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Post by ken on Jan 7, 2014 7:12:21 GMT -6
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Post by malleodei on Jan 7, 2014 9:39:12 GMT -6
Can't comment about why this happened, but I am a believer in the flu shot.
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Post by stevec on Jan 7, 2014 16:12:24 GMT -6
Btw Ken, many people die every year going to and from church, while attending church related events, and on while on missionary assignments around the world. All these things are tragic, so it seems god's work doesn't exclude people from accidents, misfortune, and human error. I'd be all for banning religious activities at the same time we ban vaccines.
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Post by ken on Jan 7, 2014 19:15:20 GMT -6
Btw Ken, many people die every year going to and from church, while attending church related events, and on while on missionary assignments around the world. All these things are tragic, so it seems god's work doesn't exclude people from accidents, misfortune, and human error. I'd be all for banning religious activities at the same time we ban vaccines. Why would you ban vaccines? Just the polio vaccine alone has helped the whole of this world!
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Post by stevec on Jan 7, 2014 21:31:57 GMT -6
Btw Ken, many people die every year going to and from church, while attending church related events, and on while on missionary assignments around the world. All these things are tragic, so it seems god's work doesn't exclude people from accidents, misfortune, and human error. I'd be all for banning religious activities at the same time we ban vaccines. Why would you ban vaccines? Just the polio vaccine alone has helped the whole of this world! Alright, then vaccines stay and only religion goes.
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Post by ken on Jan 8, 2014 6:48:47 GMT -6
Why would you ban vaccines? Just the polio vaccine alone has helped the whole of this world! Alright, then vaccines stay and only religion goes. Just like the vaccine, just because one goes haywire, no need to throw the whole effort out And Happy New Year Mr. Sensitivity
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Post by Flitzerbiest on Jan 8, 2014 13:15:51 GMT -6
Post hoc ergo propter hoc. There is no evidence to indicate that flu vaccine causes narcolepsy, nor even a plausible biological theory as to why it might.
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Post by stevec on Jan 8, 2014 13:58:29 GMT -6
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Post by ken on Jan 8, 2014 17:00:57 GMT -6
Thanks for your unbiased post. Perhaps there is another ingredient in the one produced for the US that should be used.
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Post by Flitzerbiest on Jan 8, 2014 18:16:29 GMT -6
I stand corrected. Somehow that one flew under my radar. The CDC and NIH, by the way, are fantastic examples of government doing efficiently what the private sector does not or can not.
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Post by Flitzerbiest on Jan 8, 2014 18:20:13 GMT -6
I would say that I'm curious why you posted this in the first place, but to be curious implies a degree of uncertainty about the answer. Vaccine denial is, for whatever reason, a common Evangelical blood sport. In similar news, did everyone see that Jenny McCarthy has finally come out and admitted that her son does not, and has never had autism. How many hundreds of thousands of mothers has she persuaded to not vaccinate based on that thoroughly disproven link.
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Post by ken on Jan 8, 2014 20:24:50 GMT -6
I stand corrected. Somehow that one flew under my radar. The CDC and NIH, by the way, are fantastic examples of government doing efficiently what the private sector does not or can not. I concur that the CDC and NIH are necessary governmental agencies to keep an oversight on private businesses.
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Post by ken on Jan 8, 2014 20:28:48 GMT -6
I would say that I'm curious why you posted this in the first place, but to be curious implies a degree of uncertainty about the answer. Vaccine denial is, for whatever reason, a common Evangelical blood sport. A few of reasons: 1) First you are in the medical profession and I thought you would be interested in it 2) Second - just thinking about this family, can't imagine the pain and suffering they must be going through. 3) Third - to add to the topics of discussions. 4) Last - it is interesting to see the broad reactions to a simply statement of "This must be very difficult for the family."Incidentally, I vaccinated my children
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Post by stevec on Jan 8, 2014 21:34:20 GMT -6
Thanks for your unbiased post. Perhaps there is another ingredient in the one produced for the US that should be used. The scientific journals report that it's ketchup. No respectable European would touch the US vaccine as a consequence.
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Post by stevec on Jan 8, 2014 21:51:34 GMT -6
I would say that I'm curious why you posted this in the first place, but to be curious implies a degree of uncertainty about the answer. Vaccine denial is, for whatever reason, a common Evangelical blood sport. A few of reasons: 1) First you are in the medical profession and I thought you would be interested in it 2) Second - just thinking about this family, can't imagine the pain and suffering they must be going through. 3) Third - to add to the topics of discussions. 4) Last - it is interesting to see the broad reactions to a simply statement of "This must be very difficult for the family."Incidentally, I vaccinated my children Spare us, you have a history that you can't hide from. You vaccinated your children before your evangelical mentors took up the anti-vaccination cause. I seriously suspect you wouldn't have them vaccinated today as a new parent.
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