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  1. Bradley Black Hole
    Don't Get Vaxxed.
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  2. Get vaxxed, don't get vaxxed. Either way the vaccine does not in any way affect if you can contract the virus or transmit it to others. The only thing the vaccine does is modify your DNA to make the symptoms of the virus slightly less lethal. You can still catch covid and die from the symptoms, no matter how many boosters you take it makes no difference.

    The vaccine doesn't do anything to stop the spread of COVID and if you think it should be required, you are a piece of shit that does not understand science, medicine or the economy. Society is run by retards and anyone that supports this retardation is also retarded.

    This is what happens when you keep cocaine technology illegal. The only LAWS that exist outlaw one thing and that is INTELLIGENCE AND SCIENCE instead they force you to care about worthless non industrial leftist socialization pursuits like gender and race reform.

    If you care about gender or race reform, you are a piece of shit that is unproductive on a global industrial scale. Literally every problem in the world stems from the illegalization of cocaine by the UN and the people that support it.
  3. These nutjobs actually think they're going to eradicate a common flu, once and for all. That alone proves beyond all doubt how mentally deranged they really are.
  4. AngryOnion Big Wig [the nightly self-effacing broadsheet]
    Cocaine kills covid.
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  5. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Getting A Rise From Your Covid Treatment?




    Newsweek
    Tucker Carlson, Fox News Doctor Discuss Viagra as Possible Treatment for COVID
    Jason Lemon


    Fox News host Tucker Carlson and Dr. Marc Siegel, a medical contributor with the popular cable network, discussed the possibility that Viagra could be a viable treatment for COVID-19, citing an anecdotal example and a study out of Chile.

    British tabloids The Sun and The Daily Mail first reported the story of 37-year-old nurse Monica Almeida in the United Kingdom, who was on the verge of death and in a coma after contracting COVID-19 before she was given an experimental treatment that included a large dose of Viagra. While her family had been told to say their goodbyes and she was set to be taken off the ventilator keeping her alive, she recovered and now credits the erectile dysfunction drug for saving her life.

    "Well, amazingly there appear to be growing connections between Viagra and treatment for the coronavirus," Carlson said in a segment of his Fox News show on Friday. He cited the story of the nurse in the U.K. and brought on Siegel, who is a professor of medicine at the New York University Langone Medical Center, to discuss the treatment.

    "Who thought Viagra would save us from the pandemic?" Carlson asked.

    "We're doing further investigations on it now," Siegel said, before recapping Almeida's story. "She was 72 hours away from having her respirator turned off. They gave her a massive dose of Viagra and she woke up. What might the connection be there?"

    The doctor explained that he did more research. "A study just published out of Chile, in a journal called Critical Care, found that this patient studied did not go on the respirator who got Viagra. And they actually went out of the hospital sooner."

    Siegel went on to explain that Viagra isn't just used for erectile dysfunction, saying it's used for "lung problems" and "improves blood flow to the lungs." He said it treats a range of lung conditions, including pulmonary hypertension and altitude sickness. "It makes something called nitric oxide," he explained, noting that COVID-19 "decreases" this molecule.

    "There were several studies around the world that if you inhale that nitric oxide, your lungs did a lot better with COVID. Japan, China, Scandinavia all had studies like this showing a big improvement with nitric oxide—just what Viagra does," Siegel said.

    "So, I think this is beginning of something and other studies are going on, and I think this is a potential treatment," the doctor continued.

    Ending the segment, Carlson asked: "Is there anything it [Viagra] doesn't cure?"

    Almeida told The Sun for an article published on January 2 that the Viagra "saved me." The nurse, who had treated COVID-19 patients, previously received two vaccine doses before she contracted the novel coronavirus.

    The Daily Mail reported that she first tested positive on October 31 and was then admitted to the Lincoln County Hospital on November 9. A week later, she was transferred to intensive care. Prior to going into a coma, she agreed to the experimental treatment that included the large viagra dose.

    "Within 48 hours it opened up my airwaves and my lungs started to respond," she told The Sun. Almeida said she was set to be removed from the ventilator within three days.

    "If you think how the drug works, it expands your blood vessels," said the nurse, a mother of two. "I have asthma and my air sacks needed a little help."

    Almeida also stressed to The Sun that the COVID-19 vaccine she received was key to saving her life as well. She was told that she would have died had she not been vaccinated.

