Is there a law in the US -- and do name it, post a link to it! -- according to which covid vaccination is mandatory? — baker
Under labor laws, employers have the right to set their terms and conditions of employment — if a worker doesn't comply, a company can give them the ax. This also applies for COVID-19 vaccinations, according to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
"The EEOC has made clear that individuals can be required to take the vaccine as a term and condition of employment. That is subject to requests for accommodation based on medical reasons or sincerely held religious belief," Helen Rella, a workplace attorney at New York-based law firm Wilk Auslander, told CBS MoneyWatch.
(And even if the US has one, many other countries don't.) — baker
The onus is on those who want to persuade others. — baker
No, the issue is the exact wording of the termination, not the actual reason for the termination.
The wording has to be in accordance with the law for the termination to be legal. — baker
I’ve just read the whole Wikipedia article and to be quite honest, Kubrick sounds a bit dodgy to me.
For starters, he looks crazy. Just look at his eyes in those pictures.
Then he made a series of strange movies:
One about soldiers who tied this girl to a tree and then shot her dead.
One about an old professor and his 12-year old girlfriend …. — Apollodorus
But it is true, he fairs worse with independents — Count Timothy von Icarus
Of course it makes for more interesting conversations. I guess Russian roulette is more interesting than casino roulette too. Spices up the game... — Olivier5
So an example has to be exactly the thing itself? — Isaac
You're not an expert on risk, — Isaac
so either you have a serious ego problem, or you need to support your assertions, repeating them contributes nothing to the discussion. — Isaac
If you think the national prevalence is still relevant to a risk-based decision even when we know that key variables affect the risk (variables we also know our values for), then you'll need to explain how. As it stands, risk analysis is not done using national prevalence figures, so if you think it ought to be, the onus is on you to explain how. Simply repeating the view over and over is not convincing. — Isaac
They also tend to greatly over estimate their own support, — Count Timothy von Icarus
It is even more likely to happen if the country is doing poorly, which it most certainly will be due to heavy drags on the economy. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Biden's approval rating is absolute bottom barrel. It is worse than Trump's during the same week of his Presidency, and this was the week of Charlottesville and the news of Manafort's Russian corruption ties, which tanked his polls. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I would say it is trending towards more likely that they get nothing, in which case it is more likely than not that Biden will have no major legislative achievements in his term, as I highly doubt the Democrats hold on to their razor thin margins in 2022. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In retrospect, letting Progressives pack their wish list into the House bill was a mistake, since it seems to have given them the sense that they can make policy with just 25% of the seats in the legislature by threatening to tank everything, and what is more likely is that they get nothing. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Potentially a great thing. It's 50/50 that they in fact pass absolutely nothing as progressives vote down the infrastructure bill and then can't get the rest through the Senate. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Risk analysis is not perfect, but it's a damn sight more complex than the naïve presentation of national prevalence statistics we see posted here masquerading as serious analysis. — Isaac
COVID is a real pandemic, killing millions. The vaccine, lockdowns, masks and social distancing have all helped to bring down the numbers of people dying. All those techniques are generally safe and effective. No one in their right mind would argue against those positions, and, more importantly, no-one here has. — Isaac
That seems a little daft. So assessing someone's risk for lung cancer you'd just take the prevalence of lung cancer deaths and say "that's it", yes? If another doctor said "what about the variables like smoking, sex, obesity, history, age..." you'd say "that's just chasing a fantasy, you can't get a truly individualised risk so don't even bother starting"? — Isaac
Because if what you're asking for is, "what's MY number"? I'm afraid that's not possible. Ever. You have general probabilities when it comes to almost any action in life. You can narrow down the range if you like, and select subgroups like ethnicity, sex, age, BMI, family history, history of vaccine reactions, allergies, etc. -- but even that won't be good enough to get you a specific number for YOU personally. You can claim this selection of data, customized for you, is still only generalities or prevalences. — Xtrix
Interesting to be such an advocate for one group while entirely ignoring another, larger group with far higher rates of fatality.
— Xtrix
You should know better.
There is less fault with the anti-vaccers, becuse their stance is a reaction, a revolt against the normalization of scientism, against capitalist exploitation, against being ruled by aged adolescents with advanced degrees. — baker
-Are a lot of people dying from COVID? Yes. Tragic global event.
— Isaac
-Is vaccination good public policy? Yes. Very important message to get across.
