EnglishEdward
Deity
So countries with vaccine production facilities and or money, understandably vaccinated their own people first.
There is nothing obscene about that.
There is nothing obscene about that.
Is there a good way to scale up the production of them? Getting vaccinated definitely seems like the better choice (I got vaccinated back in March and fully support it), but there are some people who will refuse to get vaccinated, and I feel like anything we can do to reduce people getting seriously ill and dying is beneficial.
I see where you're coming from there then more, but the problem I have is that isn't an "x and y" situation. Allowing people to take a vaccine is separate from allowing people to refuse a vaccine, because one carries the danger of harm to others, and one doesn't.I probably would, even if I am having a trouble parsing that sentence.
My x and y were "allowing people to take (or refuse) a vaccine" vs. "trying to force people to take a vaccine". My comment about aggregate harms vs. social harms might make more sense there.
So countries with vaccine production facilities and or money, understandably vaccinated their own people first.
There is nothing obscene about that.
I see where you're coming from there then more, but the problem I have is that isn't an "x and y" situation. Allowing people to take a vaccine is separate from allowing people to refuse a vaccine, because one carries the danger of harm to others, and one doesn't.
Have you tried using google ?
@TheMeInTeam Are you vaccinated?
When is it appropriate for me to start demanding that people (and their office staff if it's an office I visit) that I pay personally for professional services (doctors, physical therapists, accountants, lawyers, building contractors, etc.) are vaccinated for covid?
COVID-19 has been a massive IQ test and boy, has humanity failed it. Humanity has dealt with pandemics before, yet we're acting like this is the very first time we've never experienced one before.
When is it appropriate for me to start demanding that people (and their office staff if it's an office I visit) that I pay personally for professional services (doctors, physical therapists, accountants, lawyers, building contractors, etc.) are vaccinated for covid?
That's my line. Not only have I actually linked evidence that hospitals got federal funding based on COVID patients in previous iterations of this thread, the quotes you posted are not inconsistent with that.
Hospitals that are struggling have even more incentive to do things that give them money.
What is your sexual history?
How long have you been with your significant other, if you have one?
Do you have a family history of cancer, and if so what kind?
(For a desk job) do you have any pre-existing medical conditions that might require time off of work, such as a bad knee?
Are you taking medication for depression or mental illness?
What is your history in civil/family court?
If you're not comfortable with routinely asking these questions, it might be useful to give pause on the vaccination question. For both professional/business liability reasons, and personal ones.
Though I did answer this question earlier in the thread, our vaccination status isn't relevant to the arguments presented any more than your skin color is.
I don’t think I can get syphilis from standing next to my co-worker for ten minutes.
Plus there's the actual threat matrix, but I think we're ignoring that.
WSJ said:By Josh Ulick and Alberto Cervantes The highly infectious Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 has spread to more than 140 countries and accounts for 98% of U.S. Covid-19 cases. While U.S.-authorized vaccines provide strong protection against severe illness, they aren’t 100% effective and breakthrough infections, though rare and generally mild, do occur. With this in mind, scientists are working to develop shots
that would target the Delta variant specifically. The mRNA platform behind some vaccines might make this process relatively straightforward, according to Matthew Johnson, senior director of product development at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute. Vaccines work by exposing the body to a harmless version or portion of a virus. This teaches our immune systems to recognize and fight the real virus if our bodies become infected with it. The mRNA-based vaccines developed for Covid-19—including the two made by Moderna Inc. and by Pfizer Inc. and partner BioNTech SE—rely
on the outer spike proteins of the new coronavirus to prime our immune defenses. Spike proteins stud the outer surface of the virus and help it latch onto and infect healthy cells.
1. I have one that goes back many years and doesn't involve any disease.What is your sexual history?
How long have you been with your significant other, if you have one?
Do you have a family history of cancer, and if so what kind?
(For a desk job) do you have any pre-existing medical conditions that might require time off of work, such as a bad knee?
Are you taking medication for depression or mental illness?
What is your history in civil/family court?
1. I have one that goes back many years and doesn't involve any disease.
2. 53 years
3. Yes, my dad died of great cell lymphosarcoma at 54
4. No
5. No
6. I sued a major HDD manufacturer in small claims court for a defective drive and won the case. The company paid me $3000. Otherwise none.
7. I have had two Moderna shots
My primary questions are around whether I have a moral imperative to avoid supporting the unvaccinated, and the magnitude of personal inconvenience of me following through on that.
Nobody is ignoring the harm possible in taking a vaccine. Literally nobody. It is a recognised part of taking a vaccine, for which the alternative is "getting Covid". It is a recognised issue for people with pre-existing conditions, or who are on specific medicine already. I'm puzzled at why you keep raising this theoretical demographic. If it exists, it isn't a majority on this forum, nevermind anywhere else. Even people who support a mandate recognise that a vaccineThere will be the problem, denying the harms to others (the person forced to take a vaccine is 'the other' from your and my perspective). That's basically entirely it. As soon as the mandate cohort gets it into their zeitgeist that their way lacks harms, it becomes about populist legal force where the only defense is having courts that protect rights that the majority don't want you to have. Those discussions can end badly.
Vaccination status is not at all the same as the answers to your 6 questions. One's vaccination status can impact hundreds of others. The other questions have little or no impact on anyone but the answerer. (STDs can)I didn't mean for you to answer, but to seriously consider the implications of this question when considered appropriate for broad use.
(I have same vaccine history as you, FWIW).
You (paraphrased) said that 'one does not cause harm', while I was talking about forcing people to take the vaccine. So, saying 'no one denies it and critising them is okay' is not really the same thing we were talking about. But also, the harms that have been acknowledged here are not the scope of the harms that are being expressed.Nobody is ignoring the harm possible in taking a vaccine.
We're all suffering from misinformation. After that, it's just successful curation, bias, and luck in whether that information is processed usefully. Some will be right for the wrong reasons and we'll also be wrong for wrong reasons.If a person is suffering from misinformation
That's not the problem, it's a problem. If we're going to ever increasingly silo debate as 'anti-vaxxer rhetoric', then what happens is that the people who know that it's not 'anti-vax' learn that we actually don't know what we are talking about. The debate has to happen. Like I said, a lot of damage is done when positions are mischaracterized. This means that we know that there are parts of the pro-mandate crowd that will actually biasedly ignore concerns, and they'll socially pressure us into relabeling concerns as 'antivax'. "Antivax" is very far away on whatever spectrum we're putting "vaccine mandaters" onto, and so people literally on this thread (without significant pushback) continually relabelling things as 'antivax' is going to be emblematic of the problem.But the problem is it aligns with and often ends up amplifying anti-vaxxer rhetoric.
I don't weight them equally, it's definitely going to be on a matrix. And yeah, I'm also complaining about opposing measures that would speed up the end of the pandemic. Er, maybe not 'opposing', I'm more 'demanding more', but ehn.And you're seeing an increased backlash against the individuals that oppose measures that would speed up the end of the pandemic. Some of this, by volume, will end up being irrational. That's to be expected. But we need to not weight them as though they're equivalent, and based on the same strength and validity of data. Because they're not.