when is Moderna getting full approval?
cuz that's the winner, Pfizer is kinda trash now
cuz that's the winner, Pfizer is kinda trash now
So once it is approved you will have no problem right? Excellent, a coming together is almost upon us.GAC06 said:
We'll see. It's not approved. The students were kicked out anyway.
Probably not long after. Will that disappoint you ?cone said:
when is Moderna getting full approval?
cuz that's the winner, Pfizer is kinda trash now
TarponChaser said:
Diphtheria has a 10% mortality rate
If you don't see a world of difference between that at 0.05% I can't help you.
And all of the other vaccines were studied and developed and tested over years. Not months. They've also been in use for years before becoming mandated.
bangobango said:TarponChaser said:
Diphtheria has a 10% mortality rate
If you don't see a world of difference between that at 0.05% I can't help you.
And all of the other vaccines were studied and developed and tested over years. Not months. They've also been in use for years before becoming mandated.
Polio was approved within a year. That's the only "fact" you posted that I know for certain you got wrong, but it tells me that the rest of what you assert is probably FOS, too.
bay fan said:So once it is approved you will have no problem right? Excellent, a coming together is almost upon us.GAC06 said:
We'll see. It's not approved. The students were kicked out anyway.
Stating the raw number of those who have died with COVID without mentioning comorbidities, underlying conditions and age brackets of those who have died is straight up intellectual dishonesty. You know that though.Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:amercer said:lead said:
I smell a lawsuit.
Vaccine requirements at colleges aren't new.
And pretty universally those vaccines which are mandated are for diseases which have mortality rates into the double-digits. Not something which for 99.5% of the people who get it experience little more than a cold.
Share the facts on the diseases you are talking about. Percentage of death. Percentage of hospitalization. Number of deaths. Number of hospitalization. Then compare all of that to covid. Prove your argument that you are making with such authority.
Also include sources of all data
Then share what you think the threshold should be at for each category.
Seriously?
Polio: 10-30% mortality rate and 50/50 of severe handicap if you live. Smallpox: 30-100% mortality rate. Measles: 2-5% (higher in infants or elderly), like 30% chance of total hearing loss. Bacterial meningitis: 20%+ in adults. Just to name a few. These have all been posted repeatedly and thoroughly documented.
Covid is like 0.05%.
Attempting to compare mandatory covid vaccination to any of the above marks you as fundamentally unserious and unworthy of engagement on the matter.
Then don't engage with a message board on the topic if you don't want to argue with the other side. K. Bye.
645,000 people have died in the US from covid. That's important to me.
Considering the below are mandated in Texas I think covid is warranted in regards to saving lives.
But hey you are allowed to disagree!
Most of those people you are talking about we're not on their death bed and many would have at a while left to enjoy. Just cause someone was in a nursing home or had asthma doesn't mean they were going to die in the next yearTheMasterplan said:Stating the raw number of those who have died with COVID without mentioning comorbidities, underlying conditions and age brackets of those who have died is straight up intellectual dishonesty. You know that though.Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:amercer said:lead said:
I smell a lawsuit.
Vaccine requirements at colleges aren't new.
And pretty universally those vaccines which are mandated are for diseases which have mortality rates into the double-digits. Not something which for 99.5% of the people who get it experience little more than a cold.
Share the facts on the diseases you are talking about. Percentage of death. Percentage of hospitalization. Number of deaths. Number of hospitalization. Then compare all of that to covid. Prove your argument that you are making with such authority.
Also include sources of all data
Then share what you think the threshold should be at for each category.
Seriously?
Polio: 10-30% mortality rate and 50/50 of severe handicap if you live. Smallpox: 30-100% mortality rate. Measles: 2-5% (higher in infants or elderly), like 30% chance of total hearing loss. Bacterial meningitis: 20%+ in adults. Just to name a few. These have all been posted repeatedly and thoroughly documented.
Covid is like 0.05%.
Attempting to compare mandatory covid vaccination to any of the above marks you as fundamentally unserious and unworthy of engagement on the matter.
Then don't engage with a message board on the topic if you don't want to argue with the other side. K. Bye.
645,000 people have died in the US from covid. That's important to me.
Considering the below are mandated in Texas I think covid is warranted in regards to saving lives.
