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STICK IT, Damn It!
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2022-02-03 at 9:18 PM UTCThe sick fucks are vaccinating pregnant women. No studies have been done, but it looks to me that as many as 80% are suffering miscarriages as a result. You can also miscarry from covid - a good reason to avoid social contact when pregnant.
Anything related to covid is rigidly censored, but consider the known risks of other vaccines during pregnancy.
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/9758-vaccination-during-pregnancy
Google are censoring. jedi murderers. -
2022-02-03 at 9:53 PM UTCIf they're that stupid and determined to wreck themselves, let them. No pity here. The less idiots on the planet, the better.
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2022-02-03 at 10:15 PM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ If they're that stupid and determined to wreck themselves, let them. No pity here. The less idiots on the planet, the better.
This is kind of how I feel about all forms of abortion generally. They're going the next generation a favor by removing themselves from the gene-pool. -
2022-02-03 at 11:14 PM UTC
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2022-02-04 at 3:57 AM UTC
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2022-02-04 at 5:02 AM UTC
Originally posted by Donald Trump This is kind of how I feel about all forms of abortion generally. They're going the next generation a favor by removing themselves from the gene-pool.
it tends to be dysgenic
the people who abort or don't have children are the ones who are concerned that they can't give their children a good life, whereas the ones with no foresight or care for their futures are the ones who keep spurting them out
and rather than incentivise births, our governments prefer to import foreigners to 'fix' population replacement levels -
2022-02-04 at 9:15 PM UTCSTEP ON UP, FOLKS...AND STICK IT!
Bloomberg
Moderna’s Covid-19 Vaccine Gets Backing From CDC Advisory Panel
Fiona Rutherford
(Bloomberg) -- Moderna Inc.’s Covid-19 shot received unanimous backing from a group of key U.S. health advisers after its approval, a move that could help encourage the hesitant to get vaccinated as the omicron variant continues to spread across the country.
All 13 members of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted to recommend the two-dose regimen for adults on Friday.
Moderna’s shot, to be sold under the brand name Spikevax, won full approval this week from the Food and Drug Administration, becoming the second Covid vaccine to gain such a clearance. The similar messenger RNA shot from partners Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE was fully approved by regulators last year. Previously, the shots were available under emergency-use authorizations.
Another full clearance for a shot that has had a major role in the U.S. immunization campaign could persuade more holdouts who were wary of the initial review process to get shots. About a quarter of Americans who are eligible still haven’t received a vaccine, according to the CDC.
While messenger RNA shots have been associated with an elevated rate of heart inflammation in people 12 to 39 years old, the benefits of the vaccine clearly outweigh the risks, according to a government report published last July.
The CDC presented evidence during Friday’s meeting from safety monitoring systems in multiple countries showing that there is an increased, but rare, risk of myocarditis following vaccination with a messenger RNA shot. The highest risk was most commonly seen in young males after receiving a second dose.
As of Feb. 4, more than 204 million doses of Moderna’s vaccine have been administered in the U.S., accounting for about 37% of the 540 million shots administered overall.
Variant Shots
Both Moderna and Pfizer are studying omicron-specific vaccines as the variant continues to spread. Last week, Moderna enrolled the first participant in a trial of its omicron-specific vaccine booster.
At the same time, a subvariant of the omicron strain called BA.2 has been detected in at least 57 countries. While it appears to spread more easily than the original, initial findings show it doesn’t seem to cause more severe disease and booster shots remain an effective shield.
The subvariant is estimated to account for less than 1% of all sequenced cases, but the proportion of BA.2 has been steadily increasing, a CDC spokesperson said in an email Thursday. -
2022-02-04 at 9:40 PM UTC
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2022-02-04 at 9:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra it tends to be dysgenic
the people who abort or don't have children are the ones who are concerned that they can't give their children a good life, whereas the ones with no foresight or care for their futures are the ones who keep spurting them out
and rather than incentivise births, our governments prefer to import foreigners to 'fix' population replacement levels
correlation not causation.
milder strains of covid is not the result of booster shots. it hasnt been proven or documented that boosters reduced the severity of covids. -
2022-02-05 at 12:19 AM UTC
Originally posted by stl1 STEP ON UP, FOLKS…AND STICK IT!
Bloomberg
Moderna’s Covid-19 Vaccine Gets Backing From CDC Advisory Panel
Fiona Rutherford
(Bloomberg) – Moderna Inc.’s Covid-19 shot received unanimous backing from a group of key U.S. health advisers after its approval, a move that could help encourage the hesitant to get vaccinated as the omicron variant continues to spread across the country.
