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Will you take the COVID-19 vaccine?

Will you take the COVID-19 vaccine?

  • Yes, as soon as possible

    Votes: 220 57.7%
  • Yes, but I do not want to be among the first to take it.

    Votes: 68 17.8%
  • Maybe

    Votes: 17 4.5%
  • Not Sure

    Votes: 21 5.5%
  • Absolutely not

    Votes: 50 13.1%
  • I do not care if I do or don't

    Votes: 5 1.3%

  • Total voters
    381
  • Poll closed .
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Jenesis

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PeteOsborne

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Feb 12, 2020
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"MISLEADING: Vaccines cause 600 new cases of eye disease and leave 5 people blind, according to the UK Government

Explanation: According to the agency, these reports should not be interpreted as proven side effects of immunizers. In addition, no case of blindness has been reported in clinical trials of vaccines administered in the country.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE (AOS FATOS)


I agree, I posted the full list before in a PDF, below is the most recent.
On page 11 under the section" Visual impairment and blindness (excl colour blindness) " You will see the figures in the article are nowhere close to what the actual report states.
Once you have the raw data you go through and filter out improbable relations to the vaccine and continue from there.
If you look at injuries caused there are 19 broken bones, 3 crushed chest injuries ETC. that were sustained in accidents but since the patient had received a shot the injuries had to be reported, this is what raw data is.
There are 13 different types of herpes infections listed for a total of 767 infections yet no one is saying the vaccine causes herpes.
It is just that these cases were diagnosed during the reporting window and had to be documented.
Also listed and included in the reaction totals are site specific injuries like these, Back injury 5, Central nervous system injury 1, Face injury 1, Head injury 8, Limb crushing injury 4, Limb injury 54, Neck crushing 1, Neck injury 2.
One would be hard pressed to say that these were caused by the administration of a vaccine.
As well as the fact that if an individual had a car accident and had multiple injuries each injury would be listed as a single reaction, for example a piece of glass hit the eyelid causing eye lid swelling, bleeding of the eyelid, eye redness and eye irritation, these would be listed as 4 reactions.
The same is relevant for deaths listed, if someone died due to multiple injuries there would be a death registered for each injury making one death into 4, this is why raw data needs to be interpreted before making a conclusion.
 

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canada-man

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Jun 16, 2007
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Chile’s mass vaccination campaign fails to save it from recent coronavirus surge

Chile’s government was praised throughout the world for its “model rollout” of Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines. But the South American nation is now being hammered by a massive coronavirus outbreak that has threatened to overwhelm the country’s health systems.

The Chilean government has vaccinated more of its population than any other country in the Americas, exceeding even the vaccination rate of the United States. It has already vaccinated approximately 35 percent of its population. Only four other nations have vaccinated a larger percentage of its population: Bhutan, the United Arab Emirates, Seychelles and Israel. (Related: “Breakthrough” coronavirus cases still being reported, some even dying despite being fully vaccinated.)

But the country’s mass inoculation campaign has not saved it from a recent surge in coronavirus cases, which have doubled in the country and in other neighboring South American nations during the past few weeks. The country’s intensive care units are running at 95 percent occupancy.

“Nowhere are infections as worrisome as in South America, where cases are mounting in nearly every country,” said Dr. Carissa Etienne, director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).

Chilean health officials argue rise in cases is not indicative of failure of vaccines
Public health experts in Chile have argued that the rise in coronavirus cases does not mean the mass vaccination campaign is not working.

Miguel O’Ryan, a professor of medicine at the University of Chile and a member of the science ministry’s vaccine advisory committee, said the country did not expect the inoculations to make a big impact on infections until mid-2021. “What we are seeing now is simply – and tragically – what happened in all of the northern hemisphere, with a few exceptions, as autumn started [six months ago].”

“The government was over-optimistic in believing that its successful vaccination program would avoid a new wave of infections,” argued Eduardo Engel, an economist working for the Chilean government.

Engel explained that in early February the government gave its people the false impression that one dose of the coronavirus vaccine was all people needed. “That led to people getting too relaxed, while the government was not very strict at implementing restrictions.”

PAHO Assistant Director Jarbas Barbosa believes the immunization program will only have an effect when between 70 to 80 percent of the population has been fully vaccinated.

“We really don’t know yet what is the level that will provide … herd immunity,” said Barbosa, adding that it is important for Chile to keep lockdown measures in place to prevent further transmission.

Ian Sample and Oliver Holmes, journalists writing for The Guardian, have even argued that, with transmission rates in the country at such a high level, “a far greater proportion of the population will need to be vaccinated to get on top of the pandemic.”

Other experts have argued that the rise in cases is because Chileans have been given a “false sense of security,” which led to the early rolling back of lockdown restrictions and social distancing rules.

This is what Ximena Aguilera, an epidemiologist serving in the advisory committee of the Chilean health ministry, has argued. According to her, a lot of the new cases came about when many Chileans began moving around the country for the summer holidays in March.

Aguilera has also blamed the less strict adherence to social distancing regulations that came about due to the supposed success of the vaccination program as well as “lockdown fatigue.”

“Vaccines are just one part of our COVID response,” argued Etienne. “And we must continue to rely on public health measures to keep our populations and our countries safe.”

Aguilera, Engel and many other experts have also pinned the blame on the proliferation of more infectious COVID-19 variants, particularly the P1 strain from Brazil.

“The government did little to stop new variants entering the country, even though it knew since December that it was a major risk factor,” said Engel.

