superunknown said:
For what it's worth, a Trump supporter and conservative who works for me scheduled his 1st Pfizer shot today now that it's been FDA approved. So there's some anecdotal for you.
That's awesome!
superunknown said:
For what it's worth, a Trump supporter and conservative who works for me scheduled his 1st Pfizer shot today now that it's been FDA approved. So there's some anecdotal for you.
Ryota Hayami said:Kvetch said:t - cam said:
The goalpost was already moved when people started claiming the FDA was a joke or somehow untrustworthy.
The FDA is untrustworthy. See their lack of action on viable therapeutics that are known to be safe.
Their push for vaccines over all else is 100% political.
Moving the goalposts but please at least read what actual scientists and epidemiologists are saying about the vaccine. Get your news from real sources that are cited with scientific research.
Harry Stone said:Ryota Hayami said:Kvetch said:t - cam said:
The goalpost was already moved when people started claiming the FDA was a joke or somehow untrustworthy.
The FDA is untrustworthy. See their lack of action on viable therapeutics that are known to be safe.
Their push for vaccines over all else is 100% political.
Moving the goalposts but please at least read what actual scientists and epidemiologists are saying about the vaccine. Get your news from real sources that are cited with scientific research.
I own an mRNA company. We are small right now but the virus has considerably changed our trajectory. my sources are 99.99% better than everyone here, including all the articles that are linked here. I believe that mRNA vaccines are great, but I cannot stand people who get on here and scold people for not getting the shot. If your company requires it, then you have to make a choice on whats more important, your job or your principles.
There's a reason why pharmaceutical commercials list the side effects of the drug. As long as patients are educated on the side effects and take the drug anyway, they are making an informed decision to assume the risk.Quote:
Does that mean people can sue if they have adverse reactions now?
I don't have any problem with people who simply choose not to take the shot because they have done their own cost/benefit analysis and chose to forgo the jab.Quote:
but I cannot stand people who get on here and scold people for not getting the shot.
Glad to hear this. The more vaccinated, the better.superunknown said:
For what it's worth, a Trump supporter and conservative who works for me scheduled his 1st Pfizer shot today now that it's been FDA approved. So there's some anecdotal for you.
Why can't you just leave it at "you do you?"Ryota Hayami said:
You do you! I'm not throwing out "fear porn" just using data.
I'm not looking it up but getting struck by lightning twice is probably so unlikely it's statistically insignificant. The data on reinfections and breakthrough cases including those who get seriously ill are not statistically insignificant by any measure.
double aught said:Glad to hear this. The more vaccinated, the better.superunknown said:
For what it's worth, a Trump supporter and conservative who works for me scheduled his 1st Pfizer shot today now that it's been FDA approved. So there's some anecdotal for you.
But the whole conservative, anti-vaxxer thing is just odd to me. Whether you like it or not, I think Trump deserves at least some credit for helping to speed along the vaccines and ushering them through. You'd think conservatives would be taking the opportunity to tout the vaccine as a triumph of his, but instead, for whatever reason, many are doubling down on an anti-vax stance.
Seersucker Ag 2011 said:
Does that mean people can sue if they have adverse reactions now?
Ryota Hayami said:Harry Stone said:Ryota Hayami said:Kvetch said:t - cam said:
The goalpost was already moved when people started claiming the FDA was a joke or somehow untrustworthy.
The FDA is untrustworthy. See their lack of action on viable therapeutics that are known to be safe.
Their push for vaccines over all else is 100% political.
Moving the goalposts but please at least read what actual scientists and epidemiologists are saying about the vaccine. Get your news from real sources that are cited with scientific research.
I own an mRNA company. We are small right now but the virus has considerably changed our trajectory. my sources are 99.99% better than everyone here, including all the articles that are linked here. I believe that mRNA vaccines are great, but I cannot stand people who get on here and scold people for not getting the shot. If your company requires it, then you have to make a choice on whats more important, your job or your principles.
Thanks for chiming in. I would love to hear more about your opinions and data about the covid mRNA shots.
