Coronavirus

Out of context: Reply #4589

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  • oey_oey5

    I can get vaccinated via the Kindergarten where my daughter is going to start on Monday.

    My partner is totally up to it.

    I'm not against it at all but suddenly having the possibility to do it gives me a certain feeling of uncertainty about it and honestly I would prefer to wait a bit longer.

    I was trying to tell this to my partner and she made a face like: "Are you fucking kidding me?!"

    Something I totally understand, still...

    I have to make my mind up until 8 am, that's in nine and a half hours.

    • nothing changes, you only get a chance against something you couldn’t fight alone.
      all you can do is to tell yourself this is something bad.
      sted
    • i totally understand your thoughts. there is a good chance you will survive the next days with - or without vaccine so don't worry too much :)api
    • ^ hahahaha!oey_oey
    • surviving the next days made me laugh!oey_oey
    • you're totally right sted.oey_oey
    • Why are you uncertain? They've been shown to be effective and safe over the last few months.monospaced
    • To be honest I can't really say mono and because I can't find a logical reason to be afraid of anything I will most probably take the chance.oey_oey
    • It also means that with my parents getting vaccinated soon me and my family can travel to Portugal so my parents can spend some time with their granddaughteroey_oey
    • Okay. What "chance" are you taking though?monospaced
    • taking the vaccine of course...oey_oey
    • i am concerned about long term side effects for example. this is why vaccines are NOT tested on live population for more than a few years.renderedred
    • i don't want to be over sixty with a genetic disorder of some kind or other degenerative thing because we were in a hurry to approve it.renderedred
    • and to make it clear i am not antivax at all, i am anti making quick decisions and test things on a general population.renderedred
    • shut up renderedred! you're making it worse. hahahaha! shit...oey_oey
    • LOL sorry!renderedred
    • look dude i bet you wouldn't be alive without some of the basic shots(i think you got a few when u were a kid), so give the science and the missus some respectsted
    • @sted, i love science and believe it's for the good, but if i had the choice i'd go for sputnik 5, old school dormant virus technology, mRNA messenger scares merenderedred
    • all we have where i live is pfizer (they won the vaccine wars of 2020)renderedred
    • @sted, I know that dude, believe me I'm pro science and I totally believe in science. and I will take it. I'll report in 20 years. LOL!oey_oey
    • What "chance" are you taking? Meaning, what are you risking by taking it? If your'e afraid, what are you afraid of?monospaced
    • An acquaintance of mine has been working on mRNA vaccines for like 20 years. To claim they haven't been tested is simply false. Cheers!monospaced
    • @mono I don't think I'm risking anything in the near future. I'm afraid of possible long term side effects. but I'm not that well informed to be honest.oey_oey
    • Cheers @mono "There are about a dozen experimental vaccines in late-stage clinical trials globally, but the ones being tested by Pfizer and Moderna are the onlyrenderedred
    • Sputnik here I go!!!oey_oey
    • two that rely on messenger RNA." - first article on google:renderedred
    • https://www.statnews…renderedred
    • i trust your friend will test it on him/herself first and report in 5-10 yrs @monorenderedred
    • and yeah, their family and children too.renderedred
    • "Although relatively easy and quick to produce compared to traditional vaccine-making, no mRNA vaccine or drug has ever won approval."renderedred
    • all i'm saying, kudos to science but test it on a controlled group for long term effects.renderedred
    • We’ll find out in 5 years if everyone turns into lizards.Chimp
    • @renderedred, thanks, and the rest of the article details DECADES OF TESTING of mRNA vaccines. Once again, not new and quite well tested.monospaced
    • sure, decades of lab testing and that's splendid. no mRNA vaccine has ever been approved and surely not tested on human control groups.renderedred
    • which basically means YOU are the test subject, in vivo testing is so in right now.renderedred
    • it's because they haven't been needed as normal vaccines were already available, but there were BILLIONS invested in the tech because it was going to blow upmonospaced
    • also, nothing indicates that there is an issue 5-10 years later, even after all these yearsmonospaced
    • nothing indicates there ISN'T an issue after 5-10 years either. tech is great in theory i agree...renderedred
    • i will believe you mono if you produce people that got an mRNA vaccine 10 years ago and everything is finerenderedred
    • omfg, so, there's no evidence that unicorns aren't fucking behind jupiter right now, but I don't believe it's true!monospaced
    • You're exhibiting one of the biggest mock-worthy logical fallacies of all time, and you don't even realize it. You think you're being logical, but you're not.monospaced
    • There is no logical connection between the virus and the clots, and you are pulling RANDOM numbers 5-10 out of your ass, and concluding based on that.monospaced

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