Pandemic 2020

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Budley Doright

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I watched the next video that popped up re reporter questions directed at Trump. How in the hell did this guy get to become president of the United States ….. just how??? It sure changed my view from the US being the “most powerful, proud, country in the world” to “how embarrassing” :(. Growing up with a parent (Deep South father) that spouted the same shit as I grew up, I figured he was just a one off (embarrassing as well), but Ive found out there are a lot of gullible dumb fucks :(.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
the study "spread like wildfire with antivaxxers"...well of course it did, they found something to validate their retarded view of the world, and now that the information is being revised, they will ignore the revision and keep using the invalid study as a "source of information"...because false data is the only data that will support their idiocy..but really, who cares anymore? it's just more magats putting themselves in danger, and that equals less magats to vote for corrupt republikkkans...
 

Herb & Suds

Well-Known Member
All i see here is Fear, couards and idiots.
parot's prom at his best, vomiting unreliable sources all the time and claiming that's science LOL
ye "science" financed by the labs.
you guyz are so funny, so proud to be vax, boosted, how sad... that makes me laugh and cry at the same time (ur kids really... i pray for them!)
no brain and now no more soul,
under cover of kindness...to protect the others! weeeeeee
seriously, u just try to protect ur single fat ass, there is no kindness on u, the way most of u treat uninjected people here shows what kind of humans u really are :/
you get vaxxed but u can get it and share it, right? yes but less than a non one! blablabla.... less chance to go to hospital! blablabla....
19 unvaxed for only 1 vaxxed in intensive care! blablablabla parots!!!! everyone miss to say people who already got 1 or 2 doses count as a non-vax!!! Every vaxinated people is a future unvaxinated people.
As u probably understand, i did not take the shot, only few month after the "pandemic" start, many of us saw how it was going to turn and try to alert in vain, and we're right on right now while u stupidely enjoy raging on us.
The fact the vaccine don't work is not our fault.
we did not create that shit.
i can't understand how u still trust the doxa, gvts lie they don't care about people.
They 're playing what they know what to do best, divide us.
sorry for the bad words but i feel hate, it must come out from time to time so as not to break
because i know i'll have to forgive you for all that.
Somebody drank the tRUMP Kool Aid
Buy a lot of pillows or a stuffed bear lately?
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
I have a slightly askew sense of humor. Perhaps for this reason, I have acquired a supply of things that sometimes just sit around for a few decades before being used. You know, things like smoke bombs, German stink bombs (in lovely glass ampules), etc. I mean, there is no downside to having them just sitting around for when you might need them.

Well, I have a nice pack of French blood capsules that I have literally had for decades and it recently occurred to me that masks make these thing particularly useful for a couple of reasons. First, you don't really have to spend much time practicing a convincing death-grimace due to the mask, second, because the blood soaking through the mask will broadcast much, much better than just a trickle out of the corner of your mouth.

So, what opportunities are there? I could use it at work, wait for somebody to bump into me, bite down and fall to the floor writhing. But we take safety very seriously as the possibility of real injury exists. It would be terribly unfair to my co-workers and would probably get me fired for good reason. Or maybe at the Walmer, where I could get in an argument with a non-mask wearing shopper and make sure things get a little heated before letting loose.

Probably the most horrible idea I have had would be to wait until I get the Covid-vaccine and issue a mask-full of blood. Of course you would have to be filming it so you could capture the look of confusion and horror on the nurse's face as she tries to process how an injection could be responsible for such an injury. It might even go viral if I posted it to TikTok.

But I would never do this - and this is why I could never be an "influencer". Its a truly bad idea. You can hold me responsible for for even thinking about it - I wouldn't blame you. My feelings on it are a mixture of amusement at the thought-concept and revulsion that I came up with it.

I'll probably have these blood capsules for another ten years. Its just so hard to figure out a good use for them.
Fuck it. I'm going to use the blood capsule.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
As if things are not worse enough. I'm reading about how covid brings about T cell death and reports of greatly accelerated tumor and cancer growth in covid survivors, even with mild cases.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
Don’t do it! As soon as you do, the perfect scenario will present itself and you’ll wish you still had them.

That’s what happened to me anyway, with my sleeve of exploding golf balls.
Ever use a "cigarette load"? It's a little spike you stick in the end of a cigarette and it explodes when you smoke it. I haven't seen them for a while. I wonder why.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Looks like all those people pushing the idea of the pandemic was over and that omicron is mild didn't know what the fuck they were talking about. Those ideas may have even been part of the antivaxer propaganda, or just wishful thinking but they were wrong or just guessing. I know people are desperate for this thing to end but bringing false hope to a bad situation won't help if you give false hope and continually pull the rug out from under everyone.


 

DurumGallico

Well-Known Member
Yeah don't believe these dummy far right EMA neofascists death cult propagandist trolls.

"Repeat booster doses every four months could eventually weaken the immune response and tire out people, the European Medicines Agency warned last week. Instead, countries should leave more time between booster programs and tie them to the onset of the cold season in each hemisphere, following the blueprint set out by influenza vaccination strategies, the regulator said."
"Boosters “can be done once, or maybe twice, but it’s not something that we can think should be repeated constantly,” Marco Cavaleri, the EMA head of biological health threats and vaccines strategy, said at a press briefing. “We need to think about how we can transition from the current pandemic setting to a more endemic setting.” "

 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Herd immunity is a myth and won't work with corona viruses. If they are not able to create a vaccine with real lasting protection it's a moot point jenius.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
"Marco Cavaleri, the EMA head of biological health threats and vaccines strategy " = "THE TROLL" yeah of course
Finding someone that says something that you think is meaningful prior to the science being done is essentially trolling.

