• baker
    5.6k
    People just love it when something that has been nearly a vice can be portrayed as an virtue.ssu

    Is it really a vice or anything even resembling a vice?

    Do you know anyone who actually believes that the stuff written in the Declaration of Human Rights matters?

    Very few do, and they are ridiculed.

    2N7RMVpQULKC09oDg2H2gno-_9LvsvuZGMyG_nuNmORRbHY8poQZAHQZXT6IU2Z2oZtvP3S2i63ylrPRbgyGRh-AKl8UKdwWyb84XCXh449D4gbsdIJyEhrKr43YLQrJp19Zjpxv50zjbQ
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    Maybe this is a good time to separate doers and deniers?jorndoe

    Good idea.

    If people are falling for misinformation, then stop whining about them and do something to make the information more convincing.Isaac
  • baker
    5.6k
    800th time, a vaccine doesn't have to be perfect to be relevant.
    — Cheshire

    :up:

    A good 250 pages in, I wonder how many times repetitions have been posted.
    jorndoe

    The same wrong argument made a million times is still the wrong argument.

    You're forcing us into mediocrity, into thinking like gamblers, mobsters, and drug dealers. Into narrow-mindedness and hard-heartedness. Into moral depravity.
  • baker
    5.6k
    More rightwinger sentiment.
  • boethius
    2.3k
    Why is it placing the whole burden of responsibility on the people?baker

    Just chiming in to point out the near exact repetition of the conversation over a year ago (comment below was made in December 2020).

    Other than the critical policy mistakes of abandoning containment in the early stages of the pandemic (which every country that made a competent effort succeeded in doing), if things do go wrong with the vaccine, we can note the further policy disaster of allowing vaccine developers to issue press releases on their data and work with their media sycophants to create such a hype train that governments basically had to approve the vaccines (not only because they too are sycophants but, in addition, due to the overwhelming pressure and belief created in the media that "over 90% effective and the pandemic will soon be over with these vaccines!! woweee").

    Governments should have designed and mandated new trial protocols appropriate for the situation (much larger with much better experimental design and carried out by third parties), and corporations should have been gag-ordered to provide zero information to the press so that review and approval processes were not affected by public opinion and media hype. Simply accelerating the old normal process was not a reasonable policy because phase 3 is not usually followed by massive deployment of a new pharmaceutical, but there is phase 4 of post market surveillance, that is usually many years of "seeing what happens" and only a small percentage of the population gets the intervention every year (i.e. the risk of something being missed isn't so great because few people get the new intervention for many years). A competent medical professional would want a new trial design that would seek to get some of the same insights as phase 4 in an accelerated time line, which (if it is statistically impossible to do) then want direct challenge experiments (exposing trial participants to the virus deliberately, including known mutations) would be the only reasonable course of action; the benefit obviously outweighs the harm in this pandemic situation, and the only reason direct challenge experiments weren't used to get much, much more certainty about efficacy and side-effects in humans is because policy makers and their corporate donors preferred not to know, but to rather roll out a multi billion dollar gamble in a statistical haze.

    The die is cast now though, so we'll see what happens.

    And if you think policy makers aren't disastrously idiotic and corrupt, just look at the pandemic up until this point in the places rushing to be first to deploy the vaccine. Although past stupidity and corruption doesn't guarantee future stupidity and corruption, I wouldn't personally bet against it.
    boethius

    And also October 2020:

    There isn't really a basis for this belief. No vaccine trial, vis-a-vis covid, is designed to prove actual effectiveness at changing the course of the pandemic. Different experimental design would be needed for that and very likely different targets of efficacy.

    Generally, there is healthy skepticism in the evolutionary biologist community whether a vaccine that cannot irradiate the disease is a good investment, as the obvious prediction based on science is the disease will simply evolve to defeat the vaccine. Vaccines of this kind also have the potential to simply shift harm profiles around without reducing total harm, which is difficult to capture in trials which may easily a confuse looking at a shift at one part of the harm profile and conclude a general reduction of harm can be inferred when there is no basis for such a conclusion (vaccines that reduce disease severity for most people, may increase transmission while significantly increasing the severity for a sub population; for instance, that a sub population has severe over-reaction of the immune system). So, we will find out, but there is no reason to have higher confidence than a skilled gambler down on his luck on this particular issue.

    However, considering the harm the pandemic has already had on the global community, we can already conclude that vaccine technology does not protect public health from negative infectious disease outcomes, and investments in vector control, better outbreak protocols, treatment capacity, but most importantly simply public health in a general sense (preventing preventable diabetes, obesity, lung harm from bad air etc.) are more effective investments. In particular, investments in public health in the sense of healthy people is not even a cost but pays for itself many times over.

