list of long lingering side effects are (from the Mayo Clinic - https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/in-depth/coronavirus-long-term-effects/art-20490351 ) : 

  • Fatigue
  • Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing
  • Cough
  • Joint pain
  • Chest pain
  • Memory, concentration or sleep problems
  • Muscle pain or headache
  • Fast or pounding heartbeat
  • Loss of smell or taste
  • Depression or anxiety
  • Fever
  • Dizziness when you stand
  • Worsened symptoms after physical or mental activities
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Union hospital workers protest NewYork-Presbyterian’s vaccine mandate

 

Hospital workers with 1199 Service Employees International Union (SEIU) rallied Thursday against NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital’s vaccination mandate.

 

Pharmacist John Simonian joined hundreds of members of his union protesting outside the hospital.

 

“Force is not the answer, and mandate forcing people at the barrel of a gun is not right,” Simonian said.

 

Simonian has been a pharmacist with the hospital for 35 years. He said the hospital’s mandate that all employees get vaccinated is a slippery slope.

 

“If you force to do one thing in one area, there’s a possibility you can force me to do something in another area,” Simonian said.

 

The hospital announced in June that it would require all of its 48,000 employees to have received a first dose by Sept. 1 unless there’s a medial or religious exemption. NYU Langone Health announced a similar plan.

 

Meanwhile, the city said it would require its health workers get vaccinated or receive weekly COVID-19 testing. Protesters at this private hospital say they would like the same option.

 

Click on the link for the full article

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31 minutes ago, LD0506 said:

So ship the nurses, etc., that don't "believe" in vaccines to Tennessee or Missouri, get theirs that do and ship 'em to NYC

 

Voila! Problem solved

 

 

That's my niece, who is going blind and just HAD to have a kid before she went blind...

She's an RN in an ER, still doing well.  But holy crap, the **** she's been fed because hospitals and doctor's offices only have FOX on...

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15 minutes ago, EmirOfShmo said:

^^Why not send them to another state that could use them? Or, if nobody in the US wants them, send them to a country that can use them.

 

Its really expensive to transport the vaccines. Even with the eased restrictions. 

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14 minutes ago, Dan T. said:


Hey I wonder if that’s our dearly departed from Extremeskins “Sarge.”

 

Same vibe. 


I would expect that there are a lot of message board posters choosing the name "sarge". And that a lot of them have a similar resonant frequency. 

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The article that appeared online on Feb. 9 began with a seemingly innocuous question about the legal definition of vaccines. Then over its next 3,400 words, it declared coronavirus vaccines were “a medical fraud” and said the injections did not prevent infections, provide immunity or stop transmission of the disease.

 

Instead, the article claimed, the shots “alter your genetic coding, turning you into a viral protein factory that has no off-switch.”

 

Its assertions were easily disprovable. No matter. Over the next few hours, the article was translated from English into Spanish and Polish. It appeared on dozens of blogs and was picked up by anti-vaccination activists, who repeated the false claims online. The article also made its way to Facebook, where it reached 400,000 people, according to data from CrowdTangle, a Facebook-owned tool.

 

The entire effort traced back to one person: Joseph Mercola.

 

Dr. Mercola, 67, an osteopathic physician in Cape Coral, Fla., has long been a subject of criticism and government regulatory actions for his promotion of unproven or unapproved treatments. But most recently, he has become the chief spreader of coronavirus misinformation online, according to researchers.

 

An internet-savvy entrepreneur who employs dozens, Dr. Mercola has published over 600 articles on Facebook that cast doubt on Covid-19 vaccines since the pandemic began, reaching a far larger audience than other vaccine skeptics, an analysis by The New York Times found. His claims have been widely echoed on Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Edited by Califan007
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