    "There are people out there saying the vaccine has killed people. I'm not denying there are people who react and get poorly with the vaccine, but when we look at the amount of deaths we have in unvaccinated people, there is a big message there to have your jab," the nurse said, urging everyone to get the life-saving shots.

    Notably, while Viagra has not been approved by the U.S Food and Drug Administration to treat COVID-19, other drugs have been granted approval. In October 2020, the antiviral drug Veklury (remdesivir) was approved for treating COVID-19 in adults and pediatrics patients 12 years of age and older. In late December 2021, the FDA also granted emergency use authorization to Pfizer's Paxlovid treatment for COVID-19.

    Doctors and scientist have repeatedly explained that vaccination against the novel coronavirus is the best way to prevent severe illness and death.
  6. Paid off doctors and scientists with large multi-million-dollar federal grants have nauseatingly and repeatedly explained that vaccination against the novel coronavirus is the best way to prevent severe illness and death, even though thousands have died of, or have been permanently injured, by the jabs for profit that do nothing to actually prevent transmission of the virus.

    Interesting.
  7. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Prove it.

    Just for once, show your credible evidence.

    I didn't think so.
  8. Speedy Parker Black Hole [my absentmindedly lachrymatory gazania]
    Originally posted by stl1 Prove it.

    Just for once, show your credible evidence.

    I didn't think so.

    You never post any evidence credible or otherwise. You simply copypasta editorial garbage.
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  9. RIPtotse victim of incest [my adversative decurved garbo]
    I get vaxxed then immediately stuck an empty needle in the same spot as they gave me the shot and I sucked it back out and squirted it onto the ground while screaming birds aren't real.

    Had a line of women around the walgreens trying to suck my cawk after I displayed my DNA dominance in a place of public worship like the pharmacy
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  10. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Make 'em

    All

    Get

    A jab...or pay!



    The Hill
    How to hold unvaccinated Americans accountable
    Opinion by Glenn C. Altschuler, opinion contributor


    As the omicron variant of the novel coronavirus spreads across the United States, roughly 15 percent of adults remain unvaccinated. At the greatest risk for severe illness and death, they have already overwhelmed hospitals and intensive care units in many areas of the country, reducing services available to people who have non-COVID-19 related medical issues. Nearly 90 percent of these unvaccinated people indicate they will not change their minds. And a number of governors, most notably Ron DeSantis (R) in Florida and Greg Abbott (R) in Texas, are fighting the Biden administration's vaccine mandates and thwarting vaccination requirements by schools and private employers in their states.

    "I think we've sort of run out of options," Anthony Fauci recently declared.

    Fauci's frustration is understandable. But there is one way to hold unvaccinated Americans accountable for putting themselves and others at risk: make them pay more for health insurance through surcharges and eliminating paid time off when they are sick while offering financial incentives (including lower deductibles) for fully vaccinated Americans who enroll in wellness programs.

    There is ample precedent for doing so. Smoking is exempted from federal laws restricting discrimination in premiums based on health status. Insurance companies can place a surcharge up to 50 percent (subject to limitations imposed by states) for anyone who uses a tobacco product four or more times per week. Carriers rely on the honor system, but misrepresentation constitutes fraud and in some states is a felony. Employers providing health insurance often require routine medical examinations, in which nicotine can be detected through samples of blood and urine.

    And many driving infractions result in substantial increases in automobile insurance rates: Driving under the influence (DUI) can raise rate 65.5 percent; refusal to submit to a chemical test, 63.5 percent; reckless driving, 61.1 percent; at-fault accidents resulting in more than $2,000 in damages, 45.2 percent; passing a school bus, 28.4 percent; speeding, 23.8 percent; failure to stop at a red light, 22.6 percent; texting while driving, 21.6 percent; failure to use a seat belt, 5.6 percent.

    This fall, some employers began requiring unvaccinated workers to pay more for their health insurance. Delta Air Lines (which, on average, has been paying $50,000 for each COVID-19-related hospital stay) imposes a surcharge of $200 per month for its unvaccinated staff. Delta also limits salary protection for those who miss work to workers who have been vaccinated and have had "breakthrough" infections. Since these policies took effect on Nov. 1, 2021, it's worth noting, the vaccination rate among Delta employees has risen to 94 percent.

