Will You Take The Vaccine?

Are you going to take the corona virus vaccine?

  • No.

  • Yes.


Results are only viewable after voting.

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Ironically, the result is a better christian than most christians.
it's not hard to be morally superior to most christians, or muslims, or hindus...with few exceptions, religion has devolved into a way to excuse shitty behavior...go out drinking, cheat on your spouse, ignore your kids, hate your neighbor, be an asshole in traffic...just go to church, or the mosque, or mandir, and ask for forgiveness or atonement, and you're good for the rest of the week...i'd guess maybe 20% of religious people actually try to be good people, the rest just use it as a way to make themselves feel better about being assholes
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
it's not hard to be morally superior to most christians, or muslims, or hindus...with few exceptions, religion has devolved into a way to excuse shitty behavior...go out drinking, cheat on your spouse, ignore your kids, hate your neighbor, be an asshole in traffic...just go to church, or the mosque, or mandir, and ask for forgiveness or atonement, and you're good for the rest of the week...i'd guess maybe 20% of religious people actually try to be good people, the rest just use it as a way to make themselves feel better about being assholes
The somewhat positive side is that things get better if they would reapply themselves, so we don't need to convince them to embrace our ideas, which is great because that'd never happen. They just need to embrace their own ideas, you know....without getting too methy about it. Problem is, they blame the secularism of others for their own corruption(cough*crusades-r-coming*cough).
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member

Budley Doright

Well-Known Member

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
The somewhat positive side is that things get better if they would reapply themselves, so we don't need to convince them to embrace our ideas, which is great because that'd never happen. They just need to embrace their own ideas, you know....without getting too methy about it. Problem is, they blame the secularism of others for their own corruption(cough*crusades-r-coming*cough).
i welcome crusades...it's just a good way to get rid of dead weight..the more religious fanatics who kill each other over their religions, the less of them we'll have to deal with when they try to assert their bullshit later
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
i welcome crusades...it's just a good way to get rid of dead weight..the more religious fanatics who kill each other over their religions, the less of them we'll have to deal with when they try to assert their bullshit later
Many innocent bystanders got massively done over.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
lol well when you realise that a lot of NAZI Generals were actually Jews it is actually irrelevant..
Well there was at least one. He was a luftwaffe general and is well known by the whole holocaust denial set. That's kind of telling.

Please name a "lot" more.

And then tell us your thoughts on whether the holocaust happened, the shape of earth and chemtrails.

:dunce:
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
I imagine @Sir Napsalot is better prepared for battle before gunpowder.
20220121_105938.jpg
i'm still your one stop shop for heavy artillery....i've built trebuchet 16 feet tall, that will throw a 14 pound bowling ball over 500 feet, onagers that threw 16 pound shot put three blocks...and im working on a ballista that will shoot an arrow about the size of a peavey hook at least a couple of blocks..

funny, you can tell which end of the videos are mine, and which are my girlfriends...and no, i'm not the little house fan :lol:
 

printer

Well-Known Member
New CDC studies show boosters provide strong protection from omicron variant
New studies released from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday showed that a booster shot of COVID-19 vaccine provides robust protection against hospitalization and severe disease.

The studies from scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are some of the first based on real world data, and include both the delta and omicron variants.

The findings, while promising, come as the U.S. is on the tail-end of a massive spike in infections due to the omicron variant, which is overwhelming hospitals throughout the country.

The conclusions also raise questions about what it means to be "fully vaccinated." The CDC definition of "fully vaccinated" means a person has completed just their primary series of vaccinations, the agency recently said a person is only "up to date" if they have also received a booster dose.

One analysis examined hundreds of thousands of visits to emergency departments and urgent care centers, and tens of thousands of hospitalizations, between August 2021 and Jan. 5, 2022.

The study found that getting a third dose of an mRNA vaccine was at least 90 percent effective at preventing COVID-19-associated hospitalization, both during the delta and omicron periods.

A third shot reduced a person’s risk of an emergency department and urgent care visit by 94 percent during delta and 82 percent during Omicron

A second CDC study concluded that people with three shots had the highest protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection, at least during the early days of omicron.

Looking at data from 25 state and local health departments, CDC researchers found that among those who were boosted, there were 149 cases per 100,000 people on average each week.

For those who had only two doses, it was 255 cases per 100,000 people.
 
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