All 13 members of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted to recommend the two-dose regimen for adults on Friday.
Moderna’s shot, to be sold under the brand name Spikevax, won full approval this week from the Food and Drug Administration, becoming the second Covid vaccine to gain such a clearance. The similar messenger RNA shot from partners Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE was fully approved by regulators last year. Previously, the shots were available under emergency-use authorizations.
Another full clearance for a shot that has had a major role in the U.S. immunization campaign could persuade more holdouts who were wary of the initial review process to get shots. About a quarter of Americans who are eligible still haven’t received a vaccine, according to the CDC.
While messenger RNA shots have been associated with an elevated rate of heart inflammation in people 12 to 39 years old, the benefits of the vaccine clearly outweigh the risks, according to a government report published last July.
The CDC presented evidence during Friday’s meeting from safety monitoring systems in multiple countries showing that there is an increased, but rare, risk of myocarditis following vaccination with a messenger RNA shot. The highest risk was most commonly seen in young males after receiving a second dose.
As of Feb. 4, more than 204 million doses of Moderna’s vaccine have been administered in the U.S., accounting for about 37% of the 540 million shots administered overall.
Variant Shots
Both Moderna and Pfizer are studying omicron-specific vaccines as the variant continues to spread. Last week, Moderna enrolled the first participant in a trial of its omicron-specific vaccine booster.
At the same time, a subvariant of the omicron strain called BA.2 has been detected in at least 57 countries. While it appears to spread more easily than the original, initial findings show it doesn’t seem to cause more severe disease and booster shots remain an effective shield.
The subvariant is estimated to account for less than 1% of all sequenced cases, but the proportion of BA.2 has been steadily increasing, a CDC spokesperson said in an email Thursday.
Mass murderers/fraudsters for profit. -
2022-02-05 at 11:45 AM UTC
Originally posted by stl1 STEP ON UP, FOLKS…AND STICK IT!
Bloomberg
Moderna’s Covid-19 Vaccine Gets Backing From CDC Advisory Panel
Fiona Rutherford
(Bloomberg) – Moderna Inc.’s Covid-19 shot received unanimous backing from a group of key U.S. health advisers after its approval, a move that could help encourage the hesitant to get vaccinated as the omicron variant continues to spread across the country.
All 13 members of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices voted to recommend the two-dose regimen for adults on Friday.
Moderna’s shot, to be sold under the brand name Spikevax, won full approval this week from the Food and Drug Administration, becoming the second Covid vaccine to gain such a clearance. The similar messenger RNA shot from partners Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE was fully approved by regulators last year. Previously, the shots were available under emergency-use authorizations.
Another full clearance for a shot that has had a major role in the U.S. immunization campaign could persuade more holdouts who were wary of the initial review process to get shots. About a quarter of Americans who are eligible still haven’t received a vaccine, according to the CDC.
While messenger RNA shots have been associated with an elevated rate of heart inflammation in people 12 to 39 years old, the benefits of the vaccine clearly outweigh the risks, according to a government report published last July.
The CDC presented evidence during Friday’s meeting from safety monitoring systems in multiple countries showing that there is an increased, but rare, risk of myocarditis following vaccination with a messenger RNA shot. The highest risk was most commonly seen in young males after receiving a second dose.
As of Feb. 4, more than 204 million doses of Moderna’s vaccine have been administered in the U.S., accounting for about 37% of the 540 million shots administered overall.
Variant Shots
Both Moderna and Pfizer are studying omicron-specific vaccines as the variant continues to spread. Last week, Moderna enrolled the first participant in a trial of its omicron-specific vaccine booster.
At the same time, a subvariant of the omicron strain called BA.2 has been detected in at least 57 countries. While it appears to spread more easily than the original, initial findings show it doesn’t seem to cause more severe disease and booster shots remain an effective shield.
The subvariant is estimated to account for less than 1% of all sequenced cases, but the proportion of BA.2 has been steadily increasing, a CDC spokesperson said in an email Thursday.
The fact that that vaccine was created for an extinct disease (beta covid is extinct in the wild) doesn't cause even a seconds thought. -
2022-02-05 at 11:55 AM UTCall covid is beta compared to the CHAD EBOLA
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2022-02-05 at 2:45 PM UTCNewsweek
Unvaccinated Man Almost Killed by COVID Regrets Not Getting Shots: 'I Was Terribly Wrong'
Aristos Georgiou
An unvaccinated Georgia man has said he regrets not getting his COVID-19 shots after almost dying as a result of the disease.