    And yet, public health policy of the last decades has been based on under-investing in healthy foods, healthy city design, healthy habits, and healthy air -- which turns out to benefit fossil and food corporations -- and over-investing in medical technologies that "fix problems post-fact" -- which turns out to benefit pharmaceutical and other medical corporations. Certainly only coincidence and these policy failings will be swiftly corrected going forward.
    boethius

    Of course, it's now "anti-vax" to point out the original claims about vaccines ending the pandemic that had zero evidence supporting them at the time ... turns out didn't come true.

    What I got wrong though, is that blaming the insane sequence of failed policy and bailouts and gifts to large corporations on the group of people (that we knew ahead of time would exist, and sane policy would take into account as basic reality ... not to mention groups of people in poor countries that won't be vaccinated as we don't give a fuck about them anyways and it's logistically impossible to deliver) refusing vaccination has basically saved government from further scrutiny (... at least in the mass media).
  • boethius
    2.3k
    You think those billions now poured into various vaccine programs by major countries won't have an effect?
    — ssu

    Maybe, but there is currently no evidence that they will. In my version of science I believe things when there is evidence to believe it. The experimental design of the current covid related vaccine trials, do not seek to answer the question of whether the pandemic will be significantly curtailed in one way or another, and the scientists running these trials do not make such a claim.

    For instance, if the virus simply evolves to defeat the vaccine (how evolution works) the scientist will simply point out that their experimental design did not seek to provide any insight on this issue.

    The reason I mention evolution is that in an exponentially expanding new virus there are many evolutionary paths available and with 7 billion people there are many hosts available in which those evolutionary events can take place. There are already now a diversity of strains of the virus, a vaccine developed against a certain strain may already not be effective against strains that already exist, which will of course then come to dominate once the conditions are such that they have an advantage. The virus has simple maths on its side. The long amount of time it usually takes to make an effective vaccine, for good reasons, means simple math is not on its side.

    But my main point seems to be lost on you, which is that obviously vaccine technology cannot possibly be relied on to intervene to prevent major harms from infectious disease ... because those major harms have already occurred in the case of Covid, for basically the reasons you state.

    Vaccine technology is simply not a reliable basis for protecting public health from infectious disease generally speaking and the disastrous consequences of a pandemic. You may say "But of course! Vaccines take time and aren't meant to intervene to strop a pandemic before there is already major health harms and economic disruptions! dum dum", but, of course, my response is simply to repeat, that for exactly that reason, "Vaccine technology is simply not a reliable basis for protecting public health from infectious disease generally speaking and the disastrous consequences of a pandemic". There do exist other policies that can have a much bigger consequence.

    Other policy measures do not have this problem, and in the case of public health in terms of "healthiness", actually pay for itself. Therefore, focus should be first investing in policies that both intervene at all stages of a pandemic such as we are experiencing and moreover pay for themselves. Ultimately, relying on vaccine technology to control infectious disease was lazy thinking by the medical community. Does that make them idiots? I'm sure you are already confident my answer is yes, yes it does make them idiots. However, it was not a consensus; many experts predicted exactly this scenario and pointed out more effective investment strategies to protect global health against the inevitable "high impact" event we are seeing.
    boethius

    Written over a year ago: we've entered the groundhog days scenario of stupid policy ... during a situation we seem now to be in the exact repeat of, just with the experience of vaccines not having solved the problem last year ... but are going to this stime ... well, no one's actually claiming that anymore at all, but get your boosters!

    There's now not even nominal policy for most Western governments stating some plan out of the pandemic: restrictions until further notice.
  • baker
    5.6k
    Anyone who ever said that the vaccine totally prevents Covid is wrong.EricH

    And yet every day we hear things like, "If so and so would've gotten the vaccination, he'd be safe and well."
    You said such a thing just the other day, I quoted you.

    The pro-vaccination lobby insists on this simplificationism. Sure, when talking in the abstract, they'll say

    The vaccine does not prevent a person from getting Covid. The vaccine significantly reduces the odds that you will catch it - and if you do catch it the vaccine significantly reduces the odds that you will have a serious case.EricH

    But when it comes to pointing fingers in actual cases, they forget all about that, and we get

    Most victims are people who refused to get a simple vaccine that would keep them safe.EricH

    Your dead cousin being one of them.
  • jorndoe
    3.6k
    You're forcing us into mediocrity, into thinking like gamblers, mobsters, and drug dealers. Into narrow-mindedness and hard-heartedness. Into moral depravity.baker

    ?
  • boethius
    2.3k
    And yet every day we hear things like, "If so and so would've gotten the vaccination, he'd be safe and well."baker

    I remember a prediction made on this very forum a year ago:

    The glint of a few pence off the tax bill. It's really not that hard to explain why Italy was so unprepared. It costs money to be prepared and people were not willing to pay it.