— Isaac
If it is important to get that message across, it is also important not to counter that message with fabricated or artificial doubt. Which implies a responsibility to not spread fabricated or artificial doubt.
So when you focus on points of disagreement, be careful not to muddle the discourse and make it look like full of doubts and disagreements when there aren't. — Olivier5
Great -- but that's not what you were asking for, when discussing "MY numbers."
If this counts as the kind of number you want, fine -- then simply divide the vaccine data into men and women, and compare rates of death. They'll be exceedingly low in both groups -- but at least you'll have what you wanted.
— Xtrix
You asked for an example. You know what an example is, right? — Isaac
If the probability of having a stroke is .000015%, that pertains to you as well -- as much so as a roulette wheel.
— Xtrix
So there are no variables involved at all? Strokes are a random event, like the roulette ball? — Isaac
So you agree the vaccines are safe. Fantastic.
So what's the problem?
— Xtrix
Literally everything I've written over the last200 pages — Isaac
If one is making the argument that there are people having strokes and dying because of the vaccine, and that this is a reason for not taking the vaccine, then how is this not simply risk-aversion? It would be perfectly rational if the rates were higher -- but the chances are so low that to point to this as reason for rejecting it simply makes no sense, as we engage in activities all the time that have higher chances of death and disfigurement, like riding in cars and showering in a bathtub. — Xtrix
If it's all about risk profiles, then help me make my choice. What are my numbers? Let's ignore any selfish aims for now. My relative risk of causing harm to others by getting a vaccine compared to not getting one. Not the average relative risk (I know for a fact I'm not average), Not the public policy conclusion (that's based on the average risk and public policy is a blunt tool aimed at the masses). My relative risk.
Because if you can't produce figures for my risk then my decision is not risk based is it? — Isaac
Are you suggesting that nobody is above average (or below it)? Otherwise I can't see why you'd find such a claim so obviously erroneous.
— Isaac
Above average for what? As human beings? When you say that the probabilities or prevalence applies to an average, and so doesn't apply to you because you're above average, what exactly are you talking about? -- and how do you know? Are you talking about height? Weight? Chess skill? IQ? — Xtrix
The variables which influence the probabilities we're talking about. — Isaac
It doesn't apply to me if I only choose the safest airlines, it doesn't apply to me if fly six times a day, it doesn't apply to me if refuse to put the seatbelt on when instructed, it doesn't apply to me if I'm elderly, frail, or otherwise compromised — Isaac
It's really an absurd position, if you look at it. What's the risk of taking Tylenol to you? Is there zero risk? No -- there's some risk. It's just miniscule. If you had liver disease, then perhaps it's not so miniscule. But there's a number to that subset as well, and we're in the same predicament and can make exactly the same claims: well yes, that's the prevalence within that subset, but what about ME? And so on. It's chasing a fantasy. It's like the idea of limits in calculus -- you'll never get there, but that's not the point. — Xtrix
Property rights allow a business to fire people who aren't vaccinated. If Baker comes from a very socialist country, there might be more restrictions on firing people. — frank
As long as vaccination is not actually legally mandatory, suspending or firing someone for not being vaccinated is illegal.
— baker
Citation, please.
— tim wood
Read again. I'm stating a truism. — baker
As long as vaccination is not actually legally mandatory, suspending or firing someone for not being vaccinated is illegal.
— baker
And again: this is completely wrong.
Last month, before Biden's announcement, many companies had implemented COVID vaccine mandates. Especially after it was FDA approved.
In the United States, which is what I'm talking about, beyond some laws about discrimination, an employee is expected to comply with the terms and conditions of employment. They can be fired for not doing so. Period.
The terms and conditions of employment do not have to be legally mandatory. You can be fired for not wearing appropriate attire, or for a host of other violations of conditions and rules internal to a company. None of it has anything to do with the general laws of the country. There are no laws about wearing green, for example.
Every day, people get fired for being fat, for getting a tattoo, for being of the wrong religion (all of which would be illegal), but the termination document doesn't list those as reasons, but something more general.
— baker
It is openly stated that if you are not vaccinated (unless there's a legitimate exemption), you will be terminated. That is not illegal. — Xtrix
Oh for fuck's sake. Do you have plastic flowing in your veins or what?! — baker
My consolation is: some people are unlucky.
— Xtrix
Now sit down and think long and heard about what "luck" means in terms of science.
