• James Riley
    2.9k
    Isnt it possible that people getting mad at non-vaccinators (and hinestly, I must get one if I wanna go to my family in Italy) are getting mad maybe because they are afraid of infecting them? So they cant give them a hug anymore?Prishon

    I can't make heads or tails of that. I need to know who the "they" is. Making some assumptions about what you meant, I suppose that might be a reason for some. Not me. It's more generalized for me. Here's a tip of the iceberg:

    "Here we go, Texas. There is an ER doc from Houston crowdsourcing on a physician Facebook group of 50K doctors. Patient is mid-40s, sick w/ something w/ high probability of death (not COVID) & needs ICU care & GI procedure stat. ER doc can’t find any beds and “will fly anywhere.”

    This is why people saying “my choices and personal freedom don’t affect you” drive me insane. When large hospital systems get overwhelmed by largely unvaccinated patients who all of the sudden decide to trust doctors and want non FDA-approved treatment, everyone suffers.

    The group of 50.000 doctors came through and he’s on a helicopter. Doc didn’t say where but this dude is really, really sick. I hope he pulls through."
    https://twitter.com/dremilyportermd/status/1429222295919337477
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Mod note: this is going to be used as a vaccine discussion megathread from now on.
  • Prishon
    984
    sickJames Riley

    "They" are the vaccinated.

    People who dont wanna take the vaccine (untill now still me) and then, when ill, wanna get treatment are hypocrites. But still people. On who you can get mad. People are irrational. You have to live with that. Nkn-vaccinated getting ill should be treated too, if they want. But if a vaccinated gets ill too he or she must be treated firstly.
  • khaled
    3.5k
    “I know I’m a hypocrite and irrational. You can be mad at me but I won’t do anything about it”

    Typical anti-vaxer

    What’s the point of discussing anything with you then if you know you’re wrong and don’t care?
  • Srap Tasmaner
    4.9k
    No one can make me.Prishon

    In the United States at least, yes we can. The Supreme Court ruled on that issue over a hundred years ago. It is vaguely within the doctrine usually referred to as "the US Constitution is not a suicide pact".
  • James Riley
    2.9k
    "They" are the vaccinatedPrishon

    So, rewriting, it would say: "Isnt it possible that people getting mad at non-vaccinators . . . are getting mad maybe because the vaccinated are afraid of infecting them? So the vaccinated cant give them a hug anymore?"

    Okay, possible. But I don't think that is the primary reason. I'll stick by my other response.

    But still people. On who you can get mad. People are irrational. You have to live with that.Prishon

    Agreed. Especially in the U.S. where everyone thinks he's a rebel. :roll:
  • Prishon
    984
    pointkhaled

    Who says Im an anti vaxer? If people wanna have their shot then Im not saying they cant.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    ...what are we learning 'bout the recalcitrants, folks?

    What clever, well-informed, articulate folk they be.
  • Prishon
    984
    2mReplyOptionsBanno

    "The recalcitrants"

    If there is anything that pi... makes me recalcitrant then it is this presumptious and prejudicious use of language. Im not "a recacitrant". Im just a human being with things he wants and things he doesn't.

    "And what do WE learn..."

    Sticking to a group. Always safe. And cowardly.
  • Prishon
    984
    pointkhaled

    "know I’m a hypocrite and irrational. You can be mad at me but I won’t do anything about it”

    Where did I write that? I wrote that people who are nonvaccinated demanding treatment for their covid19 infection afterwards are hypocrites. I didnt say I demand it. Im not irrational. The reason I don't want it is because I dont want it. I dont think about others in that case. So? Should I be forced to think about others? I think about others. They can do whatever they want. Take the juice or not.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    And cowardlyPrishon

    As cowardly as being scared of a needle?
  • khaled
    3.5k
    I didnt say I demand it.Prishon

    Right… but I’m pretty sure you would. You’re telling me if you got COVID you would simply lie down and say “Ah, well, time to accept my fate”?

    The reason I don't want it is because I dont want it. I dont think about others in that case.Prishon

    Yea. That’s the problem isn’t it.

    If someone robs you and justifies it with “I don’t want to live honestly because I don’t want to. I don’t think about others in that case” would you think this is a reasonable justification? Is he in the right now? Should he not be punished?
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    You do realize your entire reply is a non-sequitur, yes?tim wood
    Yes, from your point of view I'm acknowledging the severity of the problem and suggesting people continue to make it worse through doubtful conversation. It must appear to be quite absurd.
    Fools do not possess free will. They are the subjects of their foolishness. Discussion of their "freedom" is immediate absurdity.tim wood
    Yes, this is a bit of a red herring. People certainly have free will and invalidating it is problematic to making a convincing argument. In regards to the immediate context, to the counter position I'm suggesting you don't share. Which is ok. If we all agreed there would be nothing left to fix on Tuesday.
  • Cheshire
    1.1k
    I was baiting Tim. But since the topic changed. No anti-vaccination is an irresponsible position. Fine if you don't participate, but don't drag others down with you that are unaccounted for do to the nature of the issue.
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    Neither affect the viral load outside the bloodstream, in the nasal mucosa, for example, which, as I cited earlier, carries a significant proportion of the transmitted virus particles. — Isaac


    Do you have references for this claim?
    Janus

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33320052/

    The information I have been able to find on the issue of viral load suggests that the more infected you are the more virus you will be shedding.Janus

    Same here.

    the vaccinated will be on average significantly less infected and hence less infectiousJanus

    Less infected and infectious than whom? Less infected and infectious than the unvaccinated in general? Yes. Less infected and infectious than a healthy young adult? What reason have we to assume that? Both the vaccinated and the healthy immune system are doing the same job - quickly clearing the virus. We'd need to see that the vaccine cleared it more quickly, on average, over the time between doses/boosters. No such study has been done, to my knowledge.