But hey you are allowed to disagree!
Ryota Hayami said:Most of those people you are talking about we're not on their death bed and many would have at a while left to enjoy. Just cause someone was in a nursing home or had asthma doesn't mean they were going to die in the next yearTheMasterplan said:Stating the raw number of those who have died with COVID without mentioning comorbidities, underlying conditions and age brackets of those who have died is straight up intellectual dishonesty. You know that though.Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:amercer said:lead said:
I smell a lawsuit.
Vaccine requirements at colleges aren't new.
And pretty universally those vaccines which are mandated are for diseases which have mortality rates into the double-digits. Not something which for 99.5% of the people who get it experience little more than a cold.
Share the facts on the diseases you are talking about. Percentage of death. Percentage of hospitalization. Number of deaths. Number of hospitalization. Then compare all of that to covid. Prove your argument that you are making with such authority.
Also include sources of all data
Then share what you think the threshold should be at for each category.
Seriously?
Polio: 10-30% mortality rate and 50/50 of severe handicap if you live. Smallpox: 30-100% mortality rate. Measles: 2-5% (higher in infants or elderly), like 30% chance of total hearing loss. Bacterial meningitis: 20%+ in adults. Just to name a few. These have all been posted repeatedly and thoroughly documented.
Covid is like 0.05%.
Attempting to compare mandatory covid vaccination to any of the above marks you as fundamentally unserious and unworthy of engagement on the matter.
Then don't engage with a message board on the topic if you don't want to argue with the other side. K. Bye.
645,000 people have died in the US from covid. That's important to me.
Considering the below are mandated in Texas I think covid is warranted in regards to saving lives.
But hey you are allowed to disagree!
TarponChaser said:Ryota Hayami said:Most of those people you are talking about we're not on their death bed and many would have at a while left to enjoy. Just cause someone was in a nursing home or had asthma doesn't mean they were going to die in the next yearTheMasterplan said:Stating the raw number of those who have died with COVID without mentioning comorbidities, underlying conditions and age brackets of those who have died is straight up intellectual dishonesty. You know that though.Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:Ryota Hayami said:TarponChaser said:amercer said:lead said:
I smell a lawsuit.
Vaccine requirements at colleges aren't new.
And pretty universally those vaccines which are mandated are for diseases which have mortality rates into the double-digits. Not something which for 99.5% of the people who get it experience little more than a cold.
Share the facts on the diseases you are talking about. Percentage of death. Percentage of hospitalization. Number of deaths. Number of hospitalization. Then compare all of that to covid. Prove your argument that you are making with such authority.
Also include sources of all data
Then share what you think the threshold should be at for each category.
Seriously?
Polio: 10-30% mortality rate and 50/50 of severe handicap if you live. Smallpox: 30-100% mortality rate. Measles: 2-5% (higher in infants or elderly), like 30% chance of total hearing loss. Bacterial meningitis: 20%+ in adults. Just to name a few. These have all been posted repeatedly and thoroughly documented.
Covid is like 0.05%.
Attempting to compare mandatory covid vaccination to any of the above marks you as fundamentally unserious and unworthy of engagement on the matter.
Then don't engage with a message board on the topic if you don't want to argue with the other side. K. Bye.
645,000 people have died in the US from covid. That's important to me.
Considering the below are mandated in Texas I think covid is warranted in regards to saving lives.
But hey you are allowed to disagree!
So maybe Cuomo shouldn't have sent covid+ patients back into nursing homes.
Polio - From field trials to approval - one year. https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/polio-vaccine-trials-beginTarponChaser said:bangobango said:TarponChaser said:
Diphtheria has a 10% mortality rate
If you don't see a world of difference between that at 0.05% I can't help you.
And all of the other vaccines were studied and developed and tested over years. Not months. They've also been in use for years before becoming mandated.
Polio was approved within a year. That's the only "fact" you posted that I know for certain you got wrong, but it tells me that the rest of what you assert is probably FOS, too.
Nope. Salk developed his in 1952 and wasn't fully approved until 1955. And research on a vaccine and testing had been ongoing since the late 1930s.
Zobel- also left out the part about different strains of polio which have disparate impacts. However, they're all far more dangerous than covid.