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Political Roundtable Part XXX

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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#881 » by Dat2U » Tue Jan 18, 2022 11:19 pm

dckingsfan wrote:
Dat2U wrote:Does a healthy diet significantly reduce the chance of illness? Yes. Do we mandate people to eat healthy to reduce the burden of care for doctors, nurses, hospitals and insurance companies? No.

Count me in if we are going after this - our healthcare system is truly f'd now. We could keep up with those with unhealthy eating habits before - now, not so much. What does that mean? It means that there will be reduced efficacy in treatment for the healthy going forward.

That we haven't addressed this issue is truly mindboggling - I guess it takes a pandemic for folks to actually see how big a problem this is?


Incentivizing? Yes. Mandating? Thats definitely something I'm uncomfortable with.

How would it be done? A tax deduction? A rebate through your employer's health insurance? I would love to see a bonafide program that rewards folks for staying healthy, incentivizes american corporations to come up with healthier options and possibly penalize/tax those corporations whose percentage of profits from unhealthy options exceed a certain threshold.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#882 » by Kanyewest » Tue Jan 18, 2022 11:26 pm

dobrojim wrote:Doc wrote
Even if the vaccines don't prevent infection (early statistics clearly showed they did, though this number has decayed vs omicron) they do prevent hospitalization and death. Should encouraging vaccines be part of the political response? It worked for Measles, Mumps, Polio, etc. If not, then what is your response? People should be allowed to choose to get infected if they want? Die if they want? Crowd hospitals etc and make other preventable deaths more deadly due to ER wait times. lack of hospital beds, etc?


So the responsible govt response has to be try to get as many vaccinated as possible.
It will save lives and save huge amounts of money too.

BTW, I may not know all the finer details of the mRNA vaccines but I'm pretty sure
that mRNA does not have a particularly long lifetime in the body before it is degraded.
I don't know if the mRNA vaccines are somehow modified to extend their lifetimes.

RNA was the first genetic material. DNA came second and was an improvement
for most organisms because it is a LOT more stable and not subject to degradation
to the same degree RNA is. RNAses (enzymes that degrade RNA) are everywhere.


Yeah it seems like J&J is doing a better job at containing Omnicron than Moderna/Pfizer from the last study I saw 3 weeks ago although perhaps that has changed. I also saw that the best combination is actually one vaccination of Moderna/Pfizer and J&J (booster). The Moderna booster is also reportedly doing better than the Pfizer one.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#883 » by Pointgod » Wed Jan 19, 2022 12:22 am

Zonkerbl wrote:It's ironic everyone is giving up on the Dems because they can't deliver. I mean, I get it. I think our one big chance to save democracy was in 2020 and we fell literally two senators short, and now we're just watching the Titanic sink.

Nevertheless, if the Dems were to hold onto the house in 2020 and pick up two seats in the Senate, then it would actually be possible to make the changes that everyone is giving up on the dems for not being able to do. I think the most important change is to not let Republicans pass laws that let them just pick the slate of electors regardless of their states' votes. I haven't checked up on it but my intuition is that Republicans have mostly backed off.


I don’t think there’s enough smoke given to voters. People need to stop blaming the Democratic Party or Joe Biden from not getting things done, they need to blame a small number of Senators for not getting things done. And instead of giving up or dissuading people from voter for the party they need to just vote in better and more Democrats. Pretty simple. There’s no leverage you can hold over Manchin or Sinema to get them to do what’s in the best interest of the country and party. Sinema isn’t up until 2024 and she certainly knows she’s not surviving a primary. She’ll gladly suck up to her contacts and take that high paid lobbying position. Manchin knows that he’s either retiring or will be the last Democrat elected in West Virginia for the foreseeable future.

I don’t think there’s much that the Democrats could have done to not lose either the House or Senate in 2022. History was working against them. That’s the reality. But passing voting rights laws isn’t about 2022, it’s about whether or not they’ll ever want to be able to actually get back in power. People have zero concept of what’s about the happen and how bad things will get. Manchin and Sinema are happy to relegate the country to one party rule and the voters are happy to go along with them, instead of doing what’s in their best interests.

