Revel in your myopic ignorance.
Put yourself in the shoes of someone who is having to play a numbers game in a population 330 million. If N percentage of vaccinated people have a notable negative side effect, and Y percentage of people who get COVID have a negative side effect, and it looks like N is less than Y, then you probably are best pushing for a higher vaccinated count in the portion of the unvaccinated who are traveling/working/playing in large groups (you don't care about the portion of the population who is not mingling too much with others either way).A Net Full of Jello said:I'm not sure what that has to do with what I posted, but okay. Point remains that no one cares if a person has a poor reaction or negative side effect to this vaccine. That's that one person's problem and no one should feel guilty that the person wouldn't be living with this side effect had he not been guilted or forced into the vaccine.. However, they certainly seem concerned over whether a person who isn't vaccinated gives covid to another unvaccinated person. Spoiler: the unvaccinated knows the risk he is taking and doesn't care (clearly) or he would have gotten the vaccine by now.Pumpkinhead said:Once the FDA issues full approval, You'll likely see more and more unvaccinated folks who want to travel/work/play in large groups have to either get vaccinated or enjoy lots of cotten swabs in nose again and again. That's what I'd do if in that was my responsiblity, and I imagine that is roughly the game plan. And the unvaccinated can get annoyed and criticize on social media all they want, but if you are trying to hit a vaccination/COVID spread target, then you are not trying to win a popularity contest anyways. Some people will hate you but that's your job So you go with some 'stick' instead of 'carrot' and up the testing requirement hassles until a bunch of the unvaccinated folks break.A Net Full of Jello said:SociallyConditionedAg said:Pumpkinhead said:Mandatory vaccinations to do certain things or perform certain jobs has between around a long long time. Once COVID-19 vaccines join the rest of the more established vaccines (which needs the FDA full approval to play out), then okey dokey, entered a new phase of the ball game.Old McDonald said:at this point there are maybe 10-20% of people still in the "wait and see" camp. supposedly full FDA approval and vaccine requirements for travel are the two developments that would be most persuasive to this group to push them over the edge. i have my doubts about the former, and obviously the latter is pretty problematic.Pumpkinhead said:
If I was trying to up the vaccination percentage, I've already given up on trying to convince the unvaccinated folks. If you live in the U.S. and haven't gotten the vaccine by this point, you've decided not to get it.
I wouldn't even bother, if I was in charge of the vaccination program, to try to communicate much to the anti-vaxxer crowd at this point. I get it. Don't want to get vaccinated. Don't really care at this point, got to move on to the next step to get my job done which means just focusing on:
1) FDA full appoval then...
2) Get vaccinated or have fun getting tested A LOT in situations that involve travel/work/play around a bunch of other people. If you don't travel/work/play around a bunch of people, then don't care about you anyways. The sedentary/introverted/self-isolated folks are not part of my problem. But if you DO like to mingle a lot in society, well, I'm going to make unvaccinated life a bit more annoying for you and test how much you REALLY are anti-vaccine.
That's what I would do. And I suspect...my take may not be far off from what the real folks are planning at this point.
If the unvaxxed folks are the only ones unsafe, why bother restricting them from any activities? I mean, if the shot works and you don't care what happens to them, who does it hurt besides them? The shot doesn't keep you from spreading COVID, so that arguments out the window. This is purely about control, not safety.
But see, the unvaccinated can give covid to the vaccinated. Vaccinated don't give it to vaccinated. So everybody must get vaccinated or they are selfish and don't care if they harm someone. I'm pretty sure that's the argument.
BUT, no one is talking about what happens if you force/guilt a person to get a new, untested, unapproved vaccine and that person has a side effect. Apparently, in that case, you shouldn't feel guilty. That seems rather hypocritical.
We'll see how much longer it takes for the FDA approval process to play out.
Quote:
Vaccine Hesitancy Explained: HIGH risk experimental vaccine vs LOW risk disease
Higher chance of injury or death than the disease
houag80 said:
Revel in your myopic ignorance.
Forum Troll said:
For as much as the vaccine hesitant crowd claims that their hesitancy is not for political reasons, that thread basically confirms that the reasons are in fact political.
AlsoQuote:
Vaccine Hesitancy Explained: HIGH risk experimental vaccine vs LOW risk disease
Higher chance of injury or death than the disease
Pure stupidity.
TL;DRSkillet Shot said:
I know. It's too long.