Chance is the end of science. We do science in order to overcome chance. — baker
I mean, really. What is wrong with you?! — baker
The same cynical attitude, the same threats, the same simplificationism, the same not listening, the same diversions. — baker
Must you yourselves suffer strokes from the vaccine in order to even begin to have empathy for iatrogenic diseases?
You think people should be consoled by a reference to luck?! — baker
"Anyone's numbers"? What would that look like, exactly? Give me an example.
— Xtrix
The RR for lung cancer and smoking is 6.99 for men and 5.09 for women. — Isaac
What have the laws of probability got to do with it. I'm talking about heterogeneity in the probabilities themselves, not the laws governing them. — Isaac
I've not once suggested the vaccine is 'dangerous'. — Isaac
Are you suggesting that nobody is above average (or below it)? Otherwise I can't see why you'd find such a claim so obviously erroneous. — Isaac
if what you're asking for is, "what's MY number"? I'm afraid that's not possible. Ever.
— Xtrix
Yes. That's the point I'm making.
if you can't produce figures for my risk then my decision is not risk based is it?
— Isaac
You understand the use of conditionals, yes. — Isaac
We'd normally then run tests to discover variables and analyse the effect of each to come up with a risk profile for each multivariate, — Isaac
The point is you don't know anyone's numbers You only know the prevalence. — Isaac
Talk me through the correct process for risk analysis. — Isaac
I don’t want to play Study Wars with you. Can you throw studies at me such that your view becomes definitively correct? Because in my view that’s what you need to do in order to justify bothering people to misery and death with oppressive mandates.
— AJJ
You'd most likely lose out. ;)
How about taking a look at what actually takes place, then?
• Anatomy of our battle against COVID-19 (Jun 2, 2021)
And there are historical (textbook) case studies. Common sense is allowed, too, ya' know.
• lockdowns can save lives (+ needless suffering)
• lockdowns have socio-economic and psychological effects
• lockdowns and quarantines work in containment situations
• the more wide-spread the pathogen, the less effective the lockdown (planning needed)
• non-compliance with lockdowns + protocols (mask, distance, sanitize) have an effect
So, make lockdowns decisive, swift, not pro-longed (especially) in containment situations.
Doesn't have much to do with fear-mongering panic or evil tyrant authoritarian government feeding on your misery or conformism for conformism's sake or whatever bullshit; has to do with learning from evidence, common sense, doing the right thing, being socially responsible, not being a loose cannon, and history is a fine teacher. — jorndoe
“Haha! You are wrong because I am right!” — AJJ
The fact remains: vaccines are safe and effective. There are extremely rare cases when they’re not— just as there are extremely rare cases where places crash.
— Xtrix
OK, so give me the numbers then. If this fact is relevant to my decision then the numbers have to be relevant to me. — Isaac
I'm aware that they're on average safer than catching the virus (in terms of harm to others), but I'm not average, so the average relative risk is useless to me. — Isaac
If it's all about risk profiles, then help me make my choice. What are my numbers? — Isaac
Perhaps that’s something to discuss with your doctor.
— Xtrix
How would my doctor know about those risks? — Isaac
My relative risk of causing harm to others by getting a vaccine compared to not getting one. — Isaac
Because if you can't produce figures for my risk then my decision is not risk based is it? — Isaac
Because if you can't produce figures for my risk then my decision is not risk based is it? — Isaac
Either way, you've been given plenty of information by now, but oddly brush it off with a hand wave. Are you looking for something else altogether...? — jorndoe
People do things because they consider them worthwhile, in line with their value system and such. Not because something would be a low risk or a high probability of success. — baker
If one is making the argument that there are people having strokes and dying because of the vaccine, and that this is a reason for not taking the vaccine, then how is this not simply risk-aversion?
— Xtrix
I'm not making that argument, and it's not clear why people think I am. — baker
If someone decided suddenly to stop riding in cars, citing "accidents and death" as a reason not to, or in airplanes (like in the movie Rain Man), then besides listening, empathizing, and being compassionate to this person, how else would you try to persuade them that they're mistaken and that the activity they're unwilling to engage in is actually quite safe?