People are focused on the wrong thing. No amount of complaining about corruption, corporate interests etc is going to matter when the Republicans have one Party rule.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#884 » by Wizardspride » Wed Jan 19, 2022 1:12 am

Read on Twitter
?t=Jw8QjMAxbdhS4KynjY96TA&s=19

President Donald Trump referred to African countries, Haiti and El Salvador as "shithole" nations during a meeting Thursday and asked why the U.S. can't have more immigrants from Norway.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#885 » by Pointgod » Wed Jan 19, 2022 2:19 am

Don’t say you weren’t warned. Expect more of this across the country if Republicans get back in power. This is just examples from one state but this is the standard for the Republican Party now.

Read on Twitter


Read on Twitter


Read on Twitter


On Martin Luther King day no less.
Read on Twitter
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#886 » by Pointgod » Wed Jan 19, 2022 2:21 am

Wizardspride wrote:
Read on Twitter
?t=Jw8QjMAxbdhS4KynjY96TA&s=19


Manchin has to be the dumbest and most naive person in Congress. The Supreme Court already gutted the voting rights act, the very same laws that he’s in favor of restoring. What a complete clueless ****.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#887 » by dckingsfan » Wed Jan 19, 2022 2:42 pm

Dat2U wrote:
dckingsfan wrote:
Dat2U wrote:Does a healthy diet significantly reduce the chance of illness? Yes. Do we mandate people to eat healthy to reduce the burden of care for doctors, nurses, hospitals and insurance companies? No.

Count me in if we are going after this - our healthcare system is truly f'd now. We could keep up with those with unhealthy eating habits before - now, not so much. What does that mean? It means that there will be reduced efficacy in treatment for the healthy going forward.

That we haven't addressed this issue is truly mindboggling - I guess it takes a pandemic for folks to actually see how big a problem this is?

Incentivizing? Yes. Mandating? Thats definitely something I'm uncomfortable with.

How would it be done? A tax deduction? A rebate through your employer's health insurance? I would love to see a bonafide program that rewards folks for staying healthy, incentivizes american corporations to come up with healthier options and possibly penalize/tax those corporations whose percentage of profits from unhealthy options exceed a certain threshold.

Tax unhealthy foods and drinks both at a federal and state level. Your idea of taxing those same corporations. Free healthcare and mental healthcare services around reducing obesity. Federal mandate adding classes that discuss what is healthy eating to the current K12 curricula (we won't see the benefits for a generation).

Subsidize healthy eating instruction on a local level and have ad campaigns that discuss what is good food - similar to what we did to drive down the number of smokers.

Come up with a vaccine that reduces obesity. Only 20% of Americans won't take that one - but they might be swayed in time not to take the booster.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#888 » by doclinkin » Wed Jan 19, 2022 7:42 pm

Dat2U wrote:Doc, I'll start by saying there's no easy answer. There's also no answer that would have likely prevented a significant loss of life.


There is. Vaccines. They work. If we had them early on we could have prevented the spread and mutation of the disease.

I'm also not anti-vaccine. But I'm confident that not enough research has been done with MRNA technology and its impact on the human body. (I won't even get into that trash ass J&J shot). As regular boosters have become a part of regime, i feel even less comfortable with the vax option. There is no long term study showing the impact of continued boosters on our bodies. Its as if were going along with the 'best' choice at the moment with zero consideration to what the long term implications could be... especially since we've learned its a leaky vax. As we should know, not all vaccines are created equal. Some are much better than others. A vaccine that doesn't protect you from infection and whose effectiveness wains after a few months is not an ideal vax and can create more problems than it's worth.


We can refer to the other thread but even post-Delta in the Omicron era, the vaccines deter infection. Leaky or no. In the Denmark study cited, vaccinated members in the same household as an infected person are only ~30% likely to catch the virus. 70% effective is still a strong number. This is up from the Delta variant where the vaccines were 80% likely to prevent infection, and up from the original strain for which it was developed (as much as 96% protection). But that is significantly better than say, the Flu vaccine which is only 40-60% effective. This is because influenza has become endemic, multiplies readily, and each year brings a new strain. Every year vulnerable people require a new flu shot. The difference is that because the flu has been around for millenia antibodies have developed in populations that make people flu resistant, and also that vulnerable people in history who contracted the flu already died off, their genes that made them vulnerable did not pass on.

The hope is still that if we can slow the growth of this virus science can stay ahead of it, and we won't have to have mass die-offs to develop herd immunity. If we had a vaccine early on that slowed the spread of the virus to 30% of its speed across populations (and we were able to deliver it to India and South Africa) we would not have had an Omicron variant.

If we had a vaccine that was even 70% effective at the start of this epidemic, 560,000 Americans would still be alive.

