![]() ![]() | Page #: 11/17 |
![]() |
@jlh1182 | 4 December 20 |
Obama mocked after promise to take Covid-19 vaccine on camera, Twitter recalls Flint water-drinking stunt.. mocked for saying he would take a future Covid-19 vaccine live on camera to prove its safety. Critics quickly recalled a similar stunt when he drank newly cleaned water in Flint, Michigan https://www.rt.com/usa/508594-obama-flint-covid-vaccine/?utm_source=browserutm_medium=aplication_chromeutm_campaign=chromefbclid=IwAR3Mg8lXHGM8vYflYr4tBOjBYVc0Cd0PkUlI_C0qZOPjkwW9Wa9UApvVM38
|
||
![]() |
@eyesore | 5 December 20 |
Its starting to look like a gimmick to me . You may be asked to self isolate and you have to social distance , which sounds like it may protect you from the symptoms, but doesn't stop you spreading it .plus it only lasts up to 90 days...2 jabs 4 times a year for the entire population....hmmmmm.
|
||
![]() |
@shadow27 | 5 December 20 |
Total gimmick. Makes you appear to not have it. Solid lockdown needed on an unprecedented scale. Shut it all down. |
||
![]() |
@wapwand | 5 December 20 |
*
And the economy gets trashed again,not a great idea hey! It is time to start thinking we may have to live with this virus forever,if we start to think that way we can adapt.
|
||
![]() |
@deusexmachina | 5 December 20 |
Open everything up but masks ate mandatory. Let natural selection do its thing. Someone goes into a shop or wherever without a mask on you can fu*k them up. It's a simple and elegant solution.
|
||
![]() |
@shadow27 | 5 December 20 |
How did we deal with the Spanish Flu? Do that again, we can't go wrong. |
||
![]() |
@alanball | 5 December 20 |
Spanish flu just died out didn't it?
|
||
![]() |
@shadow27 | 5 December 20 |
And what did people do for it to die out? They certainly didn't say ''Oh, this is the new normal''.. |
||
![]() |
@vampboy | 5 December 20 |
@ deusexmachina - 5.12.20 - 11:29am Open everything up but masks ate mandatory. Let natural selection do its thing. Someone goes into a shop or wherever without a mask on you can fu*k them up. It's a simple and elegant solution. What If someone like wakeup comes in and says Medical exemption? ![]() |
||
![]() |
@deusexmachina | 5 December 20 |
fu*k em up.
|
||
![]() |
@eyesore | 5 December 20 |
@ alanball - 5.12.20 - 05:16pm Spanish flu just died out didn't it? It mutated into something a whole lot less deadly , ie died out yes |
||
![]() |
@eyesore | 5 December 20 |
.
|
||
![]() |
@trashy | 5 December 20 |
@ wakeup4 - 4.12.20 - 09:48am So they know NOTHING about the impact on fertility. They know NOTHING about how the vaccine interacts with other medications. They did no studies with immune suppressed recipients. Yet they want everyone to take it. These people are sick psychos No one is forcing you to take it. Keep your tinfoil on |
||
![]() |
@wakeup4 | 5 December 20 |
@ trashy - 5.12.20 - 06:59pm No one is forcing you to take it. Keep your tinfoil on Im trying to save lives. Are you getting sterilised? |
||
![]() |
@deusexmachina | 5 December 20 |
Trying to save lives lol. Brilliant. Doesnt wear a mask though which is a really simple and effortless way to save lives.
|
||
![]() |
@shadow27 | 5 December 20 |
''Economists Sergio Correia, Stephan Luck, and Emil Verner released a working paper last week that makes this argument extremely persuasively. The three analyzed the 1918-1919 flu pandemic in the United States, as the closest (though still not identical) analogue to the current crisis. They compare cities in 1918-19 that adopted quarantining and social isolation policies earlier to ones that adopted them later. Their conclusion? ''We find that cities that intervened earlier and more aggressively do not perform worse and, if anything, grow faster after the pandemic is over.'' |
||
![]() |
@trashy | 5 December 20 |
@ wakeup4 - 5.12.20 - 07:28pm Im trying to save lives. Are you getting sterilised? Sure why not, I don't want kids anyway |
||
![]() |
@vampboy | 5 December 20 |
@ shadow27 - 5.12.20 - 08:11pm ''Economists Sergio Correia, Stephan Luck, and Emil Verner released a working paper last week that makes this argument extremely persuasively. The three analyzed the 1918-1919 flu pandemic in the United States, as the closest (though still not identical) analogue to the current crisis. They compare cities in 1918-19 that adopted quarantining and social isolation policies earlier to ones that adopted them later. Their conclusion? ''We find that cities that intervened earlier and more aggressively do not perform worse and, if anything, grow faster after the pandemic is over.'' Yeah, but Spanish flu did not not have a survival rate of over 99 per cent; deadly only to those with underlying health conditions and the elderly. That study can hardly be used as a basis to justify lock-down today, which I do presuppose some interpretations from this study would assume. |
||
![]() |
@eyesore | 5 December 20 |
Ireland is the fastest growing country in the world right now , one of the very few whose economy will actually show growth this year....an interesting side effect to being a tax haven .....suck it up EU ![]() |
||
![]() |
@shadow27 | 5 December 20 |
@ vampboy - 5.12.20 - 08:24pm Yeah, but Spanish flu did not not have a survival rate of over 99 per cent; deadly only to those with underlying health conditions and the elderly. That study can hardly be used as a basis to justify lock-down today, which I do presuppose some interpretations from this study would assume. Are we talking Spanish Flu first or second wave? |
||
![]() ![]() |