    But hey you can stick to your narrative of the big bad virus coming out of nowhere with no-one to blame for its spread but the tinfoil-hat wearing anti-vaxxers. I'm sure the pharmaceutical industry will be along soon on their white chargers to save us all, and then we can get back to business as usual... killing 22,000 children a day from poverty and no-one giving a shit because they're not white middle class taxpayers.
    Isaac

    And also this analysis:

    No, my point was firstly, that a rushed vaccine based on new technology may be either falsely effective, have unexpected side effects (already we're getting allergic reaction that was not anticipated), or too expensive to help poorer countries.

    And secondly that a huge proportion of the deaths are in poor communities coupled with poor healthcare services. Investing in core service provision and community healthcare is a far more efficient as it helps not only this pandemic, but also future ones. I've previously cited papers showing how proper ICU care more than halves the mortality rate. The overlap with poorer communities and existing health issues is well documented, but I can cite some if you like.

    Thirdly, investment doesn't spring out of nowhere. It's taken from other budgets. I've just cited figures for TB excess deaths which result from only a fractional drop in the availability of frontline services.

    Basically if you've already decided that the solution is an expensive vaccine then the investment is great. If your aim is to increase the number of vaccines in the world then this is a big score. If, however, your aim is to look after the immediate and future health of the population with the scarce resources we have available then the fact that a few rich countries have used up years of healthcare investment on a luxury vaccine is hardly the Holy Grail.
    Isaac
  • boethius
    2.3k
    ... because policy makers and their corporate donors preferred not to know, but to rather roll out a multi billion dollar gamble in a statistical haze.boethius

    (Stated over a year ago, fast forward to today)

  • baker
    5.6k
    ...besides which, as I understand baker's position, it has nothing to do with the significance of the reduction and everything to do with the heartless abandonment of the poor sods for whom it doesn't work, or worse.Isaac

    At this forum, not once have I seen that a pro-vaccer said that people should get vaccinated for their own sake.
    Not once has anyone who has told me to get vaccinated said that I should do it to protect my health.
    Not once. Not a single time.

    Instead, they said I should do it for others. Or that I should do it in order to protect others or not to be a burden on them.

    I watch the national news on tv, and parts of the news on several other channels. It was only a handful of times that I've heard people who advocate for vaccination said that people should get vaccinated for their own sake. Instead, the overwhelming majority of exhortations to vaccinate are that we should do it for others. To show solidarity with medical personnel who are overwhelmed. To show solidarity with the already vaccinated. And so on, but it's almost always about others.

    As if our lives don't matter, or as if we matter only insofar as we could be spreaders of the disease or take up a hospital bed that someone else wants.

    Such profound contempt of humans, masquerading as altruism and solidarity.


    the heartless abandonment of the poor sods for whom it doesn't work, or worse.

    The moral numbness that we are now being forced into ...
  • baker
    5.6k
    What do you not understand?

    Dealing in potentially dangerous substances, calculating odds, and playing Russian roulette is how mobsters, gamblers, and drug dealers operate.

    But it appears that gone are the times when mainstream society would think that operating that way is not ethical.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    At this forum, not once have I seen that a pro-vaccer said that people should get vaccinated for their own sake.
    Not once has anyone who has told me to get vaccinated said that I should do it to protect my health.
    Not once. Not a single time.
    baker

    The obvious remains obvious. Covid was pretty unpleasant even after be vaxxed. Like, keeping your brain on a light simmer for 2 weeks. I never had any respiratory effects, so antidotally I think it was worth the trouble in my experience. If you'd like respiratory distress then definitely don't get it.
  • jorndoe
    3.6k
    At this forum, not once have I seen that a pro-vaccer said that people should get vaccinated for their own sake.
    Not once has anyone who has told me to get vaccinated said that I should do it to protect my health.
    Not once. Not a single time.
    baker

    ?

    You yourself quoted

    The vaccine significantly reduces the odds that you will catch it - and if you do catch it the vaccine significantly reduces the odds that you will have a serious case.EricH

    And that's definitely not the only time that's been posted.
    Apparently, one of those things that don't sink in with some people.

    You could at least try to keep it coherent.
  • baker
    5.6k
    refusing vaccination has basically saved government from further scrutinyboethius

    That's why mandatory vaccination could be a last resort. It would force the government to act more transparently and to take at least a part of the responsibility for the safety and efficacy of the vaccine.

    The only problem is that with covid in particular, the "effectiveness" of the vaccine would be about the same as the course of the disease without the vaccine, and then the government could take the credit and make vaccination mandatory indefinitely.
  • baker
    5.6k
    What are you talking about??
    I'm vaccinated. Do I feel safe, protected? No.
  • baker
    5.6k
    Care.

