My point was that my position does not correlate with my social identity — Hanover
You're doing some torturous disservice to the phrase "lifestyle choice" if you're now using it to describe an adherence to evidence based science. — Hanover
But sure, if you mean some choose to be irrational and some not — Hanover
People not getting vaccines puts us on the brink of another shut down and another requirement to wear masks. — Hanover
Sure, if 95 people are needed to put out a raging fire and there are 100 in the room, you can sit it out and wait for everyone else to throw water on it and claim you're just as good as all those who helped out. — Hanover
We all have ultimately a right to defend ourselves against stupidity. — tim wood
the more people that share the same viral load within a given environment, the lower the proportional risk is to any individual within that environment. — Roger Gregoire
this young man is maskless he is breathing in these viral particles, thereby reducing the total number of viral particles within the room. The longer he stays, the less contaminated the room, and the safer the lady becomes. — Roger Gregoire
Viruses multiply rapidly in people. — Isaac
Isaac, does this include healthy people with strong immune systems that have been vaccinated — Roger Gregoire
From what I've read, the amount of viral replication within the body is dependent on one's immune system. In other words, those with weak immune systems will replicate more than one with a marginal immune system, and those with strong healthy immune systems will have little to no replication. — Roger Gregoire
Isaac, so are you saying that the lady would be 'safer' if she were all alone (socially isolated/distanced), within this contaminated room? — Roger Gregoire
So you don't believe in "herd immunity"? ...in other words, so you don't believe there is protective effect to the vulnerable by integrating immune people within the herd? — Roger Gregoire
So you don't believe in "herd immunity"? ...in other words, so you don't believe there is protective effect to the vulnerable by integrating immune people within the herd? — RJG
I just said, being surrounded by immune people is better than being surrounded by non-immune people. Are you having trouble reading? — Isaac
Is being surrounded by immune people (rather than no people) safer tor the vulnerable person? — Roger Gregoire
No, of course not. Surrounded by immune people the person's environment is being replenished with live viruses (albeit at a slow rate), surrounded by no one their environment will be devoid of live viruses within a matter of hours. — Isaac
So then you believe immune people provide no protective effect to the herd? — Roger Gregoire
Usually stupidity is a mob rules kind of thing — Book273
Fear is the best tool. As fear increases, rational thought decreases, and people are more easily led — Book273
The most flagrant sign of stupidity is people silencing all those who disagree leading to echo chambers. Both can be found in COVID conspiracy theory communities. — Hello Human
a group of academics described the “hazards” experienced by vaccine researchers, including being ostracised by peers for challenging the status quo... — in Bragazzi NL, Watad A, Amital H, et al.Debate on vaccines and autoimmunity: do not attack the author, yet discuss it methodologically. Vaccine2017
there is considerable evidence that many editors and referees are hostile to papers that challenge prevailing beliefs (Armstrong, 1996, 1997; Campanario, 1995; Epstein, 1990; Horrobin, 1990; Lang, 1998; Mahoney, 1976, 1979; Thompson, 1999). The result in some cases can be that publication of innovative ideas, and data that backs them, is delayed or blocked. — Suppressing Research Data: Methods, Context, Accountability, and Responses, Accountability in Research, Vol. 6, 1999, pp. 333-372
That's not what's happening here at all. The fire actually needs 95 people to throw water on it, but 5 people don't agree, they think throwing water on it will make it worse. That's OK because only 95 people need to throw water on it. Public policy doesn't need to do anything to compel those 5 to act against their sincere beliefs, moralising flag waivers don't need to either. — Isaac
What worries me considerably more than the issue of whether nutjobs are allowed to post on corporate hosted vanity projects, is the restrictions on scientific research. Here we'll run into actual silence, as in we'll never hear, by any source, that which might otherwise have been known. — Isaac
Teen wins Covid vaccine lottery in NC — frank
I changed my perception.Chavis said she plans to use her money to fund her education. She plans to major in psychology and wants to become a therapist. She also said she may treat herself to a shopping spree.
That's a pretty Kierkegaardian point of view but I am agree because life tend to be pity and dreams are just dreams. — javi2541997
can we not protect our scientists from being silenced and do what is necessary to shut down the persuasiveness of the nutjobs so that we don't get political pushback for rational societal decisions? — Hanover
Quantifiable empirical data and scientific evidence, though essential, are almost never sufficient, as an impoverished interpretation of the ‘follow the science’ imperative may suggest. — Dr Thana Cristina de Campos-Rudinsky - Journal of Medical Ethics
The Covid vaccine works. There is no evidence to the contrary. I mean truth does matter here, right? — Hanover
It’s reasonable to believe that the product may be effective and that the known and potential benefit outweigh the known and potential risks.
Communicating the individual and prosocial benefits of high vaccination rates, payments and a combination of both strategies did not increase vaccination intentions. — experimental evidence that payments do not increase willingness to be vaccinated against COVID-19 - JME
using coercion or incentivisation to promote COVID-19 vaccination risks a public backlash and may well be unsuccessful in promoting COVID-19 vaccination. It is already apparent that scepticism about the virulence of COVID-19 and strong suspicion of pharmaceutical companies, scientists, and policy-makers has become part of some people’s social and political identities. An attempt to coerce rather than persuade may be seen as a threat from distant and patronising elites and feed into existing social and political divisions without resulting in higher rates of vaccination. — Persuasion, not coercion or incentivisation, is the best means of promoting COVID-19 vaccination - JME
the people and institutions attempting to remedy the supposed problem are the very people and institutions that are not trusted and where there is no trust, attempts to nudge or coerce are likely to be strenuously resisted — Ana Wheelock in Vaccine confidence, public understanding and probity: time for a shift in focus? - JME
I live in the US and I won't take any Covid-19 vaccine until there is a version which receives APPROVAL from the FDA. Wearing a mask, social distancing, frequent hand washing, etc will have to (and do) suffice in significantly slowing the spread of the contagion until then. — 180 Proof
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