    Mercy Health, whose 7,000 employees work in hospitals and clinics in Wisconsin and Illinois, has introduced a "risk pool fee"; $60 per week is deducted from the wages of workers who have not been vaccinated. After the policy was announced in September, vaccination rates rose from 70 percent to 91 percent.

    As omicron rages, health care workers are exhausted, frustrated and disheartened. In a sentiment shared by many of her colleagues, Sarah Rauner, a chief nurse practitioner in Troy, Mich., declared, "So much of what we see on a daily basis is preventable." A few days before Christmas, Sue Wolfe, a nurse in Madison, Wis., wondered why unvaccinated people "did this, why are they doing this to me. ... This is my second 16-hour shift this week. Came in at 2 o'clock in the morning and it's now 7 at night. I got my 20-minute break. It gets hard. I am 61 years old and I am doing this." Wolfe pleads with the unvaccinated to get vaccinated: "Do it for the people that you care about, that perhaps are susceptible to getting really sick because of the virus that you're carrying."

    Last summer, an exasperated Gov. Kay Ivey (R) in Alabama told reporters, "Folks are supposed to have common sense. But it's time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks, the regular folks. It's the unvaccinated folks that are letting us down."




    Two-thirds of Americans now say they are angry at the unvaccinated.




    Two years into a pandemic that has claimed more than 800,000 lives, blaming and shaming are unlikely to persuade the vast majority of those remaining to take a safe and effective vaccine, for themselves, people they care about, or strangers they encounter in grocery stores or restaurants.

    But if the unvaccinated can't be reached through their hearts or minds, we can - and should - require them to pay at least some of the financial costs they are forcing the rest of us to bear.
  11. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    The Washington Post
    In much of the West, the walls are closing in on anti-vaxxers
    Anthony Faiola


    In much of the West, the walls are closing in on anti-vaxxers

    Republican governors in the United States may be championing the cause of the vaccine resistant and suing to stop mandates imposed by the Biden administration. But elsewhere in the West, the jab-less are increasingly becoming personae non gratae.

    The omicron variant is exacting some of the highest infection rates of the pandemic, and the growing frustration of the vaccinated majority in the West against its unvaccinated minority is reaching a tipping point in some countries. Studies suggest omicron causes milder symptoms. Even so, the unvaccinated — at least those without valid medical reasons — are being blamed for overburdening hospitals by putting themselves, and society, at risk.

    In Florida, for instance, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a law that barred companies and schools from insisting all their employees be vaccinated. Within the week, Disney halted its vaccine requirement for Walt Disney World workers.

    Compare that to the stance of French President Emmanuel Macron, who vowed in less-than-tactful language last week to make the life of the unvaccinated a living hell.

    Pushback from his political foes wasn’t enough to derail Macron’s plan to shrink the world of the unvaccinated. By an overwhelming 214-to-93 vote, the French parliament approved his bid to remove a loophole that had allowed the unvaccinated to get around French health restrictions on dining at cafes, riding trains and going to the movies by providing a negative coronavirus test.

    Now, it’s take the jab, or sip your champagne at home.

    At the same time, the world grew for the vaccinated in France. Self-isolation times for those with full vaccine doses who test positive, Macron’s government said, would drop from 10 days to seven on Monday, and five days with a negative test result.

    Macron’s explosive remarks — made ahead of an expected reelection bid in April — assumed a certain calculus: That the perceived selfishness of the unvaccinated had pushed a share of the population to the breaking point.

    After critics derided the crude language he deployed as unpresidential, Macron remained unbowed: “When some make from their freedom … a motto, not only do they put others’ lives at risk, but they are also curtailing others’ freedom. That I cannot accept,” he told reporters in Paris on Friday. “When you are a citizen, you must agree to do your civic duty.”

    BBC Paris correspondent Hugh Schofield reasoned that Macron was issuing a challenge to political rivals. “Are they with him, doing everything possible to boost the number of vaccinated?” Schofield wrote. “Or are they siding with the minority, the five million instead of the 50 million, and the anti-vaxxers?”

    Getting less media play was a similar if more discerningly worded reprimand last week from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. He spoke as the province of Quebec moved to bar the unvaccinated from government-run stores selling alcohol or cannabis.

    “People are seeing cancer treatments and elective surgeries put off because beds are filled with people who chose not to get vaccinated; they’re frustrated. When people see that we’re in lockdowns, or serious public health restrictions right now because [of] the risk posed to all of us by unvaccinated people, people get angry,” he told reporters.

