Awww....Share price currently just under $303, down almost $28 ( just over 8.3%) on the day.
May it continue to fall.
To the skin or in the skin?Definitely easier to stick to the skin than a spoon....
Because they are making accurate statements to try to motivate as many people as possible to vaccinate, for the benefit of all of us.Sorry, do words matter? We know exactly why this article is authored the way it is![]()
well, there's no reason for it to fully perforate the skin; it'll stick fine with the tines adhering to just the first two layers (don't ask me how I know this).To the skin or in the skin?
(Also, it figures that a pro-vax household would also allow that abomination of two utensils. /s)
"early" -- that account has been around longer than I have. They've been going into the deep end with Muskism of late.Because they are making accurate statements to try to motivate as many people as possible to vaccinate, for the benefit of all of us.
Of course, the poster I'm replying to has been banned (and thank you Aurich for recognizing what he was attempting to do early and acting), but I hope that others looking on will see what I've said.
Not just republicans, sadly.Lets call it what it is. Saying the "trans kid debacle" lets them off easy. Its the pro teen suicide pogram.
Republicans have always been pro lgbtq suicide.
Think god struck someone with lightening for that. don't remember who though. That's what you get for being outside during a storm though.This why I just love things like this:
Contraception Begins at Erection Act
Unfortunately the bill died
The act was never meant to actually pass. The point of the act was to beg the question, to point out the sexist hypocrisy of those who voted to ban abortion but refused to ban "spilling one's seed upon the ground", as the Bible calls it, and calls a sin.Think god struck someone with lightening for that. don't remember who though. That's what you get for being outside during a storm though.
omgosh, did you just try to b0Th SideZ the republikkkan party's well documented and organized campaign of terror and hatred against lgbtq people?Not just republicans, sadly.
Blumenthal, coauthor of the designed-to-kill-trans-kids KOSA bill, knows that the false "Social media is killing kids!" narrative he pushes is not only not backed by science but that his proposed "solutions" are actively harmful to kids, but true to a scheme that in its entirety follows the antivaxxer playbook to the letter, he views personal gain as more important than the children he weaponizes.
Apparently Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took a page from the Russian playbook and started up Ars sleeper cells.glogloglo Account Banned 12y 929
Not in the slightest.omgosh, did you just try to b0Th SideZ the republikkkan party's well documented and organized campaign of terror and hatred against lgbtq people?
Gravity is a theory.Bold claim. Non-existent risk! I bet it's closer to "We don't know, but the benefits likely far outweigh risks". Medicine is a PRACTICE after all. Not an assertion.
"“This work is still in its early stages, and we need to validate these findings,” said co-senior study author Akiko Iwasaki, Sterling Professor of Immunobiology at Yale School of Medicine, in a press release."Covid 19 vaccines cause chronic health problems in some:
https://nypost.com/2025/02/24/healt...ccine-causes-chronic-health-problems-in-some/
One could say the act wilted, by design.The act was never meant to actually pass. The point of the act was to beg the question, to point out the sexist hypocrisy of those who voted to ban abortion but refused to ban "spilling one's seed upon the ground", as the Bible calls it, and calls a sin.
actually…Gravity is a theory.
I prefer to think of it as intelligent falling.actually…
that’s just a theory
Yep... for those new to the anti-science battleground/hellscape, the actual original bullshit started out as "medicine is a practice, not a science". Or "fact". And all of these "theories" and "practices" just all wilt in the face of actual FACT, as set forth in the Bible.Gravity is a theory.
The problem is that all these words have multiple meanings. Usually, you can determine which specific meaning is intended via context clues, but some people just aren't that smart.Yep... for those new to the anti-science battleground/hellscape, the actual original bullshit started out as "medicine is a practice, not a science". Or "fact". And all of these "theories" and "practices" just all wilt in the face of actual FACT, as set forth in the Bible.
Oh, you were surprised that this was all from the creationist lunatic playbook?
Wow- those numbers are much bigger than I would have guessed. I guess it's a fairly broad definition of Long Covid... certainly that's not the Dianna Cowern version.It's really annoying how hard it is to get absolute numbers out of a study. The study says the risk of long COVID is anywhere from 1-3%, so vaccination reduces that risk to
.43% to 1.29% for single symptom long covid
.27% to .81% for multi-symptom long covid
This was after one series of two-dose vaccines. It'd be interesting to see how long the protection lasts.