Does the vaccine reduce serious illness? It appears so. Did a flu shot help the flu? Yes. Did we mandate flu shots and fire people from their jobs for not taking a flu shot? No.


Hospitals and Nursing Homes require flu vaccinations. Schools require MMR shots before kids are allowed to enroll. Yes, we do. We had effectively defeated measles until Facebook posts allowed anti-vaxx misinformation to spread.

Does a healthy diet significantly reduce the chance of illness? Yes. Do we mandate people to eat healthy to reduce the burden of care for doctors, nurses, hospitals and insurance companies? No.


Totally off the point. You cannot pass obesity to 7 people. If you could contract morbid obesity by breathing the same air in an elevator as a big boy then hell yes we would see vaccines and mandates for anti-fat vaxx.

There's never an easy answer for everything but the current response screams overreach from governments across the world.


Fckn how. How is it overreach to form a public policy to prevent mass death.

800,000 Americans dead. That is over 13 Viet Nam Memorial walls worth of dead Americans. In one year killing more Americans than 30 years of the AIDS epidemic. It's not enough to say 'yeah that's bad, but hey people die'. We have no natural immunity to this thing, so it spreads like wildfire. There is no firewall to slow it down. EXCEPT vaccines or mass death. The very purpose of government in the first place is to protect people, even against their own choices. Dangerous drugs are illegal. Medicines are controlled. People are crying that these vaccines haven't been tested enough, in part because we are used to them being tested for up to 10 years before they are sent to market. And if not they are illegal.

This is a case where it is overwhelmingly in the public good NOT to delay the use of an effective treatment. This is a case where Government very sensibly has flexed in order to protect the largest number of people.

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare


Health and Welfare. Defense. Insuring Domestic peace. Ensuring that more Americans don't die and that we can safely open society (and our economy). We have Fire Marshall codes determining how many people can safely stand in one place. We have banned smoking indoors. Children cannot buy guns. And yes if you want to put your kid in public school they have to be vaccinated against the most virulent diseases.

It is reasonable to be hesitant and skeptical. It is fair to be concerned about your individual personal liberty. Marijuana should be legalized at a federal level. Prostitution should be legalized taxed and regulated to ensure sex workers have access to regular health care, as it is in Amsterdam. The government should not force women to keep an embryo in her body. The intelligence agencies should not be in our personal lives.

But absolutely government should have a policy to deal with the cataclysmic overgrowth of a newly mutated virus. The options are: lockdowns, mass death, or science. Doubtless there will be better science as we go, but so far to me the development of these vaccines in that short of a period of time is a f****ing miracle. I'm proud as hell of our scientific community, even if, yeah, huge pharmaceutical corporations stand to benefit from their work. They did remarkably good work with zero time to do it.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#889 » by Pointgod » Wed Jan 19, 2022 9:23 pm

I don’t want to turn this into a thread about vaccines, but vaccines are undoubtedly effective. There’s literally no argument against being vaccinated unless you’re allergic to the vaccine ingredients. You’re better off from a hospitalization, ICU, death, infection, COVID long haul symptoms and spreading to other people.

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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#890 » by long suffrin' boulez fan » Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:40 pm

What’s most galling to me is that idiots Manchin and Sinema are not playing their hands from a position of strength.

I appreciate them not wanting to engage in a tit for tat on the filibuster. They may be principled enough to think of it as a race to the bottom that will blow back if/when the Rs are in control. They might even believe that bipartisan legislation is better for the country. I’m ok with that.

But the ramifications of their inaction will invariably lead to voter suppression and decades in the wilderness for progressive and even moderate causes.

So, they should issue a joint offer/ultimatum to the GOP. Bring 10 Rs to the table to develop a list of voting reforms satisfactory to them or have them side with their own party and do it without them.

Same thing for the BBB elements they support.

C’mon people. Leverage your position to be honest brokers.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#891 » by Pointgod » Thu Jan 20, 2022 3:47 am

long suffrin' boulez fan wrote:What’s most galling to me is that idiots Manchin and Sinema are not playing their hands from a position of strength.

I appreciate them not wanting to engage in a tit for tat on the filibuster. They may be principled enough to think of it as a race to the bottom that will blow back if/when the Rs are in control. They might even believe that bipartisan legislation is better for the country. I’m ok with that.

But the ramifications of their inaction will invariably lead to voter suppression and decades in the wilderness for progressive and even moderate causes.