    On the other side of the world, Australia’s prime minister appeared to make the same political determination as Macron — that it pays to ostracize the unvaccinated.

    Australian Open defending men’s champion Novak Djokovic, who is unvaccinated, saw his visa canceled by federal authorities after a dispute over whether he truly qualified for a medical exemption from Australian rules that require vaccinations for visitors. The kerfuffle left the wealthy athlete stuck in a dingy “detention hotel” as he took his case to court, ultimately securing release on Monday. But not before the tennis star had turned into a global lightning rod for the anti-vax movement, and with Australian authorities suggesting they might try to void his visa again.

    Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, my colleagues reported, had initially distanced himself from the dispute over Djokovic’s visa. But with his conservative coalition facing a tougher-than-expected election — and growing public outrage over what Australians saw as a priority pass for an influential athlete — Morrison stepped in.

    Despite outrage from Djokovic supporters — led by his father, who likened his son’s persecution to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ — and a back and forth over whether Australian officials and local tennis authorities shared some of the blame, a public sense remained that Djokovic was most guilty.

    “In a Twitter poll conducted by your humble correspondent, out of about 5000 respondents, only 5 per cent or so think he should be let out of the hotel and allowed to play after all — coincidentally, about the same number of people in this country who are anti-vax nutters,” columnist Peter FitzSimons wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald.

    Want to be unvaccinated in Austria? After a February mandate takes effect, that will cost you thousands of dollars in running quarterly fines. As cases spike in Italy — a country with tragic memories of the toll of covid-19 — everyone over 50 must be vaccinated, officials announced last week. If workers over 50 fail to prove they have either been vaccinated or recently recovered from the virus, they face suspension from work starting Feb. 15, Politico reported. This on top of Italy’s strict Green Pass program that already makes life far more complicated for the unvaccinated.

    Increasingly, the West is rewarding the vaccinated, while maintaining pandemic-related burdens on the unvaccinated. Belgium last week opted to drop its requirement for fully vaccinated people to self-isolate if they come into contact with an infected person — but the unvaccinated must still isolate for 10 days.

    In Germany, lawmakers say a proposed vaccine mandate may take months to pass. In the meantime, the Germans have sharply rolled back access to public spaces for the unvaccinated. Across Europe, the unvaccinated have pushed back against mandates and lockdowns, sometimes violently and arguing government overreach. Last week, the Independent reported, German police were “attacked with bottles, fireworks and one was even bitten” during anti-vaccine mandate protests numbering 35,000 people in cities across the country.

    “It is clear that through these measures, they want to exclude us,” one unvaccinated woman who did not give her name told Al Jazeera. “We can sit outside certain places, but it always feels like you don’t have the permission to exist in the same way that those who are vaccinated do.”




    STICK IT, damn it!
  12. Donald Trump Black Hole
    The pandemic is over.
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  13. Bradley Black Hole
    imagine when 1%> of the world doesn't have the vaccine and the evil rich people flip the switch and the entire world is now cleansed of over population leaving only the greatest people
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  14. CDC just openly admitted the jabs don't prevent transmission. Imagine all the people who feel like total fools right now.
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  15. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Imagine how stupid the unvaccinated feel lying in their coffins for eternity after listening to fools like Speculum.
  16. Originally posted by stl1 Imagine how stupid the unvaccinated feel lying in their coffins for eternity after listening to fools like Speculum.

    You lied for a year and insisted the jab would prevent transmission, just because your beloved fraud Fauci said so. Now you come out the fool.
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  17. Bradley Black Hole
    STL1 did you really suggest for one year that the vaccines would stop transmission based on what your celebrity crush Jon said?
  18. Bradley Black Hole
    in all fairness Spectral you suggested that Hilary Clinton & Co would be arrested in massive nation wide arrest after donald trump is assailed as president due to findings that the dominion program was subterfuged

    so you're not very good at predicting shit either just saying
  19. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    I'm predicting Speculum gets the Covid...if he ever comes out of his house.
  20. Originally posted by Bradley in all fairness Spectral you suggested that Hilary Clinton & Co would be arrested in massive nation wide arrest after donald trump is assailed as president due to findings that the dominion program was subterfuged

    Who says they're not going to be?
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