Holly-May Leslie
Registered Member
getting super technical here
its very technical stuff
which vaccine are you talking about ?
I was talking about whichever one's used mRNA.
getting super technical here
its very technical stuff
which vaccine are you talking about ?
'it's the response that's not right
'it's the response that's not right
something is just not right
give me all your power & belief'
sewing the seeds of mistrust to create a devote cult member
what is a good way to respond to being dead ?
Lots of people. Which privilege?so who is it that is making this claim that their own privilege should be worth more than other peoples lives ?
What does run up the Jolly Roger mean?Aha. I was wondering when you would run up the Jolly Roger.
Well, yes. Dead people might find it a bit tricky to disagree with living people.5.2 million dead COVID victims might disagree. (Or more accurately, their families might disagree.)
I won't attempt to debate a third person who's not on this thread, so I thought I'd just comment on this:Sue: It doesn't work. Those who get it can still pass the virus on. It just minimizes the risk. Me: Then it doesn't work.
I would say that it is way too easy. And it is fear that really does it.Dealing with humans is like trying to herd cats. It's a very hard task.
Okay. The vaccinated should be fine with that. If they're not then I recommend them separating themselves from the unvaccinated. In fact, that seems to already be happening to a huge extent. It is like these unvaccinated people, (Who are mostly just unvaccinated because they don't trust a rushed experimental vaccine which people are getting threatened into having) are being slowly ostracised from society. It makes no sense, but if they feel safer with no unvaccinated people about, then so be it.Covid is a problem because everyone isn't vaccinated. It would still be a small problem for a while but without everyone getting vaccinated it just goes on and on. It gives Covid the opportunity to mutate and the problem just gets worse.
I won't attempt to debate a third person who's not on this thread, so I thought I'd just comment on this:
Seatbelts work. Airbags work. Parachutes work. Condoms work. Airplanes work. Cars work. NONE of them work 100%, and no one thinks they do. Why are vaccines somehow different?
Okay. The vaccinated should be fine with that. If they're not then I recommend them separating themselves from the unvaccinated. In fact, that seems to already be happening to a huge extent. It is like these unvaccinated people, (Who are mostly just unvaccinated because they don't trust a rushed experimental vaccine which people are getting threatened into having) are being slowly ostracised from society. It makes no sense, but if they feel safer with no unvaccinated people about, then so be it.
Yes. Because during your argument with Sue you said "then it doesn't work." That indicates you believe it does not work. If you have since changed your opinion, and now think they DO work (even if they are not 100%) then good for you!I suppose they are not. Were you under the impression that I thought they were?
because they don't trust a rushed experimental vaccine
Google is your friend.What does run up the Jolly Roger mean?
my rough guess of death stats isIt's killed close to 5.2 million people.
i may have in error lead a poor examplemultiple responses
Ummmmm let's say the vaccine type was being worked up before COVID-19 came along
Extract
Messenger RNA, or mRNA, was discovered in the early 1960s; research into how mRNA could be delivered into cells was developed in the 1970s.
https://publichealth.jhu.edu/2021/the-long-history-of-mrna-vaccines
Let's also say the groups of people who offered to use themselves as test subjects were tested concurrently not sequentially
Normally test groups are tested, results poured over then testing moves to the next group. With urgency of COVID-19 groups were tested alongside each other and priority given to analysis
Rushed NO, method speed up (hastened) YES