Pro-vaxxers have a heurestic too, where the most used one is "scientific consensus". Even that is posited as a rational decision making process but it really isn't. But since most people tend to agree with the fact it's a pretty good heurestic they don't get challenged on it. — Benkei
It isn't my problem that there are not enough beds. If you're so concerned, donate your bed? — Merkwurdichliebe
You prefer the indescriminate blowing up of Arab children, I prefer covid fatalities. — Merkwurdichliebe
Did you know that children are far less susceptible to severe infection from covid than are other age groups? I guess that means I care about the lives of children more than you. — Merkwurdichliebe
I am, if I see the situation to be a democratic state, I expect it to serve its people.. — Merkwurdichliebe
This is probably news to you, but not everyone is so needy, there are multitudes of people that do not want others to give a shit about them, especially strangers they will never meet. Looks like you don't give a shit about those people...so much for your universal benevolence — Merkwurdichliebe
Trust isn't rational at all. — Benkei
I could be right 99 times, that's no reason at all to trust I'll be right the 100th time. — Benkei
Trust isn't rational at all. It's a rather obvious point really. I could be right 99 times, that's no reason at all to trust I'll be right the 100th time. Trusting scientific consensus generally works for a basis to make decisions but it's not a rational decision making process. — Benkei
It will be your problem if you or a loved one need a bed. I donated mine by getting a vax. — James Riley
I don't prefer either, but there is one I can do something about and I did it. You know, the one with more numbers. — James Riley
What have you done for those Arab kids? Did you get a shot so you could better be there for them? If so, good. Nobody is likely to be able to help your kids if they can't take a few minutes out of their life for a free shot. — James Riley
The difficulty for the state is people like you. Can the state fix stupid? — James Riley
Your reasoning fails. I don't give a shit about those who do not want others to give a shit about them. Fuck them. I give a shit about those who do care, and who will be killed by the former. — James Riley
Hey, its Russell Crow!Speaking of kids: — James Riley
Damn right! It will be my problem, not yours or anybody else's. — Merkwurdichliebe
And even though we are vaxxed, that is no guarantee we won't need "a bed" someday. — Merkwurdichliebe
Don't worry about me, whether or not i got vaxxed. Mind your own business before you get stepped on foo. — Merkwurdichliebe
Let me get this strait...you say you did something about covid, and nevertheless, there are more fatalities... sounds like you didn't do much. — Merkwurdichliebe
I have done nothing to stop the bombing of Arab children, and as you say, there are less fatalities than with covid....seems that my strategy is more effective here. — Merkwurdichliebe
did those children get their free shot so they don't put me at risk? — Merkwurdichliebe
You are obviously a born servant the state. You would have made a great Nazi. — Merkwurdichliebe
You care very much about those people who don't want concern from others. It is obvious from your posts here. If you didn't, you would respect the individual's right to choose rather than getting so butt-hurt about people declining the vaccine. After all, if you and your loved one's have all been vaccinated, then you all are not at risk from the nonvaxxed, and there is no need to be concerned over anyone's health, right? — Merkwurdichliebe
And even though we are vaxxed, that is no guarantee we won't need "a bed" someday. — Merkwurdichliebe
It will be if you are taking up a bed I want for my friends or loved ones. It ain't all about you. — James Riley
Especially since so many unvaxxed, non-masking, non-distancing people are spinning up variants; not to mention the dolts that vax but throw shade on vaxxing. — James Riley
Keep your filthy fucking virus out of other people's lives and we're good. Until then, it is my business, fool. — James Riley
I go the shot, I mask, I distance. — James Riley
there are more fatalities because the stupid people say stupid people have rights to be stupid people. — James Riley
I think you just owned yourself — James Riley
Nobody cares about you. — James Riley
Your reasoning fails you. Re-read what you just said. Think. Try harder. — James Riley
Really? What are you gonna do? whine about it on TPF. — Merkwurdichliebe
Oh no! Variants, so scary!