That specific comment about the shots was aimed at people who said they wouldn't get it because it wasn't fully approved but are still making different excuses now that it is approved.
aggierogue said:Why can't you just leave it at "you do you?"Ryota Hayami said:
You do you! I'm not throwing out "fear porn" just using data.
I'm not looking it up but getting struck by lightning twice is probably so unlikely it's statistically insignificant. The data on reinfections and breakthrough cases including those who get seriously ill are not statistically insignificant by any measure.
That's what many of us want. Get your vaccine. Wear your masks, and leave other people alone.
It's amazing that some of you guys are vaccinated, boast about the protection you have acquired, and live on this board to point their fingers at others who've chosen a different route.
Zobel said:
Isn't that the part of the mRNA sequence itself? Wouldn't that be a material change, and precluded under approval? That seems kinda major.
J_Daddy05 said:
OP will be glad to know that my opinion hasn't changed since Trump was president, FDA approved or not.
Not politically motivated
Not anti vax
Hope that doesn't ruin anyone's preconceived notions about those who haven't gotten the jab.
superunknown said:double aught said:Glad to hear this. The more vaccinated, the better.superunknown said:
For what it's worth, a Trump supporter and conservative who works for me scheduled his 1st Pfizer shot today now that it's been FDA approved. So there's some anecdotal for you.
But the whole conservative, anti-vaxxer thing is just odd to me. Whether you like it or not, I think Trump deserves at least some credit for helping to speed along the vaccines and ushering them through. You'd think conservatives would be taking the opportunity to tout the vaccine as a triumph of his, but instead, for whatever reason, many are doubling down on an anti-vax stance.
I always figured anti-vaxxers were granola-deodorant wearing hippie types and then the Jenny McCarty anti-vax stuff happened and there seems to be a louder (if at least not stronger) portion now coming from that intersection of Alex Jones and evangelical home schooling types. I don't quite understand it. I would have thought Trumps initiative towards cutting down red tape and giving the companies financial incentives would have been a great selling point and an example of cutting gov regulation that worked. Obviously I whiffed on that.
Harry Stone said:Zobel said:
Isn't that the part of the mRNA sequence itself? Wouldn't that be a material change, and precluded under approval? That seems kinda major.
it is, yes, and should be precluded under approval, yes, and im sure it was under phase 1-3. but what if they switched to something like trilink cleancap technology after eua.
https://www.trilinkbiotech.com/cleancap/?utm_campaign=Capping&utm_medium=cpc&utm_source=google&gclid=Cj0KCQjwjo2JBhCRARIsAFG667UsxHAr-qeak3K274_VBeZGty5Pm3siyR0-Z4SHmMuRQ5mleOU5IqQaAorGEALw_wcB
t - cam said:J_Daddy05 said:
OP will be glad to know that my opinion hasn't changed since Trump was president, FDA approved or not.
Not politically motivated
Not anti vax
Hope that doesn't ruin anyone's preconceived notions about those who haven't gotten the jab.
You are one subset of those refusing the vax. There were many people waiting for the approval. Hope this makes them feel safe.
Off topic, but I would advocate people do this regardless. There are enough bad (incompetent or malicious, doesn't matter) medical people out there, be as vigilant as you can on behalf of your loved one. The Duntsch's of the world don't have cartoon villain mustaches to easily identify them as ****ty practitioners.The Big12Ag said:
push and push and advocate for your loved one
I found some really good reading materials for you. it does look like pfizer uses co-transcriptional capping. it's a much cheaper method with one less purification step. we have seen less translational efficiency with a trinucleotide than Cap 2-O-Methyltransferase and VCE, but it is still effective just not consistent, which could effect the lots.Zobel said:
Isn't that the part of the mRNA sequence itself? Wouldn't that be a material change, and precluded under approval? That seems kinda major.
In a sense, maybe. for the most part, longer is usually more beneficial. however, certain cell types, like some myoblasts, may actually induce hyperadenylation. but typically the more stable the mRNA, the more the control of deadenylation.Zobel said:
Wow - awesome, thanks.
Quick question - I was under the impression that the poly-A tail had a sort of diminishing returns as to length. At some point you don't more benefit from making it longer. Is that true? Does it change the relevance of PCR vs IVT?