But we still don't know the long term effects the vaccine carries so we have very little idea of what that N percentage is.Pumpkinhead said:Put yourself in the shoes of someone who is having to play a numbers game in a population 330 million. If N percentage of vaccinated people have a notable negative side effect, and Y percentage of people who get COVID have a negative side effect, and it looks like N is less than Y, then you probably are best pushing for a higher vaccinated count in the portion of the unvaccinated who are traveling/working/playing in large groups (you don't care about the portion of the population who is not mingling too much with others either way).A Net Full of Jello said:I'm not sure what that has to do with what I posted, but okay. Point remains that no one cares if a person has a poor reaction or negative side effect to this vaccine. That's that one person's problem and no one should feel guilty that the person wouldn't be living with this side effect had he not been guilted or forced into the vaccine.. However, they certainly seem concerned over whether a person who isn't vaccinated gives covid to another unvaccinated person. Spoiler: the unvaccinated knows the risk he is taking and doesn't care (clearly) or he would have gotten the vaccine by now.Pumpkinhead said:Once the FDA issues full approval, You'll likely see more and more unvaccinated folks who want to travel/work/play in large groups have to either get vaccinated or enjoy lots of cotten swabs in nose again and again. That's what I'd do if in that was my responsiblity, and I imagine that is roughly the game plan. And the unvaccinated can get annoyed and criticize on social media all they want, but if you are trying to hit a vaccination/COVID spread target, then you are not trying to win a popularity contest anyways. Some people will hate you but that's your job So you go with some 'stick' instead of 'carrot' and up the testing requirement hassles until a bunch of the unvaccinated folks break.A Net Full of Jello said:SociallyConditionedAg said:Pumpkinhead said:Mandatory vaccinations to do certain things or perform certain jobs has between around a long long time. Once COVID-19 vaccines join the rest of the more established vaccines (which needs the FDA full approval to play out), then okey dokey, entered a new phase of the ball game.Old McDonald said:at this point there are maybe 10-20% of people still in the "wait and see" camp. supposedly full FDA approval and vaccine requirements for travel are the two developments that would be most persuasive to this group to push them over the edge. i have my doubts about the former, and obviously the latter is pretty problematic.Pumpkinhead said:
If I was trying to up the vaccination percentage, I've already given up on trying to convince the unvaccinated folks. If you live in the U.S. and haven't gotten the vaccine by this point, you've decided not to get it.
I wouldn't even bother, if I was in charge of the vaccination program, to try to communicate much to the anti-vaxxer crowd at this point. I get it. Don't want to get vaccinated. Don't really care at this point, got to move on to the next step to get my job done which means just focusing on:
1) FDA full appoval then...
2) Get vaccinated or have fun getting tested A LOT in situations that involve travel/work/play around a bunch of other people. If you don't travel/work/play around a bunch of people, then don't care about you anyways. The sedentary/introverted/self-isolated folks are not part of my problem. But if you DO like to mingle a lot in society, well, I'm going to make unvaccinated life a bit more annoying for you and test how much you REALLY are anti-vaccine.
That's what I would do. And I suspect...my take may not be far off from what the real folks are planning at this point.
If the unvaxxed folks are the only ones unsafe, why bother restricting them from any activities? I mean, if the shot works and you don't care what happens to them, who does it hurt besides them? The shot doesn't keep you from spreading COVID, so that arguments out the window. This is purely about control, not safety.
But see, the unvaccinated can give covid to the vaccinated. Vaccinated don't give it to vaccinated. So everybody must get vaccinated or they are selfish and don't care if they harm someone. I'm pretty sure that's the argument.
BUT, no one is talking about what happens if you force/guilt a person to get a new, untested, unapproved vaccine and that person has a side effect. Apparently, in that case, you shouldn't feel guilty. That seems rather hypocritical.
We'll see how much longer it takes for the FDA approval process to play out.
No doubt people are turned off by how political the vaccine has become. And no doubt they are turned off by political people pushing the vaccine. And no doubt people distrust many of the political people who are pushing the vaccine. But the distrust isn't necessarily rooted in the politics themselves. We could also discuss WHY there is so much distrust and the possible politics behind it, but that doesn't change the fact that while the issue has become political, that isn't necessarily why the majority of people still unvaccinated have opted to not get the shot.Forum Troll said:
For as much as the vaccine hesitant crowd claims that their hesitancy is not for political reasons, that thread basically confirms that the reasons are in fact political.
AlsoQuote:
Vaccine Hesitancy Explained: HIGH risk experimental vaccine vs LOW risk disease
Higher chance of injury or death than the disease
Pure stupidity.
samurai_texan said:
We know there is no point getting the vaccine since it was only good against one strain...so it's pointless.