Guess what else? Fuck your vaccine, I piss on it. — Merkwurdichliebe
I'll make you a deal, ill keep "your filthy fucking virus" out of other people's lives, if you keep all your fascist bullshit in your spiteful little skull. — Merkwurdichliebe
Good for you, you want a cookie? — Merkwurdichliebe
Momma always said: "stupid is as stupid does". ~Forest Gump — Merkwurdichliebe
I've always owned myself, — Merkwurdichliebe
I am owning you right now in fact. — Merkwurdichliebe
I can care about myself just fine. — Merkwurdichliebe
My reasoning stands, otherwise you would have been specific in pointing out where it fails. — Merkwurdichliebe
You care very much about those people who don't want concern from others. It is obvious from your posts here. If you didn't, you would respect the individual's right to choose rather than getting so butt-hurt about people declining the vaccine. After all, if you and your loved one's have all been vaccinated, then you all are not at risk from the nonvaxxed, and there is no need to be concerned over anyone's health, right? — Merkwurdichliebe
And even though we are vaxxed, that is no guarantee we won't need "a bed" someday. — Merkwurdichliebe
Anyway. Let me get this strait...you say you did something about covid, and nevertheless, there are more fatalities — Merkwurdichliebe
You say that if I didn't care about those who don't care about others then I would respect their right to choose. WTF? Why would I respect the rights of anyone I don't care about? Your words. Jeesh. — James Riley
Then you say the vaxxed are not at risk from the non-vaxxed, right after you said: — James Riley
if you and your loved one's have all been vaccinated, then you all are not at risk from the nonvaxxed, and there is no need to be concerned over anyone's health, right? — Merkwurdichliebe
You people really just don't understand, do you? — Xtrix
This is not an individual thing. This is a collective thing. Community -- you've heard of that word, yes? — Xtrix
This is why we should care that everyone is being vaccinated unless, of course, they want to isolate themselves from society, which is their choice. — Xtrix
The vaccinated can still get breakthrough cases, and some who want a vaccine can't get one. I'm vaccinated, and I'm not afraid of the virus. That means exactly NOTHING when discussing vaccination. We should all get vaccinated -- they're safe, they're effective, and they help stop the spread. 6 billion shots given around the world, 100s of millions of people fully vaccinated. Serious side effects? Extremely rare -- better odds of getting hit by lightning. — Xtrix
If you want to remain ignorant, fine. But the excuses don't work, and patience is running out. People who want to quit their jobs over this -- good, do so. Tough shit. — Xtrix
"You people", lol. Just so we are clear, to what people do you think I belong? — Merkwurdichliebe
if you think going out into society is a risk to your health and life, then YOU can choose to dig into your den of cowardice and stay put. Stop encroaching on other people's lives with your cowardice, man up. — Merkwurdichliebe
I definitely do not want to be affiliated with you people. — Merkwurdichliebe
A start to at least get a meaningful conversation going is that both sides realise they've not rationally arrived at their position, unless they're expert epidemiologists or virologists and some doctors, and stop assuming only the other is irrational. — Benkei
A "high aim"? No, a most basic one.people first need to be in the clear about "the big existential issues" and have a definitive answer to the meaning of life question.
— baker
That's ... aiming rather high (unless I misunderstand, which is entirely possible). — jorndoe
So we can do what? Remain on autopilot? Eat, drink, and make merry? This is supposed to be the whole point of life?There are historical/textbook case studies, and (cumulative) evidence, all that stuff, that we can learn from
No. Truth trumps diversity.Seems relevant for a functional society where all kinds of different people interact, yes?
A start to at least get a meaningful conversation going is that both sides realise they've not rationally arrived at their position, unless they're expert epidemiologists or virologists and some doctors, and stop assuming only the other is irrational. — Benkei
When making decisions about one's own body, there isn't a need for one's arguments to be understood as rational anyway. — Tzeentch
When making decisions about one's own body, there isn't a need for one's arguments to be understood as rational anyway. — Tzeentch
Legally, this is actually quite a tricky area. Because in order to argue for or against, one has to take into account what the constitution and the laws of one's country say. This way, one quickly ends up in problems that even professional constitutional lawyers have difficulty to be unanimous about.Obviously decisions about your body need to be weighed against the interest of others if those decisions have consequences for others and once you reached a conclusion you'll have to argue for it. — Benkei
If you don't get caught, who can say that you didn't have the freedom to do those things?And your decisions can also have consequences. You're free to drink, but you don't get to drive. You're welcome to walk around naked, just not in public.
Indeed, because according to the constitutions of many countries, one's body is by default considered private and granted the right to exist. — baker
If you don't get caught, who can say that you didn't have the freedom to do those things? — baker
As things stand, every human on the planet is subject to some government, so, yes. (Even those people who don't have citizenship; and there is, on principle, no no-man's land, so that wherever on planet Earth someone is, one is always under someone's jurisdiction.)So bodily integrity is only a right that can be granted by governments? Interesting. — Benkei
If the State truly is as powerful and as authoritative as it says it is, then why does it catch only some of those who break the law?If you don't get caught, who can say that you didn't have the freedom to do those things?
— baker
You're always free to break the law. But we generally agree it is opportunistic to do so as those breaking the law are only too happy to get all the protections a well organised state offers. This is why ndividuals generally cannot be the arbiter of law (only state sanctioned individuals, e.g. judges) even though there are extreme cases where norms ought to precede laws and therefore require civil disobedience.
A non-rational argument is a contradiction in terms so I have no clue whatsoever what your point is. — Benkei
Obviously decisions about your body need to be weighed against the interest of others if those decisions have consequences for others and once you reached a conclusion you'll have to argue for it. — Benkei
I consider mandatory vaccinations for specific services/industries a curious hill to want to die on. — Benkei
... except prophylactic medicine, apparently, where the left are not only happy to hand over control to a private corporation, but then spend the majority of their time doing their fucking advertising for them. — Isaac
A "high aim"? No, a most basic one. — baker
Truth trumps diversity. — baker
There are historical/textbook case studies, and (cumulative) evidence, all that stuff, that we can learn from, we'd be fools not to — jorndoe
a functional society where all kinds of different people interact — jorndoe
This is supposed to be the whole point of life? — baker
Life is what you make of it, so make it a good one. — paraphrasing the good Doc Emmett Brown
Pro-vaxxers have a heurestic too, where the most used one is "scientific consensus". Even that is posited as a rational decision making process but it really isn't. But since most people tend to agree with the fact it's a pretty good heurestic they don't get challenged on it. — Benkei
Trust isn't rational at all. It's a rather obvious point really. — Benkei
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