    Do you know what that is?
  • EricH
    608
    Fair enough. I'll correct myself.

    Most victims are people who refused to get a simple vaccine that would dramatically reduce the odds that they will be infected.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    ↪Cheshire What are you talking about??baker

    Generally, comments are directed toward the quoted bit at the top. Can I confuse anything else for you?
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    The only problem is that with covid in particular, the "effectiveness" of the vaccine would be about the same as the course of the disease without the vaccine, and then the government could take the credit and make vaccination mandatory indefinitely.baker

    This part is false
  • baker
    5.6k
    Can I confuse anything else for you?Cheshire

    Yes. Your image of me.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    Yes. Your image of me.baker
    Poster convinced vaccines don't correlate well with disease outcomes. Freely equivocates as needed.

    Alright, what would you prefer.
  • boethius
    2.3k
    That's why mandatory vaccination could be a last resort. It would force the government to act more transparently and to take at least a part of the responsibility for the safety and efficacy of the vaccine.

    The only problem is that with covid in particular, the "effectiveness" of the vaccine would be about the same as the course of the disease without the vaccine, and then the government could take the credit and make vaccination mandatory indefinitely.
    baker

    Agreed ... except I would say that was already the plan last year ... as I pointed out over a year ago:

    In which case, the likely situation is still not "good". The current vaccine programs are too little and too late to affect this winter season; coronavirus has demonstrated strong seasonal tendency and so will anyways go down in the spring and it will be difficult to know if the vaccine is working or not, and if we will be hit by a third wave next season anyways, whether due to the vaccines not working or new strains defeating the vaccine.boethius
  • NOS4A2
    9.2k


    Do you think there is some magical spell that stops the virus?
    It's about stemming the tide, containing, tracking, learning.

    Some of your comments can't be differentiated from paranoia.

    No. You can only stop a virus by not letting is spread to others. But there is no evidence governments can accomplish this task. So why let them?
  • Baden
    16.3k
    Mandatory vaccination is essentially a tax on wilful COVID spreaders. It's not like the government is holding you down and forcing a fucking needle into you.
  • john27
    693
    I would like to add, that even though you CAN get infected if you are vaccinated, its entire principle has to do with the probability of infection. It's meant to slow covid down, and it works.

    https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7034e5.htm#F1_down

    Edit: Plus, the symptoms between the vaccinated and the unvaccinated vary immensely:

    https://uihc.org/news/vaccinated-vs-unvaccinated-how-sick-can-you-get
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Next time I have a fat guy on the stretcher having a heart attack I will make sure to let him know that Banno says he should have hit the gym and eaten more salad; now accept the responsibility of your choices fatty, and die with dignity. Same with the alcoholics, people that get in car accidents if they were driving too fast...Book273

    Not a good analogy; overeating and alcoholism are addictions, and driving too fast is due to overconfidence in one's abilities. Not getting vaccinated, though, is a choice not to do something that has little attendant risk, based on either, or some combination of, believing stupid conspiracy theories, paranoia, or just bloody-minded refusal to do what you are told you should.

    Those who believe stupid conspiracy theories may be able to be educated, those who are paranoid may not be able to overcome their paranoia, it's those who are just bloodymindedly recalcitrant who most of all should be expected take responsibility for their decisions. Of course they won't because they think it is wrong that they should be told what they should do.

    What I see no justification for is publicly arguing against vaccination since it flies in the face of all the evidence. Also arguing against businesses mandating vaccination, when all they are doing is protecting themselves against being held responsible if someone becomes infected in the workplace (as well as simply protecting their employees, customers and associates) is just absurd in a time when occupational health and safety, and litigation for failure to comply with the requirements is so prevalent.
  • NOS4A2
    9.2k
    U.S. study suggests COVID-19 vaccines may be ineffective against Omicron without booster

    It’s not looking good. I suspect that they’ll widen the goal posts, determine that those who are fully vaccinated are in fact not, and exclude the vaccinated from various aspects of normal life until they get the next Pfizer wonder drug.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    It’s not looking good. I suspect that they’ll widen the goal posts, determine that those who are fully vaccinated are in fact not, and exclude the vaccinated from various aspects of normal life until they get the next Pfizer wonder drug.NOS4A2
    What for?
  • Banno
    24.9k
    On what basis then?Isaac
    It's an odd question.

    So we have in place a strong and competent tracing system. Folk who have been identified as potentially carrying the Dreaded Lurgy are asked to get tested and isolate pending the result. If someone were to attend a venue during that period they would receive a $1000 fine.

    Same for positive cases.

    Yes, the treatment of First Nations folk has been sadly wanting. It's a symptom of a systemic issue, one we need to deal with.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.