So, they should issue a joint offer/ultimatum to the GOP. Bring 10 Rs to the table to develop a list of voting reforms satisfactory to them or have them side with their own party and do it without them.

Same thing for the BBB elements they support.

C’mon people. Leverage your position to be honest brokers.


The thing is that Manchin and Sinema don’t care. They have zero incentives, interests or higher loyalty to the party or country. To your point they don’t even have to negotiate with Republicans, they don’t even bother negotiating with their own party or saying what they’d vote to pass on something like BBB which can’t be filibustered.

At the end of the day they know they’re not running again and would rather do nothing, than make an exception on the filibuster for voting rights. I promise you once Republicans are back in power, they’ll carve out the filibuster 100% just like they did with Supreme Court picks. Then they’ll lie and gaslight about it and say Democrats could have used it while they were in power. And they’d right and Manchin and Sinema will stay silent because they’re selfish tools.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#892 » by Pointgod » Thu Jan 20, 2022 4:21 am

For anyone saying there’s no difference between the two parties just listen to the difference from a Republican himself (current Governor)

Read on Twitter


The Republican Party is one complete joke and at this point they aren’t even trying to hide it because they know they can cheat to win.

Read on Twitter


You have to be completely insane to ever let this party get power at any level of government. McConnell couldn’t even muster up a bland response that his agenda will be for the American people because he has none and he doesn’t care precisely because voters refuse to punish Republicans electorally. Don’t say you haven’t been warned.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#893 » by dobrojim » Thu Jan 20, 2022 6:07 am

my earlier post about the relative instability of RNA vs DNA was not intended
to say the mRNA vaccines are worse than the J&J. I don't believe that is true.
It was intended to counter the argument that somehow an mRNA vaccine
might have some pernicious long term effect. There is no reason to believe
that is true.

The mRNA is used in the body to code for and synthesize the antigens that previous
previous types of vaccines would simply be injected, as protiens, into you.

An mRNA molecule is a pretty ingenious way of exposing the body
to novel proteins.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#894 » by Zonkerbl » Thu Jan 20, 2022 10:02 am

Republicans doing nothing is good news, trust me. Frankly right now the main thing the Dems are accomplishing is the same... keeping the Republicans from being able to do anything. That's kind of how the system was designed by the Founding Fathers. They wanted it to be extraordinarily difficult for one party to take over and do whatever the hell it wanted. We're in a period of our history where the parties have done what game theory predicts they would - they've sorted into two camps with absolutely contradictory policy positions. And that's good - look at the damage Roe v. Wade did to the politics in this country. I will defend Roe v. Wade to the death, but I can't help but notice that having a policy that primarily benefits one political side has really poisonous side effects.

Is the gridlock in US politics eventually going to destroy the world through climate inaction? Yes. Well, what's going to happen is poor people will die and rich people will actually benefit. What they don't tell you about all the sci fi stories about humans colonizing other planets is that all those colonists are billionaires. Man, I should write my own economics-based sci fi.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#895 » by doclinkin » Thu Jan 20, 2022 2:09 pm

Zonkerbl wrote:Is the gridlock in US politics eventually going to destroy the world through climate inaction? Yes. Well, what's going to happen is poor people will die and rich people will actually benefit. What they don't tell you about all the sci fi stories about humans colonizing other planets is that all those colonists are billionaires. Man, I should write my own economics-based sci fi.


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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#896 » by Ruzious » Thu Jan 20, 2022 2:17 pm

Wizardspride wrote:
Read on Twitter
?t=Jw8QjMAxbdhS4KynjY96TA&s=19

Lol, does Manchin have any constituency that agrees with his thought processes?
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#897 » by Zonkerbl » Thu Jan 20, 2022 7:05 pm

I wonder if Manchin considers african americans to be Americans.

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Freudian slip, obviously.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#898 » by Pointgod » Fri Jan 21, 2022 3:04 am

Zonkerbl wrote:Republicans doing nothing is good news, trust me. Frankly right now the main thing the Dems are accomplishing is the same... keeping the Republicans from being able to do anything. That's kind of how the system was designed by the Founding Fathers. They wanted it to be extraordinarily difficult for one party to take over and do whatever the hell it wanted. We're in a period of our history where the parties have done what game theory predicts they would - they've sorted into two camps with absolutely contradictory policy positions. And that's good - look at the damage Roe v. Wade did to the politics in this country. I will defend Roe v. Wade to the death, but I can't help but notice that having a policy that primarily benefits one political side has really poisonous side effects.

