Me neither. Why the vaccine hate? It's a medication like any other. Medications have side effects in a small percentage of people, especially when millions are taking it. Even if you get COVID under it, it prevents the disease from progressing to the serious stage. It's more effective than the flu vaccine.
I've worked closely with my colleagues at Oxford and I have full faith in ours. Ours is not an experimental trial, the experiments are over. It's a success. I cannot say the same for mrna vaccines like Pfeizer, etc. and I am watching closely how they're responding but the science is sound, IMO. To hate vaccines and medical progress in general is ridiculous, because they work. Do they have side effects sometimes? Yes. So does Tylenol. And what happens one day when China sends us a more serious form of SARS? We are going to need to rely on medicine when this shit happens. MRNA can produce a vaccine in a week, so if something like that arrives, and this works well, we can use it to save ourselves fast.
I also want to point out that I'm religious (as a lot of people here are) and I genuinely don't believe the vaccine is the mark of the beast. The Bible is clear that the mark of the beast cannot be taken accidentally or unknowingly; it's something that asks you to renounce God and it's very clear to oneself when one commits blasphemy of the soul.
When I got my green card I had to take 11 vaccines. They were an absolute requirement, and I had to agree to it to proceed. If this is deemed safe, and becomes compulsory, I have no qualms about it. If, God forbid, it somehow fails or unprecedented situations cause it to be useless, then we move on and do the next great thing. But China won't win on this and vaccines aren't the enemy.
Me neither. Why the vaccine hate? It's a medication like any other. Medications have side effects in a small percentage of people, especially when millions are taking it. Even if you get COVID under it, it prevents the disease from progressing to the serious stage. It's more effective than the flu vaccine.
I've worked closely with my colleagues at Oxford and I have full faith in ours. Ours is not an experimental trial, the experiments are over. It's a success. I cannot say the same for mrna vaccines like Pfeizer, etc. and I am watching closely how they're responding but the science is sound, IMO. To hate vaccines and medical progress in general is ridiculous, because they work. Do they have side effects sometimes? Yes. So does Tylenol. And what happens one day when China sends us a more serious form of SARS? We are going to need to rely on medicine when this shit happens. MRNA can produce a vaccine in a week, so if something like that arrives, and this works well, we can use it to save ourselves fast.
I also want to point out that I'm religious (as a lot of people here are) and I genuinely don't believe the vaccine is the mark of the beast. The Bible is clear that the mark of the beast cannot be taken accidentally or unknowingly; it's something that asks you to renounce God and it's very clear to oneself when one commits blasphemy of the soul.
Is the coronachan cocktail required? Or is it voluntary like Acetaminophen?
When I got my green card I had to take 11 vaccines. They were an absolute requirement, and I had to agree to it to proceed. If this is deemed safe, and becomes compulsory, I have no qualms about it. If, God forbid, it somehow fails or unprecedented situations cause it to be useless, then we move on and do the next great thing. But China won't win on this and vaccines aren't the enemy.
Sounds like it’s not required. Whew.