Fifty-six-year-old Jeff Adams, from the city of Covington, told FOX 5 Atlanta that he contracted COVID-19 at the concert of a friend's band at the American Legion in Conyers in August, 2021.
At this point Adams was not vaccinated. He said he had decided against getting the shots because a blood test in July that year revealed that he had COVID-19 antibodies, indicating a prior infection.
As such, he believed that he did not need to get vaccinated.
But he has now spoken about his experience with the disease and said that he regrets his decision.
"I can tell you conclusively that is the worst decision of my life," he told FOX 5. "I'm a person who has never been sick much at all in my life, and I thought I didn't have to worry about it. But, boy, was I wrong. I was terribly wrong."
Adams said that within days of the concert he became extremely sick and delirious. Eventually, his mother and daughter convinced him to visit to the emergency department at Piedmont Rockdale Hospital in Conyers.
"I was very near death, shortly after I got to the hospital," Adams said. "I had waited too long, but I don't even remember that. There is about a six-week period of my life, beginning on August 8, that I have no memory of at all."
Dr. Shimool Rabbani, a physician at the hospital who treated Adams, said he was one of the sickest COVID-19 patients he had seen over the past two years.
The 56-year-old was in acute respiratory failure and needed to be placed on a mechanical ventilator in the ICU.
Adams also has two health issues that put him at high risk of becoming severely ill from COVID-19. "I was 305 pounds and diabetic. And, that didn't help at all," he said.
Adams ended up spending 88 days in hospital and had to be resuscitated on five separate occasions. During his hospital stay, he was on a ventilator for five weeks and was also in a coma for five weeks.
"I came as near death as anybody," he said. "There was probably a six- to eight-week period of terrible pain, I mean excruciating pain. I couldn't get out of bed. I couldn't walk. I could barely speak."
Adams is now back at home but he faces a long recovery, and still requires a tracheostomy tube.
"I can walk a limited amount. I can get in and out of my hospital bed, I have a medical bed at home. I'm receiving home healthcare and coming to the hospital once every two weeks to have a surgery wound addressed," he said.
Adams is now urging people who have not been vaccinated to get their shots.
"Ever since I've regained consciousness and could speak, I've told everybody I can to go get the vaccine, because it's that important," he said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), people who have recovered from COVID-19 will have some protection from repeat infections. But reinfections can still occur in these individuals, and in some cases they can be serious. New virus variants may also increase the risk of reinfection.
All COVID-19 vaccines continue to be highly effective in protecting against severe illness. As such, the CDC recommends vaccination for all people aged five years or older, including individuals who have been infected before. -
2022-02-05 at 2:47 PM UTCSinglehandedly destroying the Democratic party
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2022-02-05 at 3:04 PM UTC
Originally posted by stl1 Newsweek
Unvaccinated Man Almost Killed by COVID Regrets Not Getting Shots: 'I Was Terribly Wrong'
Aristos Georgiou
An unvaccinated Georgia man has said he regrets not getting his COVID-19 shots after almost dying as a result of the disease.
Fifty-six-year-old Jeff Adams, from the city of Covington, told FOX 5 Atlanta that he contracted COVID-19 at the concert of a friend's band at the American Legion in Conyers in August, 2021.
At this point Adams was not vaccinated. He said he had decided against getting the shots because a blood test in July that year revealed that he had COVID-19 antibodies, indicating a prior infection.
As such, he believed that he did not need to get vaccinated.
But he has now spoken about his experience with the disease and said that he regrets his decision.
"I can tell you conclusively that is the worst decision of my life," he told FOX 5. "I'm a person who has never been sick much at all in my life, and I thought I didn't have to worry about it. But, boy, was I wrong. I was terribly wrong."
Adams said that within days of the concert he became extremely sick and delirious. Eventually, his mother and daughter convinced him to visit to the emergency department at Piedmont Rockdale Hospital in Conyers.
"I was very near death, shortly after I got to the hospital," Adams said. "I had waited too long, but I don't even remember that. There is about a six-week period of my life, beginning on August 8, that I have no memory of at all."
Dr. Shimool Rabbani, a physician at the hospital who treated Adams, said he was one of the sickest COVID-19 patients he had seen over the past two years.
The 56-year-old was in acute respiratory failure and needed to be placed on a mechanical ventilator in the ICU.
Adams also has two health issues that put him at high risk of becoming severely ill from COVID-19. "I was 305 pounds and diabetic. And, that didn't help at all," he said.
Adams ended up spending 88 days in hospital and had to be resuscitated on five separate occasions. During his hospital stay, he was on a ventilator for five weeks and was also in a coma for five weeks.