Is the gridlock in US politics eventually going to destroy the world through climate inaction? Yes. Well, what's going to happen is poor people will die and rich people will actually benefit. What they don't tell you about all the sci fi stories about humans colonizing other planets is that all those colonists are billionaires. Man, I I should write my own economics-based sci fi.


Republicans don’t do anything because they get their cronies in the states to do the dirty work for them. As long as they deliver tax cuts to their corporate donors and outsource turning the US into Christian Taliban to the courts, the fact that they haven’t done anything is because they let other people do the dirty work, that way they don’t need to answer to voters.

That should not let the Democrats off the hook from doing the things that will benefit all Americans, the vast majority of Americans support and will get them re-elected. The filibuster is a stupid, completely made up rule. Every other functioning Democracy operates just fine with majority rule in their politics.

Democrats should get rid of the filibuster to pass legislation pretty simple. If Republicans felt that strongly about forced births and giving 2 year olds hand guns then they should do the same (they’ve done as much for the Supreme court). The founders expected the parties to negotiate, debate and compromise to find a path to move forward. They never imagined that people would be stupid enough to elect morally bankrupt Republicans who want to destroy Democracy and the Federal government they work for
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#899 » by Kanyewest » Fri Jan 21, 2022 4:14 am

Zonkerbl wrote:I wonder if Manchin considers african americans to be Americans.

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Read on Twitter
?s=20

Freudian slip, obviously.


it also isn't true

http://www.electproject.org/_/rsrc/1619750456515/home/voter-turnout/demographics/Turnout_by_Race.png
http://www.electproject.org/home/voter-turnout/demographics

The point about turnout being up significantly in 2020 is true. This was the same point President Biden made during his news conference on Wednesday, that turnout had been so high even without new federal rules, which he presented as a reason for some optimism. But this ignores a crucial point: Turnout was that high because voting access was expanded in response to the coronavirus pandemic. With more states implementing the sorts of changes that the Democratic proposal would standardize — and, of course, with a hyperpolarizing incumbent on the ballot — turnout was up.
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Re: Political Roundtable Part XXX 

Post#900 » by Dat2U » Fri Jan 21, 2022 6:23 am

doclinkin wrote:
Dat2U wrote:Doc, I'll start by saying there's no easy answer. There's also no answer that would have likely prevented a significant loss of life.


There is. Vaccines. They work. If we had them early on we could have prevented the spread and mutation of the disease.

I'm also not anti-vaccine. But I'm confident that not enough research has been done with MRNA technology and its impact on the human body. (I won't even get into that trash ass J&J shot). As regular boosters have become a part of regime, i feel even less comfortable with the vax option. There is no long term study showing the impact of continued boosters on our bodies. Its as if were going along with the 'best' choice at the moment with zero consideration to what the long term implications could be... especially since we've learned its a leaky vax. As we should know, not all vaccines are created equal. Some are much better than others. A vaccine that doesn't protect you from infection and whose effectiveness wains after a few months is not an ideal vax and can create more problems than it's worth.


We can refer to the other thread but even post-Delta in the Omicron era, the vaccines deter infection. Leaky or no. In the Denmark study cited, vaccinated members in the same household as an infected person are only ~30% likely to catch the virus. 70% effective is still a strong number. This is up from the Delta variant where the vaccines were 80% likely to prevent infection, and up from the original strain for which it was developed (as much as 96% protection). But that is significantly better than say, the Flu vaccine which is only 40-60% effective. This is because influenza has become endemic, multiplies readily, and each year brings a new strain. Every year vulnerable people require a new flu shot. The difference is that because the flu has been around for millenia antibodies have developed in populations that make people flu resistant, and also that vulnerable people in history who contracted the flu already died off, their genes that made them vulnerable did not pass on.

The hope is still that if we can slow the growth of this virus science can stay ahead of it, and we won't have to have mass die-offs to develop herd immunity. If we had a vaccine early on that slowed the spread of the virus to 30% of its speed across populations (and we were able to deliver it to India and South Africa) we would not have had an Omicron variant.

If we had a vaccine that was even 70% effective at the start of this epidemic, 560,000 Americans would still be alive.

Does the vaccine reduce serious illness? It appears so. Did a flu shot help the flu? Yes. Did we mandate flu shots and fire people from their jobs for not taking a flu shot? No.