NewOldAg said:
Just the schools? Not the podcasts that are so popular nowadays the are straight out of LA?
Not the tv networks that push subliminal messages in their series?
Not the Disneys, not the MLB, not the NFL, the NBA whose sports heroes kids will look up to?
Not Twitch, Reddit, or any of the gaming culture? Or how about the parents that are supposed to explain and filter?
I'm not sure public schools are what you think they are; a parent has 100x the influence a teacher has over a child's future.
You are absolutely lying and if I actually respected you then I would search for it. Trump, within the past few months, has urged people to take the vax. Look it up, you might learn something.TXAGFAN said:
All those words, most vaccinated people perceive those who did not get vaccinated as being swayed by political propaganda, not science/facts. Propaganda that the politicians themselves didn't even follow - Trump, Desantis, etc are all part of a LONG line of republicans who publicly spoke/speak negatively about vaccine and are themselves vaccinated.
Ironically, I feel the same about young healthy people rushing out to take a rushed, unapproved vaccine, that the makers are shielded from liability for a virus that has a 99.99% survival rate. I also laugh at young healthy people masked up in public as a WW2, Korean War and Vietnam vet walks past them unmasked. Take the shot, stfu and leave everyone else alone. And before you ask, no, IDGAF if I might infect your vaccinated ass.Forum Troll said:
For as much as the vaccine hesitant crowd claims that their hesitancy is not for political reasons, that thread basically confirms that the reasons are in fact political.
AlsoQuote:
Vaccine Hesitancy Explained: HIGH risk experimental vaccine vs LOW risk disease
Higher chance of injury or death than the disease
Pure stupidity.
Quote:
People are refusing to take the Vaccine because they don't trust his Administration, they don't trust the Election results, and they certainly don't trust the Fake News, which is refusing to tell the Truth.
- Donald Trump
https://www.newsweek.com/trump-claims-americans-not-taking-covid-vaccine-because-they-dont-trust-president-1612889TXAGFAN said:
Why are you SO angry? Don't be mad at me, I'm pointing out that the Republican Party leadership don't even believe this bull**** they're pushing and many here seem to be all in on that vaccine is bad.
Get vaccinated, don't get vaccinated - I wish you would, but it doesn't occupy a ton of space in my head.Quote:
People are refusing to take the Vaccine because they don't trust his Administration, they don't trust the Election results, and they certainly don't trust the Fake News, which is refusing to tell the Truth.
- Donald Trump
I believe this is his most recent statement? So pro vaccine you're right. In a moment he could encourage people to get vaccinated he makes it about himself and his bull**** narrative, again.
This topic has begun extremely politicalicized despite it likely that the same government vaccination push and decision logic would be occuring regardless of which political party was sitting in the chairs.A Net Full of Jello said:No doubt people are turned off by how political the vaccine has become. And no doubt they are turned off by political people pushing the vaccine. And no doubt people distrust many of the political people who are pushing the vaccine. But the distrust isn't necessarily rooted in the politics themselves. We could also discuss WHY there is so much distrust and the possible politics behind it, but that doesn't change the fact that while the issue has become political, that isn't necessarily why the majority of people still unvaccinated have opted to not get the shot.Forum Troll said:
For as much as the vaccine hesitant crowd claims that their hesitancy is not for political reasons, that thread basically confirms that the reasons are in fact political.
AlsoQuote:
Vaccine Hesitancy Explained: HIGH risk experimental vaccine vs LOW risk disease
Higher chance of injury or death than the disease
Pure stupidity.
Did you read the whole article I posted? I doubt you did because you're afraid to read the truth. BTW, Newsweek is a liberal rag, so that should give them credence with you. It's not hard to admit you're wrong, hard to swallow, but that's not our problem.TXAGFAN said:
That is his quote and a whole ass sentence, but whatever you say.
The media is biased and so are trumps own words, that makes sense? No, it's just more ****ty messaging from a guy who lost election because of his poor control of narrative.
Have a good evening.
Of course I read it, but in a moment he could have been presidential and rose above the covid narrative that cost him the election he went off about media, stolen election, etc.Prognightmare said:Did you read the whole article I posted? I doubt you did because you're afraid to read the truth. BTW, Newsweek is a liberal rag, so that should give them credence with you. It's not hard to admit you're wrong, hard to swallow, but that's not our problem.TXAGFAN said:
That is his quote and a whole ass sentence, but whatever you say.
The media is biased and so are trumps own words, that makes sense? No, it's just more ****ty messaging from a guy who lost election because of his poor control of narrative.
Have a good evening.