"I came as near death as anybody," he said. "There was probably a six- to eight-week period of terrible pain, I mean excruciating pain. I couldn't get out of bed. I couldn't walk. I could barely speak."
Adams is now back at home but he faces a long recovery, and still requires a tracheostomy tube.
"I can walk a limited amount. I can get in and out of my hospital bed, I have a medical bed at home. I'm receiving home healthcare and coming to the hospital once every two weeks to have a surgery wound addressed," he said.
Adams is now urging people who have not been vaccinated to get their shots.
"Ever since I've regained consciousness and could speak, I've told everybody I can to go get the vaccine, because it's that important," he said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), people who have recovered from COVID-19 will have some protection from repeat infections. But reinfections can still occur in these individuals, and in some cases they can be serious. New virus variants may also increase the risk of reinfection.
All COVID-19 vaccines continue to be highly effective in protecting against severe illness. As such, the CDC recommends vaccination for all people aged five years or older, including individuals who have been infected before.
The variant he had was most likely delta and delta is now extinct.
Does it hurt you? Your deadly disease is dead 🤣
You can't force inject people or muzzle them anymore. -
2022-02-05 at 4:49 PM UTC
Originally posted by stl1 Newsweek
Unvaccinated Man Almost Killed by COVID Regrets Not Getting Shots: 'I Was Terribly Wrong'
Aristos Georgiou
An unvaccinated Georgia man has said he regrets not getting his COVID-19 shots after almost dying as a result of the disease.
Fifty-six-year-old Jeff Adams, from the city of Covington, told FOX 5 Atlanta that he contracted COVID-19 at the concert of a friend's band at the American Legion in Conyers in August, 2021.
At this point Adams was not vaccinated. He said he had decided against getting the shots because a blood test in July that year revealed that he had COVID-19 antibodies, indicating a prior infection.
As such, he believed that he did not need to get vaccinated.
But he has now spoken about his experience with the disease and said that he regrets his decision.
"I can tell you conclusively that is the worst decision of my life," he told FOX 5. "I'm a person who has never been sick much at all in my life, and I thought I didn't have to worry about it. But, boy, was I wrong. I was terribly wrong."
Adams said that within days of the concert he became extremely sick and delirious. Eventually, his mother and daughter convinced him to visit to the emergency department at Piedmont Rockdale Hospital in Conyers.
"I was very near death, shortly after I got to the hospital," Adams said. "I had waited too long, but I don't even remember that. There is about a six-week period of my life, beginning on August 8, that I have no memory of at all."
Dr. Shimool Rabbani, a physician at the hospital who treated Adams, said he was one of the sickest COVID-19 patients he had seen over the past two years.
The 56-year-old was in acute respiratory failure and needed to be placed on a mechanical ventilator in the ICU.
Adams also has two health issues that put him at high risk of becoming severely ill from COVID-19. "I was 305 pounds and diabetic. And, that didn't help at all," he said.
Adams ended up spending 88 days in hospital and had to be resuscitated on five separate occasions. During his hospital stay, he was on a ventilator for five weeks and was also in a coma for five weeks.
"I came as near death as anybody," he said. "There was probably a six- to eight-week period of terrible pain, I mean excruciating pain. I couldn't get out of bed. I couldn't walk. I could barely speak."
Adams is now back at home but he faces a long recovery, and still requires a tracheostomy tube.
"I can walk a limited amount. I can get in and out of my hospital bed, I have a medical bed at home. I'm receiving home healthcare and coming to the hospital once every two weeks to have a surgery wound addressed," he said.
Adams is now urging people who have not been vaccinated to get their shots.
"Ever since I've regained consciousness and could speak, I've told everybody I can to go get the vaccine, because it's that important," he said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), people who have recovered from COVID-19 will have some protection from repeat infections. But reinfections can still occur in these individuals, and in some cases they can be serious. New virus variants may also increase the risk of reinfection.
All COVID-19 vaccines continue to be highly effective in protecting against severe illness. As such, the CDC recommends vaccination for all people aged five years or older, including individuals who have been infected before.
"I was 305 pounds and diabetic..." BUT.. COVID. -
2022-02-05 at 4:53 PM UTC
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2022-02-05 at 4:54 PM UTCPeople who are grossly obese and in poor health die of the common flu all the time... BUT.. COVID. Such dishonest ratbags.
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2022-02-05 at 5:01 PM UTCThere are three things im going to think about all day today
1. Covid 19
2. Obesity
3. Donald Trump -
2022-02-05 at 5:04 PM UTCgiant obese (unnecessary) donald trump with a covid ray