Hospitals and Nursing Homes require flu vaccinations. Schools require MMR shots before kids are allowed to enroll. Yes, we do. We had effectively defeated measles until Facebook posts allowed anti-vaxx misinformation to spread.

Does a healthy diet significantly reduce the chance of illness? Yes. Do we mandate people to eat healthy to reduce the burden of care for doctors, nurses, hospitals and insurance companies? No.


Totally off the point. You cannot pass obesity to 7 people. If you could contract morbid obesity by breathing the same air in an elevator as a big boy then hell yes we would see vaccines and mandates for anti-fat vaxx.

There's never an easy answer for everything but the current response screams overreach from governments across the world.


Fckn how. How is it overreach to form a public policy to prevent mass death.

800,000 Americans dead. That is over 13 Viet Nam Memorial walls worth of dead Americans. In one year killing more Americans than 30 years of the AIDS epidemic. It's not enough to say 'yeah that's bad, but hey people die'. We have no natural immunity to this thing, so it spreads like wildfire. There is no firewall to slow it down. EXCEPT vaccines or mass death. The very purpose of government in the first place is to protect people, even against their own choices. Dangerous drugs are illegal. Medicines are controlled. People are crying that these vaccines haven't been tested enough, in part because we are used to them being tested for up to 10 years before they are sent to market. And if not they are illegal.

This is a case where it is overwhelmingly in the public good NOT to delay the use of an effective treatment. This is a case where Government very sensibly has flexed in order to protect the largest number of people.

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare


Health and Welfare. Defense. Insuring Domestic peace. Ensuring that more Americans don't die and that we can safely open society (and our economy). We have Fire Marshall codes determining how many people can safely stand in one place. We have banned smoking indoors. Children cannot buy guns. And yes if you want to put your kid in public school they have to be vaccinated against the most virulent diseases.

It is reasonable to be hesitant and skeptical. It is fair to be concerned about your individual personal liberty. Marijuana should be legalized at a federal level. Prostitution should be legalized taxed and regulated to ensure sex workers have access to regular health care, as it is in Amsterdam. The government should not force women to keep an embryo in her body. The intelligence agencies should not be in our personal lives.

But absolutely government should have a policy to deal with the cataclysmic overgrowth of a newly mutated virus. The options are: lockdowns, mass death, or science. Doubtless there will be better science as we go, but so far to me the development of these vaccines in that short of a period of time is a f****ing miracle. I'm proud as hell of our scientific community, even if, yeah, huge pharmaceutical corporations stand to benefit from their work. They did remarkably good work with zero time to do it.


You will not change my mind and I'm not going to change yours. That time has long since past my friend. We're locked into these roles. Your vaxxed and likely boostered and I've already risked family, friends, reputation and my way of life on this issue but with no fear of losing any of it. I've had enough arguments and getting talked down to by those who simply have no business doing so to be over the discussions completely, not sure why i drug myself into this. Maybe its my small way lashing out at those i know for being isolated and the continued encouragement of such policies to inflict more limitations. I've bit my tongue tho for the most part but its really tough. Especially from those I felt a connection with on some level.

Call me selfish, self absorbed. Call me a fool or idiot or someone not deserving of medical care. Retreat to person of moral authority, i get that alot. It gets a chuckle from me now. That's what we've been told to do. Make those unvaxxed idiots on the right the scapegoat because we need to blame something even though I'm one of many african-americans who remain 'vaccine hesitant' and I most adsuredly do not lean right wing. I realize my reasoning won't make sense to you. My conclusion will likely have few co-signers. My decision is just what resonates with me. I stand in what I believe in, not what anyone else tells me I should believe. I've listened but after 2 years I have enough confidence and information to make a reasoned decision to say the continued vaccine & booster regimen is riskier longterm than any of the current strains of covid for a person like myself with no comorbidities. Obviously that's not everyone. If i had comorbidities or didn't intermittent fast daily, didn't have a low carb, 0 sugar diet and wasn't in terrific shape I might weigh the risk differently.

And yes, i don't trust the science. Doesn't mean I never have or don't see the value. I just don't trust eager, greedy biomedical companies to get it right when rushed. This is coming from someone who has worked from all healthcare viewpoints. Insurers, biomedical firms, patient case management and end care and now the medical research/grants management space. Competency is a rare trait even among elite thinkers. Good intentions, bad results is a common theme. The Novavax option looks intriguing but even then I don't trust them to get it right, right away.

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