Looks like it is not the first time this guy says something that can be used by trolls to make seem like it is something far worse than it is to push anti-vaccine propaganda, putting us all at a much larger risk due to idiots thinking this means they should not get vaccinated/boosted.

https://apnews.com/article/europe-rome-coronavirus-pandemic-coronavirus-vaccine-08d7d402fc20b371436898534f728f2e
Screen Shot 2022-01-18 at 9.45.26 AM.png
ROME (AP) — A top official at the European Medicines Agency says there’s a causal link between AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine and rare blood clots, but that it’s unclear what the connection is and that the benefits of taking the shot still outweigh the risks of getting COVID-19.

Marco Cavaleri, head of health threats and vaccine strategy at the Amsterdam-based agency, told Rome’s Il Messaggero newspaper on Tuesday that the European Union’s medicines regulator is preparing to make a more definitive statement on the topic this week.

Asked about Cavaleri’s comments, the EMA press office said its evaluation “has not yet reached a conclusion and the review is currently ongoing.” It said it planned a press conference as soon as the review is finalized, possibly Wednesday or Thursday.

Based on the evidence so far, Cavaleri said there’s a clear association between the AstraZeneca vaccine and the dozens of rare blood clots that have been reported worldwide amid the tens of millions of AstraZeneca shots that have been given out.

“It is becoming more and more difficult to affirm that there isn’t a cause-and-effect relationship between AstraZeneca vaccines and the very rare cases of blood clots associated with a low level of platelets,” Cavaleri was quoted as saying.

AstraZeneca did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Late in the day, however, the pharmaceutical company and Oxford University, which developed the vaccine, announced they were pausing the trial of their jabs in children while British regulators investigate the potential blood clot link in adults.

“Whilst there are no safety concerns in the pediatric clinical trial, we await additional information” from the British regulator, an Oxford spokesperson said in a statement.

In Geneva, the World Health Organization said its experts were also evaluating a possible link between the AstraZeneca vaccine and rare blood clots — and that it might have a “fresh, conclusive assessment” before Thursday.

In March, more than a dozen countries, including Germany, suspended using AstraZeneca over the blood clot issue. Most EU nations restarted on March 19 — some with age restrictions — after the EMA said the benefits of the vaccine outweighed the risks of not inoculating people against COVID-19. At the time, the EMA recommended the vaccine’s leaflet be updated with information about the rare clots.

Any further doubts about the AstraZeneca vaccine would be a setback for the shot, which is critical to Europe’s immunization campaign and a linchpin in the global strategy to get vaccines to poorer countries. The AstraZeneca vaccine is cheaper and easier to use than rival vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna and has been endorsed for use in over 50 countries, including by the 27-nation EU and the World Health Organization. U.S. authorities are still evaluating the vaccine.

Cavaleri said while EMA was prepared to declare a link, further study was still needed to understand why and how the phenomenon occurs.

He said the rare blood clots, including some in the brain, coupled with a low level of blood platelets that may make people at risk of serious bleeding, “seem to be the key event to study further.” Cavaleri promised more details soon, adding: “In the coming hours, we will say that the link is there, how this happens we still haven’t figured out.”

Cavaleri said the biological mechanism for how the vaccine might be causing the rare clots was still unknown and if it was linked to how the shot is made, other vaccines with similar technologies might also need to be evaluated.

He stressed the risk-benefit analysis remained positive for the AstraZeneca jab, even for young women who appear to be more affected by the clots.

“Let’s not forget that young women also end up in intensive care with COVID. So we need to do very meticulous work to understand if the risk-benefit analysis remains for all ages,” he was quoted as saying.

He ruled out a preventive therapy to address the rare blood clots, saying there is still too much unknown about the phenomenon.

Even after the March 19 restart, the Dutch and German governments suspended the jabs for people under 60 and some Europeans have been shying away from getting a shot.

Romania’s national vaccination committee’s chief, Valeriu Gheorghita, said Tuesday that since March, 207,000 people in Romania had canceled their AstraZeneca vaccine appointments and another 92,000 simply didn’t show up.

“It is a high percentage, a third of people scheduled who did not show up,” Gheorghita told reporters.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson declined to be drawn directly into the latest warnings about the vaccine but urged people to look at the advice from Britain’s independent Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency.

“Their advice to people is to keep going out there, get your jab, get your second jab,” he said during a visit Tuesday to an AstraZeneca facility in Macclesfield, in northwest England.

Last week, Britain’s MHRA said seven people had died in the U.K. due to blood clots after getting the AstraZeneca jab. It said it wasn’t clear if the shots are causing the clot and that it was undertaking a “rigorous review” into the reports. The agency said it had identified 30 blood clot cases out of 18.1 million AstraZeneca jabs given by March 24.

Adam Finn, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Bristol, said the latest surge of COVID-19 cases that is filling up hospitals across Europe should prompt people to get vaccinated as soon as possible.

“If you are currently being offered a dose of Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, your chances of remaining alive and well will go up if you take the vaccine and will go down if you don’t,” he said.
 
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