Learn more about the ineffective mass vaccination campaigns in countries like Chile by reading the latest articles at Vaccines.news.

Sources include:

FT.com

TheGuardian.com

RepublicWorld.com

NYTimes.com

France24.com

 

canada-man

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Jun 16, 2007
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canadianmale.wordpress.com

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
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47-Year-Old MSNBC Legal Analyst, Midwin Charles, Dead One Month After Experimental MRNA Shot

Amazingly no cause of death is established yet you spread bullshit and nonsense. OH WAIT, you tried this as someone else too.



The best part is no one is paying attention to anti-vaxxers and lining up to get the jab. Most can't wait except for the few who lack common sense and live in a alt reality.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
20,870
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I had my shot a few weeks ago, as did 75% plus of my fellow workers, whom took it 1-3 weeks before me.
This represents 100 + people.
Not one of us had an adverse reaction.
STOP this BS and take the bloody thing.
Well said!!
 

sp free

Well-known member
May 31, 2003
2,094
590
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What do you care if I take it or not. You got yours. Thanks again for participating in the vaccine trials.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
20,870
15,451
113
What do you care if I take it or not. You got yours. Thanks again for participating in the vaccine trials.
As I've said before, I really do not want you to get it. It would be a waste of a precious jab that can go into the arm of a person who would be useful to society.
 

sp free

Well-known member
May 31, 2003
2,094
590
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🤡

Selfish? For not wanting to take an unnecessary risk? Please do explain, I can’t wait to hear this.
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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Chile’s mass vaccination campaign fails to save it from recent coronavirus surge

Chile’s government was praised throughout the world for its “model rollout” of Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines. But the South American nation is now being hammered by a massive coronavirus outbreak that has threatened to overwhelm the country’s health systems.

The Chilean government has vaccinated more of its population than any other country in the Americas, exceeding even the vaccination rate of the United States. It has already vaccinated approximately 35 percent of its population. Only four other nations have vaccinated a larger percentage of its population: Bhutan, the United Arab Emirates, Seychelles and Israel. (Related: “Breakthrough” coronavirus cases still being reported, some even dying despite being fully vaccinated.)

But the country’s mass inoculation campaign has not saved it from a recent surge in coronavirus cases, which have doubled in the country and in other neighboring South American nations during the past few weeks. The country’s intensive care units are running at 95 percent occupancy.

“Nowhere are infections as worrisome as in South America, where cases are mounting in nearly every country,” said Dr. Carissa Etienne, director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).

Chilean health officials argue rise in cases is not indicative of failure of vaccines
Public health experts in Chile have argued that the rise in coronavirus cases does not mean the mass vaccination campaign is not working.

Miguel O’Ryan, a professor of medicine at the University of Chile and a member of the science ministry’s vaccine advisory committee, said the country did not expect the inoculations to make a big impact on infections until mid-2021. “What we are seeing now is simply – and tragically – what happened in all of the northern hemisphere, with a few exceptions, as autumn started [six months ago].”

“The government was over-optimistic in believing that its successful vaccination program would avoid a new wave of infections,” argued Eduardo Engel, an economist working for the Chilean government.

Engel explained that in early February the government gave its people the false impression that one dose of the coronavirus vaccine was all people needed. “That led to people getting too relaxed, while the government was not very strict at implementing restrictions.”

PAHO Assistant Director Jarbas Barbosa believes the immunization program will only have an effect when between 70 to 80 percent of the population has been fully vaccinated.

“We really don’t know yet what is the level that will provide … herd immunity,” said Barbosa, adding that it is important for Chile to keep lockdown measures in place to prevent further transmission.

Ian Sample and Oliver Holmes, journalists writing for The Guardian, have even argued that, with transmission rates in the country at such a high level, “a far greater proportion of the population will need to be vaccinated to get on top of the pandemic.”

Other experts have argued that the rise in cases is because Chileans have been given a “false sense of security,” which led to the early rolling back of lockdown restrictions and social distancing rules.

This is what Ximena Aguilera, an epidemiologist serving in the advisory committee of the Chilean health ministry, has argued. According to her, a lot of the new cases came about when many Chileans began moving around the country for the summer holidays in March.

Aguilera has also blamed the less strict adherence to social distancing regulations that came about due to the supposed success of the vaccination program as well as “lockdown fatigue.”

“Vaccines are just one part of our COVID response,” argued Etienne. “And we must continue to rely on public health measures to keep our populations and our countries safe.”

Aguilera, Engel and many other experts have also pinned the blame on the proliferation of more infectious COVID-19 variants, particularly the P1 strain from Brazil.

“The government did little to stop new variants entering the country, even though it knew since December that it was a major risk factor,” said Engel.

Learn more about the ineffective mass vaccination campaigns in countries like Chile by reading the latest articles at Vaccines.news.

Sources include:

FT.com

TheGuardian.com

RepublicWorld.com

NYTimes.com

France24.com

Chile has not reached the herd immunity as yet. The percentage that has been vaccinated with at least one dose is around 35%. There are those variants from neighbouring countries that have hit them and unless they reach the 80% of the population having at least one dose, they will be susceptible to a third wave. Moreover the Chile Government like Brazil did not have very serious lockdown measures and their numbers per capita were almost as high as Brazil during the peak of the 1st wave of the pandemic. Also 93% of the population have been administered the Chinese Sinovac Vaccine that has around a 52% efficacy. Moreover if they get just one dose of it then it will have just a 3% efficacy that rises to the 56.5% after the second dose and only two weeks later. Just around 15% of Chileans have received the two doses!!
 
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