I wouldn't try to persuade them at all, it is not my place. — baker
Getting vaccinated will not bring an added quality to one's life. — baker
Further, you fail to offer a meaningful consolation for the prospect of vaccine damage and vaccine failure. — baker
As long as vaccination is not actually legally mandatory, suspending or firing someone for not being vaccinated is illegal. — baker
Every day, people get fired for being fat, for getting a tattoo, for being of the wrong religion (all of which would be illegal), but the termination document doesn't list those as reasons, but something more general. — baker
Oh dear; you don't know what a straw-man is. — NOS4A2
I don't know if you are up on current events or not but maybe you're not aware of Biden's vaccine mandates for companies who employ over 100 people, even though it's in the first paragraph of Krugman's piece you quoted. If they do not enforce his vaccine mandates, to fire unvaccinated employees, they face massive fines. So much for corporate power. — NOS4A2
His mandate should begin very soon and will effect nearly 100 million workers, you know, those people you used to support. — NOS4A2
Oh look, the state. Does Biden represent United Airlines or Tyson? Nope. Did I mention United Airlines or Tyson? Nope. Did I say physically forcing? Nope. — NOS4A2
And now we're comparing vaccine mandates to smoking bans. Another false analogy, — NOS4A2
And the data show that the risks are incredibly low, and that vaccines are safe. How else are we to talk to those who continue to refuse?
— Xtrix
As if they are human beings who are not convinced by mere gambles. — baker
People are being suspended or fired from their jobs for not being vaccinated. As long as vaccination is not actually legally mandatory, suspending or firing someone for not being vaccinated is illegal.
— baker
This is completely wrong. Ask United Airlines, who did exactly that.
— Xtrix
What is wrong?
Did you see the actual notice of termination, the actual wording? — baker
Is it even worth it to engage with these people?
They're immune to facts and they will not change their minds no matter what happens, which is interesting psychologically. But should we engage for the sake of others who are rational yet "on the fence"?
I struggle with this.
— Xtrix
42 pages later, any nearer to the answer? — Down The Rabbit Hole
The Right has generally supported the right of proprietors of businesses to hire and fire, for whatever reasons they like, as they see fit. And now it is mostly the Right that is squealing about it and calling it an infringement of individual rights. — Janus
Listening to you and other vocal pro-vaccers here at the forum is like listening to some of the high politicians in the country where I live, and in some other EU countries as well. The same cynical attitude, the same threats, the same simplificationism, the same not listening, the same diversions. — baker
But you have no right to infect others
— Xtrix
There you go, making wild accusations that I am going around infecting people with covid. Where is your hard evidence that I am doing that? — Merkwurdichliebe
People are being suspended or fired from their jobs for not being vaccinated. As long as vaccination is not actually legally mandatory, suspending or firing someone for not being vaccinated is illegal. — baker
As someone who’s taking the vaccine already, what exactly are you driving at here?
— Xtrix
That the enthusiasm of the vocal pro-vaccers is unfounded.
That the hatred and contempt that the vocal pro-vaccers show for everyone who doesn't share their enthusiasm is unjustified. — baker
143 strokes out of 10 million shots for the Pfizer vaccine, last I checked. Which is much better than the strokes caused by COVID infection — and still extremely rare any way you slice it.
— Xtrix
Part of the problem is insisting on looking at the matter from the perspective of large numbers, large populations, and then expecting that individual people will be convinced and soothed by this.
If you are the one who gets the stroke after the vaccine, it does not matter to you if so many millions didn't get one. It's still you who is now paralyzed. — baker
Do you ever reflect on risk before crossing the road or eating seafood? I'm pretty sure you don't.
— baker
You don't have to reflect on risk when you get vaccinated either. — Janus
Then why are those who want people to get vaccinated feeding us that line???
Why are high government officials, epidemiologists, public advertisements, and so on telling us that the risk of something going wrong is low, and that therefore, we should get vaccinated? — baker
Krugman’s argument is a stupid one. The fact that governments have in the past regulated this or that activity isn’t an argument that they should keep on doing so, that they should force companies to mandate vaccines, that they should violate someone’s bodily autonomy and their right to make one’s own medical decisions, and so on. — NOS4A2
False analogies and appeals to tradition are the few arguments they have left. — NOS4A2
Absent any coherent argument they have state coercion, the last resort of the weak. — NOS4A2
Of course many people will comply when the government threatens to end their livelihood. Cruelty and coercion may be successful, sure, but achieving success through these means only serves to illustrate how their other efforts until then were utter failures.
How are they running the vaccination programme? — Down The Rabbit Hole