    OK, but you haven't addressed the point as to why one should not adopt all the strategies that work, because together they will be even more efficacious than any single strategy. You are offering other strategies as alternatives to vaccination, why should they not be adjuncts?Janus

    Because one is usually held to have satisfied one's moral duty at a reasonable point. It's not normal to expect one to do absolutely everything in one's power to protect others from harm. Think about your actions which put others at risk of harm - driving, sports, consumer choices, polluting activities... is it not generally held sufficient that you take steps to reduce the harm these cause, rather than expend every effort until such harms are eliminated? We have to have a concept of reasonable risk, otherwise society would grind to a halt.

    Are you saying that there might some day be a true answer to the question as to whether vaccination reduces viral transmission, but that there is no fact of the matter today because we are not able to determine it?Janus

    No, I'm saying that the proposition "vaccination reduces viral transmission" is already constructed, it's a human social construction - the terms, the grammar, the logical structure... If we apply the word 'truth' to such constructions (and it seems we do) then it is already overdetermined, the proposition itself is already constructed of theories. What we'll one day find is something we're (mostly) happy to apply the word 'true' to.
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    I wasn't suggesting that unvaccinated people should be accused, much less convicted, of actually infecting people, so I'm not seeing your analogy here.Janus

    Oh I wasn't suggesting you did, I'm sorry if I wasn't clear enough. It was related to you point about it being more likely than not the the vaccinated have lower transmission rates. I only brought it up because I thought you might be interested in, or have an opinion on, the related ethical dilemma.

    Is it not the case that people may be confined if they are judged to be mentally by professionals ill in a way and to a degree that makes it seem likely to the psychologist(s) that makes the judgement and commit them to an institution that they will be a danger to themselves or others?Janus

    Yes, but only if that can be shown beyond reasonable doubt. That was the point, it's not usually sufficient that it be only more likely than not that medication will prevent harm.
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    Those people you reference don't exist.James Riley

    What an unusual claim. Carrying on though...

    when it turns out they were wrong, they want to come, on bended knee, to the very system they failed to trustJames Riley

    So do you not do anything the medical system has told you is a risk? Never smoke, drink, eat red meat, exercise too little, get stressed, skip the veggies, engage in sports, ski, drive, breathe city air, travel...

    what kind of society raises people who think they can listen to a charlatan and somehow know better?James Riley

    You've just got finished telling us you don't know what the experts are actually saying, nor do you know what the dissenters are actually saying. You said you trusted the institutions of your government. So this has nothing to do with charlatanism - you're not in a position to judge that. This has to do with choices about who to trust, that's the only thing you personally have any knowledge about. You trust the institutions of your government and what you perceive to be the consensus of scientists. Others don't. That's all you can judge on, because that's all you're qualified to know about the situation.

    Those who chose differently, yes, I would expect them to kick me to the street. After all, that is the kind of people they are.
    But I would NEVER, not in a million years, go to them for treatment.
    James Riley

    As above - do you never engage in any activity the healthcare system has told you is a risk to your health?
  • Prishon
    984
    otherskhaled

    If someone robs you and justifies it with “I don’t want to live honestly because I don’t want to. I don’t think about others in that case” would you think this is a reasonable justification? Is he in the right now? Should he not be punished?

    Soeone robbing me wants it. Do you compare me with a robber?
    So actually I want to take it. But I just say that I diont want?
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    ...what are we learning 'bout the recalcitrants, folks?

    What clever, well-informed, articulate folk they be.
    Banno

    The majority of vaccine hesitancy is among those educated to PhD level.

    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.07.20.21260795v1.full-text

    Until this latest freakshow turned up there was a well informed, properly cited and intelligent debate which drew zero response from you.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Further investigation into hesitancy among those with a PhD is warranted.

    Yep.
  • Isaac
    10.3k


    And?

    ...until then we just assume whatever explanation suits our narrative?
  • Banno
    24.8k
    What do you want? Yes, the result is interesting. Have you an explanation?
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    Yes, the result is interesting. Have you an explanation?Banno

    Yes, but I don't think that's relevant, I'd be just speculating.

    The point is already made - you scanning a few posts is clearly sufficient for you to draw the conclusion that recalcitrants are not "clever, well-informed, articulate folk" yet a massive, peer-reviewed, study conducted by experts on the matter apparently is insufficient as yet to draw any substantive conclusions...

    The simple fact is that your 'what we've learned' has been demonstrably shown wrong, to at least the same standard of evidence used to draw the first conclusion, if not substantially better.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    You might not be aware that my comments were on a novel thread created by Prishon, which caught my attention and to which I posted prior to it's being merged here.

    But I have posted to this thread previously.
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    You might not be aware that my comments were on a novel thread created by Prishon, which caught my attention and to which I posted prior to it's being merged here.Banno

    I wasn't aware of that, no. But as you were aware, it may have behoved you to make a more reasonable assessment of the general tenor of vaccine-hesitant posts before judging the entire position... If you've posted to this (new) thread before then presumably you'll have been aware of reasonable, cited, arguments derived from experts in their field?
  • Janus
    16.2k
    Less infected and infectious than a healthy young adult? What reason have we to assume that?Isaac

    No reason, I was only saying that it seems plausible to think the vaccinated in general would be less infectious than the unvaccinated in general.
  • Banno
    24.8k
    Not from Prishon, no.
  • Isaac
    10.3k
    I was only saying that it seems plausible to think the vaccinated in general would be less infectious than the unvaccinated in general.Janus

    Indeed. Only, 'in general' doesn't apply to the moral argument. An individual need not consider their own actions as if they knew nothing of their circumstances.
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