I think you read the data wrong. 43% of the people who developed long COVID were unvaccinated, not 43% of unvaccinated developed long COVID.These are the relevant numbers.
12 of whom (43 percent) were unvaccinated, and 594 acted as controls, 136 of whom (23 percent) were unvaccinated.
so 23% of the the sample are unvaccinated but 43% of the unvaccinated develop long covid.
...so 148 total unvaccinated (136 + 12), and 28 total with long COVID, 12 from the unvaccinated group, meaning only 8.1% of the unvaccinated group developed long COVID (12 unvaccinated with long COVID / 148 total unvaccinated)TFA said:Of the 622, 28 developed long COVID, 12 of whom (43 percent) were unvaccinated, and 594 acted as controls, 136 of whom (23 percent) were unvaccinated.
I miss the days when creationists tried to distance themselves from even more unfounded ideas by pointing out that it's not like they were flat earthers, anyone can SEE the earth is round, but you can't see the distant past so it's up to interpretation! I mean, they were wrong, but what makes it so awful is that now we've got flat earthers, GENUINE flat earthers, who are actually in CONGRESS at this point.I prefer to think of it as intelligent falling.
I prefer to think of it as the earth just needing a nice hug sometimes.I prefer to think of it as intelligent falling.
How dare you contradict my religion!I prefer to think of it as the earth just needing a nice hug sometimes.
literally a 18th century joke on the stupidity of ‘dark ages’I miss the days when creationists tried to distance themselves from even more unfounded ideas by pointing out that it's not like they were flat earthers, anyone can SEE the earth is round, but you can't see the distant past so it's up to interpretation! I mean, they were wrong, but what makes it so awful is that now we've got flat earthers, GENUINE flat earthers, who are actually in CONGRESS at this point.
How dare you contradict my alcoholism!How dare you contradict my religion!![]()
at 9.8 m/s2I prefer to think of it as the earth just needing a nice hug sometimes.
Well, only up to terminal velocity. You have to feel out the atmosphere first before knowing when it's alright to hug the earth.at 9.8 m/s2
For those who wish the sea shanties could go on an on...The act was never meant to actually pass. The point of the act was to beg the question, to point out the sexist hypocrisy of those who voted to ban abortion but refused to ban "spilling one's seed upon the ground", as the Bible calls it, and calls a sin.
Well, I'll be paying for that in my youtube recommendations feed!For those who wish the sea shanties could go on an on...
Lol, you forgot the /sBut this new data directly contradicts a YooToob video I saw a while ago — and I think it had a celebrity in it. So screw your science and screw your vaccines!
So it turns out, people have long since worked out how to calculate how big of a sample set you need to reach a conclusion based on the results. That's why it's a "57-73%" and not "exactly 65%" reduction in risk. That's a rather meaningful improvement regardless of exactly where it falls within those broad error bars, so I'm not sure I see the benefit of spending the money and effort to follow up with a larger set size.Unfortunately the number of participants in the sturdy was only 615. Tough to draw universal conclusions with such a small sample set when the authors say, "An estimated 1% to 3% of children infected with SARS-CoV-2 will develop post–COVID-19 condition (PCC)."
View attachment 103571
16 of whom (57 percent) were vaccinated? I'm having a sleepless night - am I reading this wrong?Of the 622, 28 developed long COVID, 12 of whom (43 percent) were unvaccinated
Well you see the problem with being stupid is that you’re too stupid to know that you are.They thought they were clever for pointing out the definition of medicine.
Imagine how dumb you must be to think other people can't have come to that conclusion on their own.
Dumb people very often think the rest of the world misses very, very basic points. It's really just them being ignorant, coming to a very basic revelation and then assuming because other people aren't talking about it, that they must not have thought of it themselves.
In reality their "clever revelations" are just basic facts everyone else already knew and assumed. That's why they weren't talking about them.
Even the brain eating worm came away empty handed.A lying sack of shit with a head full of worms!
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Nah.Booster shots with flu every year for me, wife, kids, only has Covid once and it wasn’t that bad. Will continue as long as we are allowed lol. We’ll need to see a disease with like a 50% death rate without a vaccine (and like 1% with) before people will finally admit they’re fucking wrong.
lequel est l'asticot?like trying to tighten a screw with a maggot